Alexander Emperor of Russia, retires
from Wilna, I, 343. He orders the division of his army to re-unite at Drissa, 344. His proclamations, 347. Is to adhere to Lord Wellington's plan of defence, II, 110
Allen, J., commits suicide, II, 189
donian British frigate taken, 283. De- scription of an American frigate, 284 British declaration of war, II, 166. President's message to congress, 298 313. Act declaring war with Britain 303. New York convention, 307. The Chesapeake declared in a state o blockade, 206. Embargo and deten- tion of American ships, 263.
Alban, cutter, is lost on the coast of Association for the extirpation of heresy,
Holland, II, 204
Algerine outrage, II, 108
Agricultural reports, II, 16, 28, 85, 106, 117, 137, 158, 174, 195, 208 D'Antraigues, Count and Countess, mur- dered, II, 114
L'Ariadne and other French frigates, of- ficial account of an action with them, I, xxviii
America, affairs of, I, 243. Mr Whit- bread moves for copies of the corre- spondence betwixt the British and American governments, 254. Discus- sions on the Orders in Council, 258. Declaration of the British government respecting them, 267. Farther discus- sions on them, 268. The President's message to congress on the corre- spondence of Henry, a pretended agent of the British government, 269. Ame- rican declaration of war, 277. An af- fray at Baltimore, 281. General Hull surrenders himself and army, 281. The Guerriere British frigate taken, 281. General Wadsworth and army defeat- ed and taken prisoners, 282. Mace-
Badajoz, siege of, Gazette account, I, xx,
Bagnell, Lieutenant John, wounded in a duel, II, 165
Banks, Mr, he introduces a bill for abo- lishing sinecure places, I. 86. His bill opposed, 88
Bank notes, account of the amount is- sued, and of the silver tokens issued, II, 206
Barbadoes, singular phenomenon there, II, 98-
Barclay, Captain, backs himself against time, II, 112
Bassano's letter to Lord Castlereagh proposing peace, IF, 294 Baltimore riot, II, 145
Beauharnois, his letter to the Prince of Neufchatel, I, 387, 388 Bees, an instance of their fecundity, I,
Belfast mail-coach attacked by robbers, II, 112
Bennet, Mr, he moves for official returns to show the frequency of flogging in the army, I, 41
Bernadotte, correspondence between him and Buonaparte, II, 103. His income augmented, 122. His speech to the king of Sweden on his resuming the government, 286
Bellingham, John, he assassinates Mr Perceval, I, 144. His trial, 147. Exe- ecution, II, 76
Bohljat, an Armenian merchant, attempt to murder him, II, 162
Borringdon, Lord, his motion for an ad- dress to the Prince Regent on the proposed formation of a new ministry, I, 130
Borthwick Castle, sale of, II, 95 Bowden, William, commitment of, to Bodmin gaol, II, 83
Bowler, Thomas, his final examination at Bow-street office, II, 103. Executed, 128
Brand, Mr, his motion for a parliament- ary reform, I, 44
Bread, price of it in London, 1812, II,
Brighton, appearance of a singular fish there, II, 188
Britain, comparative statement of the population of, II, 10
Brock, General, defeats General Wads-
worth, I, 282. His proclamation to the army in Upper Canada, lvi Brougham, Mr, his motion relative to the droits of Admiralty, I, 20. His motion opposed, 22. Brings forward a motion for a committee to enquire into the state of the commerce and manufactures of the country, 258. Speaks on the orders in council, 272 Brown, William, murders a child, II, 119 Brown, Mrs, damages given to her, II, 6 Bruce, Mr, and housekeeper murdered,
II, 170. Murderer secured, 173 Bruce, J. his trial for murdering J. Dean, II, 204
Buccleuch, Duke, death of, II, 8 Buonaparte, Napoleon, he invades Rus-
sian Poland; his address to his sol- diers, I, 341. Enters Wilna, 343. His boastings, 345. Captures Smolensko,
359. Engages Kutusoff at Borodino ; his address to his army, 364. Enters Moscow, 369. Murders 100 Russians, 370. Attempts to establish order in the city, 371. Attempts to negociate, 373. Destroys the Kremlin, 376. Driven from Moscow, 377. Retreats, 382. Deserts his army, 389. Exposé of his views, II, 110. His proclama- tion to his soldiers, iii. His treaty of alliance with Austria, 293. His revo- cation of the Berlin and Milan de- crees 297. Summary of his Russian campaign, 209.
Burdett, Sir Francis, his interruption to the ordinary proceedings of the Com- mons, I, 3. His motion relating to the flogging of soldiers, 41 Bushby, Dr, speech on his intended ad- dress on opening Drury-Lane theatre, II, 160. His address, 161.
Cadiz, the French raise the siege of it, II, 147
Cain, Alexander, alias O'Kane, trial of, at Edinburgh, II, 9
Campbell, Dugald, police officer, death of, II, 2
Canning, Mr, his speech on the bill brought forward by Lord Castlereagh, for the preservation of the public peace in the disturbed counties, I, 113. His correspondence with Lord Liverpool on the formation of a new ministry, 154. He speaks on the catholic claims, 199. His speech on the Prince Regent's message, recommending an annuity to Lord Wellington, 297. Mi- nutes of conversation between him and Lord Liverpool, II, 222. And corre- spondence with Lord Liverpool, 234. Statement to Lord Melville, 252. Paper signed by him and Lord Welles- ley, 246
Carders, object of the association, I, 183 Castlereagh, Lord, he brings in a bill to
preserve the public peace in the dis- turbed counties, I, 110. His speeches on Mr S. Wortley's motions, 164, 179. His speech on rescinding the Orders in Council, 273. His speech
on the Prince Regent's message re- specting Portugal, 299. His answer to Bassano's letter, II, 296 Cathcart, Lord, his dispatch containing the particulars of the entry of the Rus- sians into Moscow, II, 183 Catholic emancipation, debates on, I,
189. Motions relating to it, 193 Catholic Board, its proceedings, I, 194 Chandeliers, description of a superb set, II, 200
Chaplin, Elizabeth, murdered by her hus- band, II, 187
Chipstow, accident there, II, 152 Charlotte, Princess of Wales, birth-day of, II, 7
Civil List, Mr Eden's motion for a select committee to enquire into the charges on it, I, 24
Cochrane, Lord, his views as to the mode in which the war ought to be conduct- ed, I, 5 Commerce, comparative view of the trade of Scotland for the half year, ending July 1812, with that ending July 1811, II, 198
Convention Act, proceedings in Ireland under it, II, 191
Conway, accident near it, II, 148 Cooke, Mr, the player, account of his death, II, 171
Corbet, Mr, wonderful sagacity of a dog in finding him, II, 151 Corn Exchange, arrivals at, II, 13 Corn, average price of it in England and Wales, 1812, II, 338
Corn Laws, review of the arguments on them, II, 343
Crawfurd, John Lindsay, trial of, II, 24 Crawfurd, Major-General Robert, fune- ral of, II, 28
Covent Garden, accident there, II, 120 Creevy, Mr, his motion relative to the Leeward Island duties, I, 23. His motion respecting the tellers of the exchequer's salaries, 85. Objections to it, 86
Crofton, Lieutenant Hamilton, trial and acquittal of, II, 9
Cruelty, instance of, II, 132 Ciudad Rodrigo, siege of, gazette ac- count, I, xii. Invested by Lord Wel- lington, II, 13
Currency, state of, discussions concern- ing it, I, 32
Danish squadron captured or destroyed, Gazette account of, I, xxxvi
Darmstadt, a girl poisons her brother there, I, 172
Dartmoor prison, insurrection at it, II.
Davy, Sir H. his letter to the president of the Royal Society, II, 181 Dawson, D., is tried for poisoning race- horses, II, 33, 112. His execution,
Detroit, Fort, N. America, gazette ac- count of its surrender, I, ii
Dodd, murders his wife, II, 145 La Dorade, French store-ship, her de- struction, II, 102
Disturbed counties, report of the com- mittee appointed to enquire into their state, II, 264
Droits of Admiralty, parliamentary dis- cussions relating to them, I, 19 Drury Lane theatre opened, II, 160 Dublin, an occurrence there, II, 183 Dunbar, shocking instance of barbarity near, II, 30
-, Esq. prosecutes Lord Semple for crim. con. II, 199
East India Company, proceedings of the directors, II, 4, 92
East Indies, an attempt made to break
out of Beckergunge jail, II, 176. Rob- bery in India, 177
Eden, Mr, his motion for a select com- mittee to enquire into the charges on the civil list, I, 24
Edinburgh, riots at, II, 1. Robberies at, 17. Rioters' trials, 31, 44. Riots in it, 130 Edinburgh Royal Society, election of their office-bearers, II, 191
Edwards, Sophia, and Mary Nest, drown themselves, II, 193
Elliot, Mr, he speaks against Mr Brand's
motion for parliamentary reform, I, 47
Emery, Mr, struck by lightning, II, 104 Engelbart, Colonel, murdered by the French, I, 390
Essen, General, he attacks the Prussians near Riga, I, 355, 380 Exeter, extraordinary circumstance at, II, 20
Examiner, trial of the proprietors for libels, II, 198
Exports from Great Britain, II, 335
Falkingham, interesting occurrence there, II, 148
Fashions, II, 16, 29, 50, 63, 107, 116, 136, 157, 173, 194, 208 Fitzwilliam, Earl, his motion for a com- mittee to enquire into the state of Ireland, I, 190
Finances, comparative statement of, II, 7 Frame-breakers, their proceedings, I, 101. Bill introduced by Mr Ryder for their punishment, 105, 108. Lord Castlereagh brings forward a bill for, their suppression, 110.
Freemantle, Mr, his speech on the Prince Regent's message respecting Portugal, I, 302
French eagles deposited in Whitehall Chapel, ceremony of, II, 156 Frolic, Gazette account of her capture by the Wasp, I, ix
Faulkner, Mr, commits suicide, II, 123 Folkestone, Lord, he proposes that a committee be appointed to enquire into the proceedings of the English ecclesiastical courts in the case of Mary Ann Dix, I, 30. He moves in the Commons for a return of all the foreigners serving in the British army,
40 Folkestone, remarkable circumstance oc- curred there, II, 133
Gamage, Lieutenant, his trial for mur- der, II, 179. His execution, 191 George III. King, the state of his health engages the attention of parliament, I, 8. Reports on the state of his health, II, 7, 105, 119,145, 163, 198, 217, 218
George, Prince Regent, his message to the Commons recommending a suit- able provision for the princesses, I, 24. His letter to the Duke of York, in which he expresses his desire that Lords Grey and Grenville should unite in strengthening the existing admini- stration, 127. His message recom- mending an annuity to Lord Welling- ton, 296. His message respecting Portugal, 299. Address of the corpo- ration of London to, II, 80. Celebra- tion of his birth-day, 123. He dis- solves parliament, and calls another, 156. His speech on opening parlia- ment, 215. His letter to the Duke of York, 218. His speech on proroguing parliament, 262. On opening parlia- ment, 271. His message on a grant to Russia, 274
St George and Defence, loss of, II, 12, 19 Gibson, James, committed to prison for murder, II, 97
Galdingham, Mrs Louisa, commits sui- cide, II, 133
Gore, Captain, the Honourable John, death of, II, 84
Gordon, Duchess of, her death, II, 56. Her interment, 79
Grahame, John, death of, II, 96 Grahame, Reverend James, Memoir of, II, 384
Grey, Lord, his speech on the address to the Prince Regent, I, 2. His answer to the Prince Regent's invitation to strengthen the Perceval administra- tion, 127. Opinion of many opposi- tion members on the answer, 129. Exposition of his political creed, 136. Grey and Grenville, Lords, their letter to the Duke of York, II, 220. Me- morandum from their minute, 244. Letters to Lord Wellesley, 246, 248, 250. To Moira, 253. To Wellesley, 254. To Moira, 255, 257 Grenville, Lord, his speech on the ad- dress to the Prince Regent, I, 2. His answer to the Prince Regent's invita- tion to strengthen the Perceval admi- nistration, I, 127. Opinion of many opposition members on the answer, 129. His speech on catholic emanci- pation, 189
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