474 
WALES, : 
Married.] Evan Jones, esq. of Gell- ee 
Carnarvonshire, late Heutenant-colone! of the 
23d, to Miss Kenyon, youngest daughter of 
the late Roger K. esq. of Cefn. 
Robert Smith, esq. of Pontypool, to Miss 
Platt, daughter of the late John P. esq. of 
Monmouth. 
George Kinderley, esq. of Lincoln’s-inn, 
to Miss Adams, eldest daughter of John A. 
esq. late of Peterwell, Cardiganshire. 
At Haverfordwest, Dr. John Dauberry, of 
Doctor’s Commons, London, to Miss For- 
tune, daughter of the late Joseph F. esq. 
Died.] At Abergavenny, Sir Charles Mit- 
chell, late commander in the East India Com- 
pany’s service. 
At Levingatefon, near Brecon, Rees Price, 
esq. Surgeon, of Hay, a gentleman of great 
eminence if his profession. 
At Leeswood, Flintshire, Miss Eyton, eld- 
est daughter of ‘the Rev. Hope Wynne E, 
At Merlin’s-bridge, Haverfordwest, George 
Mends, esq. purser in the royal navy. 
At Pen-y-Bryn, Denbighshire, aged 95, 
Mrs. Holland, relict of Hugh H. esq. The 
very valuable estate of Pen- y-Bryn devolves 
to Mr. R. Jones, of Glyn-r-isaf, Carnarvon- 
shire. 
At Maenturog, Widcioncthahine, Barbara 
Williams, 101. 
Near Milford, on his way to Bristol, Joshua 
Courtenay, esq. late of Waterford. 
At Trefrew, Mold Flintshire, George Tho- 
mas, esq. 
At Penynant, Denbighshire, T. Griffith, 
esq. 97. 
At Newhouse, near Cardiff, Thomas Lewis, 
esq. a captain in the Eastern Glamorgan vo- 
lunteer infantry, 
At Forden, near Montgomery, Mr. dots 
Lloyd, son of John L. esq. 
At Pontgarreg, in the parish of Liandyssyl, 
Cardiganshire, John Davies Jenkin, shoe» 
maker. He was a remarkable instance of the 
improvement natural genius is capable of, by 
application, without the assistance of educa- 
tion. . He became a master of the English 
language, so far as to understand the divines, 
historians, and politicians of the age, though 
he could neither ask nor answer the shortest 
questions in that language. 
At Presteign, Radnorshire, in his 88th 
year, Mr. William Stanton, who served the 
office of parish clerk fifty-four years. He 
was blind latterly, but lived to know his 
great great grand daughter, who had living, 
previous to his decease, her father, grand~ 
father, and grandmother, great grandfather, 
and great grandmother, and the above-men- 
‘tioned great great grandfather; all of whom 
resided within thirty yards of each other. 
What is very remarkable, his immediate pre- 
decessor in the office of parish clerk (one Ri- 
chard Bebb) held that office forty years. who 
was grandfather to one of the.present Direc- 
tors of the East India Company. A humour- 
Gus incident, well known‘in that towa, be- 
1 
IV, ales—I ? eland—Deaths Abroad, 
fone is 
tween the rector we the clerk’s son, ‘tare the 
cause of his quitting the country, and settling 
in London, which aid the foundation of the 
present advancement in life of that family. 
IRELAND. 
At Castle Waller, county of: Limerick, 
Bridget Behan, aged 140 years. She retained 
all her faculties to the last moment About 
six years back she fell down stairs and broke 
her thigh, and, contrary to expectation, she 
recovered, and Sa He stronger on it everafter © 
—and, strange toteli! it completely cured her 
of an old rheumatism with which that limb 
had been affected; very lately she cut ar 
eye-tooth. | 
DEATHS ABROAD. 
At Copenhagen, Christian the VIIth, 
King of Denmark. He was born on the 
29th of January, 1749. In the year 1766 
he was married to the Princess Carolina Ma- 
tilda, sister of our revered monarch. The 
unfortunate fate of that princess, owing, it 
is generally supposed to the enmity of her 
step- -mother, has long been a subject of re+ 
gret in this country. The late King of 
Denmark .came to England in the year 1767, 
and was received with every possible. demon- 
stration of respect by all ranks of people, as 
well as by the illustrious family to whom he 
had been recently allied. Soon after his 
return to Denmark, his faculties which were 
never bright, sunk into a decay which wholly 
unfitted bim for the duties of his situation, and- 
his kingdom has ever since been govefned 
under his name, without the least. chance 
that he would, be able to resume: his royal 
functions. Before this melancholy eveat in 
his lite there was nothing in his character, 
morally,or intellectually, calculated to excite 
admiration. 
At Paris, aged 34, Madame Cotin, known’ 
in the ieee world by the interesting novels 
of Claire d' Albe ; Malvina; Amélie de Mansfeld 
Mathilde ; Biles. Z and a short epic compo- 
sition in pruse entitled La Prise de Fericho. 
At Gottingen, the celebrated political wri- 
ter I. S. Putter, in the 83d year of his age. 
At the Cape of Good Hope, on the 27tli of 
October, Andrew Barnard, Esq Secretary of 
the colony of the Cape of Gadi Hope, a situ- 
ation which he had filled with great credit, 
from the commencement ef Lord Macartney” $ 
government, in 1797, till the restoration of 
the colony to Holland by the'peace of Amiens, 
and to which he was again appointed’ by.the 
Jate ministry, under the government off 
Lord Caledon. Mr. Barnard was son of the 
late Dr. B. Bishop of Limerick, and married: 
Lady Anne Lindsay,. sister to the Earl of Bal 
cafras, and the countess of Hardwicke, — 
survives him. 
At Koepenick, near Berlin, the celebrated 
mathematician, John Bernoulli, member of 
the Royal Academy of Sciences at. Berlin, 
and known by several mathematical and astro- 
nomical publications, particularly his» Recueil’ 
pour les Astronomes. 
MONTHLY 
seit, 
é 
