; 
1804.] 
SCOTLAND. 
Married. } At Invernefs, G. Forbes, M.D. 
to Mifs M. Welth. : 
Died.] At Edinburgh, Mrs. A. Rollo, 
widow of the late J. Dundas, efg. advocate, 
of Phillipftown.—f. Pringle, efq. vice ad- 
tniral of the blue.—-At his apartments in this 
city, Mr R&. Wilfon, late of London, but 
formerly an eminent printer of this city — 
Of a paralytic ftroke, Mr. A. Ramiay, 
keeper of John’s coftee-houfe. 
At his feat of Balbithan, aged 34, Gene- 
tal Benjamin Gordon, lieutenant-colonel of 
the 48th regiment of foot. The general was 
many years abroad, in actual fervice, often in 
very perilous fituations, and always conducted 
himfelf with fingular propriety. 
At Leith, Capt. J. Thompfon, late of the 
Indefatigable, fhip of war. He was promoted 
to the rank of mafter and commander, for his 
active and fuccetsful fervices when under the 
command of Sir Edward Pellew. 
At Aberdeen, in his 76th year, Mr. fj. 
Copland, merchant, and one of the bailies of 
that city. 
IRELAND. 
Married.} At Cork, S: Penrofe, jun. efg. 
to C. Harman.—I. J. Cox, efy. late of the 
royal navy, to Miis J. Travers, daughter of 
the late Mr. Alderman Travers.—J. Mac- 
cartey, eq. of Newcattle, county of Limerick, 
to Mils Allen, daughter of C. Allen, efgq. 
mayor of Cork. 
Died.| Sic Thomas Efmond, bart. of Bally- 
naftra, in the county of Wexford. Sir Tho- 
mas was defcended from a very ancient Ro- 
man Catholic family, and was one of the oldeft 
baronets in that kingdom. 
At Dunany, county of Louth, aged 94, R. 
Jones, e{q late of iiland Bridge, the oldeit 
magiftrate of the county of Dublin. 
DEATHS ABROAD, 
On the 28th of Auguft laft, died at Bar- 
badoes, Capt John Edward Bonner, of the 
64th regiment, aged 22. This gallant young 
officer fell a victim to a moft violent and ma- 
lignant f-ver, in confequence of exceffive ex- 
ertion, in the late expedition againft St.Lucia, 
under the command of General Grinfield: 
he poffeffed many amiable and eftimable 
qualities, and, whether confidered as a’man, 
a foldier, a relative, or friend, his early lofs 
wiil long be affectionately regretted by chofe 
who were beft acquainted with his worth. 
On the rath of March laf, near Kalck- 
oural Fort, in the northern part of; Bengal, 
Major R. Nairne, of the Hon. Eat India 
company’s 8th native cavalry, and fon of the 
jate R. Nairne, efq. formerly fecond in coun- 
cil at Fort Marlborough. He was kilied by 
a fhot from a matchlock, while=leading on 
his regiment againft a rebel Zemincar. He 
was generally confidered as a moft excellent 
officer. 
At Syiney, New South Wales, Mrs. At- 
kins, wife of R, B, Atkins, efq. deputy judge. 
Scotland—TIreland—~Deaths Abroad. 
- graphical work before he left Rome. 
099 
advocate of that colony. This lady hada 
little before joined her huiband, from Eng- 
land, where fhe remained, at home, fome 
time behind him. She was confidered asa 
very fine woman, and generally refpedted by 
all who knew her, ; 
On the sth of September, at Tarento M. 
Lacles, infpeétor of artillery in the Neapoli- 
tan fervice, and known in the literary world, 
as the author of the novel entitled Les Lia- 
ifons Dangerewfes. 
At Ceylon, Eaft Indies, Captain Paul Car. 
rington, brother to Sir Edmund Carrington, 
Chief juftice of the ifland. 
In the month of September lat at Savan~ 
nah La Mar, Mr. J}. Lindfay, furgeon, F. Re 
S. E. and author of feveral ingenious botani- 
cal papers in the tranfadtions of the Edin- 
burgh Society, aad in the tranfaétions of the 
Linnzan Society, London. 
Gn the 22d of September, 1802, at Pifa, 
Angiolo Fabroni, curator of the univerfity, 
é&c. and generally known in the literary 
world by his biographies of Italian literati of 
the feventeenth and eighteenth centuries 5 
of which work, eighteen volumes have al- 
ready appeared, and the nineteenth had been 
prepared for the prefs by the author. Fa. 
broni was born at Marradi, ‘in Tufcany, on 
the 7th of February, 1732. He acquired 
the firft rudiments of {cience at Faenza, and 
atterwards in the college of Bandinelli, at 
Rome, where he continued to purfue his 
ftudies, and at laftobtained acanonry. A va- 
cancy occurring of the office of prior of the 
church of St. Lorenzo, at Florence, he was 
appointed to fill that place by the Duke Pe~ 
ter Leopold : here he remained two years, till 
he was called to Pifa. Fabroni was highly 
efteemed by the above-mentioned - Grand 
Duke and his fucceffors, and availed them- 
felves of his advice relative to the affairs and 
adminiftration of the univerfity 5 and like- 
wife enabled him to travel, far the purpofe of 
enlarging of his knowledge. He carried on 
an extenfive epiftolary correfpondence with 
foreign literati, and was much valued by 
many princes. He had begun his great bio- 
Belides 
this work, he likewife wrote feparate biogra- 
phies of Cofmo, Lorenzo, Leo, and other 
diftinguifhed Princes of the houfe of Medici, 
and many panegyricks on celebrated learned 
men, partly in the Latin, and partly in the 
Italian language. To thefe may likewife be 
added the Giornale de Letieratt, which he had 
begun to edit at Pita in i792, and which he 
continued till the 102d volume. ‘Fwo 
years before his death, he publithed fome de- 
votional traéts, with which he declared him- 
felf to be better fatisfied than with all his 
preceding works. He left the bulk of his+ 
property, amounting to about fifteen hun- 
dred fcudi, to the poor, or to public chari- 
table inftitutions ; and all the claflics in his 
Nibraty, confifting of the beft editions, to his 
nephew, Kaphael Fabronis 
MONTHLY 
