This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1817.
Events
- January 27 â March 18 â Jane Austen begins, but abandons her novel Sanditon ("Three Brothers").
- February 12 â Junius Brutus Booth makes his stage debut in the title role of Shakespeare's Richard III at the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden in London.
- February 20 â Junius Brutus Booth as Iago plays opposite Edmund Kean in the title role of Othello at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane in London.
- March â Percy and Mary Shelley with Claire Clairmont and the latter's new daughter by Lord Byron, Allegra (at this time called Alba), having moved from Bath, begin a year's residence in Marlow, Buckinghamshire, England, where Mary completes Frankenstein and gives birth to her third child, and Percy writes The Revolt of Islam.
- April 1 â Blackwood's Magazine is launched as the Edinburgh Monthly Magazine. In October the publisher, William Blackwood, relaunches it as Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine.
- August 6 â Gas lighting on stage is introduced in London's English Opera House (extended to the auditorium on September 8). On September 6 it is introduced at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, where it has already been installed in the auditorium and foyer, and the Theatre Royal, Covent Garden, as a demonstration.
- December 18 â 20 â William Hone successfully defends himself in a London court on charges arising from his publication of political satires.
- December 20 â Jane Austen's first and last completed novels, respectively Northanger Abbey and Persuasion are published together by John Murray in London (dated 1818), six months after the author's death at Winchester. Her brother Henry Austen contributes a biographical note, which first publicly identifies her as the author of her previously anonymous novels. She had earned ã684 in her lifetime from her writing.
- December 28 â English painter Benjamin Haydon introduces John Keats to William Wordsworth and Charles Lamb at a dinner in London to celebrate progress on his painting Christ's Entry into Jerusalem, in which all feature.
- December 31 â Walter Scott's historical novel Rob Roy, written from this spring, is published anonymously by Archibald Constable in Edinburgh, while a shipload of copies is carried from Leith to London for simultaneous publication there by Longman.
- unknown â J. & J. Harper publishing house is founded in New York City by James Harper and his brother John.
New books
Fiction
Drama
Poetry
Non-fiction
Births
- February 21 â José Zorrilla y Moral, Spanish poet and dramatist (died 1893)
- March 19 â Jozef Miloslav Hurban, Slovak writer, radical and minister (died 1886)
- May 7 â Euphemia Vale Blake, British-born American author and critic (died 1904)
- May 21 â Hermann Lotze, German philosopher (died 1881)
- July 12 â Henry David Thoreau, American poet and philosopher (died 1862)
- September 5 â Aleksey Konstantinovich Tolstoy, Russian poet, dramatist and novelist (died 1875)
- September 14 â Theodor Storm, German novelist and poet (died 1888)
- December 31 â James T. Fields, American publisher (died 1881)
Deaths
References