1750 in literature
This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1750.
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Events
    
- March – The Rambler is founded by Edward Cave; it lasts for 208 issues, and is mostly written by Samuel Johnson.[1]
 - March 5 – Shakespeare's Richard II (in Colley Cibber's version) is presented at their theatre on Nassau Street (Manhattan) by Walter Murray and Thomas Kean,[2] the earliest known significant professional performance of Shakespeare in North America.
 - unknown dates
- Weekly meetings for contributors to the Encyclopédie begin, at the salon of Baron d'Holbach.
 - Jean-Jacques Rousseau wins the prize of the Academy of Dijon for his Discourse on the Arts and Sciences.
 - London theatres wage "the Romeo and Juliet war" – competing productions appear with David Garrick and Anne Bellamy at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane and with Spranger Barry and Susannah Cibber at the Royal Opera House in Covent Garden.
 - Old Orchard Street Theatre opens in Bath (England) under the management of John Palmer, with a performance of Shakespeare's Henry IV, Part 2.[3]
 - Carlo Goldoni commits himself to writing a comedy for each week of the 1750–1751 seasons at Gerolamo Medebach's Teatro San Angelo in Venice – 16 plays.[4]
 
 - After taking an M.D. at Aberdeen, Tobias Smollett travels in France, collecting material for The Adventures of Peregrine Pickle.
 
New books
    
    Fiction
    
- Anonymous
- The Adventures of Mr. Loveill, interspers'd with many real amours of the modern polite world
 - The Nominal Husband, or, Distress'd Innocence
 - Revived Fugitive: a novel, translated from the French
 
 - Henry Brooke – A New Collection of Fairy Tales
 - John Cleland – Fanny Hill (official and expurgated)
 - Sarah Fielding (attributed) – The History of Charlotte Summers
 - Edward Kimber – The Life and Adventures of Joe Thompson
 - Charlotte Lennox – The Life of Harriot Stuart
 - Robert Paltock – The Life and Adventures of Peter Wilkins
 - Sarah Scott – The History of Cornelia
 
Drama
    
- Kitty Clive – The Rehearsal, or, Bays in Petticoats
 - Carlo Goldoni
- La Bottega di Caffe (The Coffee Shop)
 - Il bugiardo (The Liar)
 - I pettegolezzi delle donne (Women's Gossip)
 - Il teatro comico (The comic theatre)
 - Il vero amico (The True Friend)
 
 - William Shirley – Edward the Black Prince
 - Voltaire – Oreste
 - William Whitehead – The Roman Father
 
Poetry
    
- William Collins – The Passions
 - Thomas Cooke – An Ode on Martial Virtue
 - Robert Dodsley – The Oeconomy of Human Life
 - Mary Jones – Miscellanies
 - Thomas Warton – The Triumph of Isis
 - Edward Young – The Complaint (aka Night Thoughts)
 
Non-fiction
    
- John Barrow – Navigatio Britannica
 - William Blackstone – An Essay on Collateral Consanguinity
 - Samuel Bownas – A Description of the Qualifications Necessary to a Gospel Minister
 - John Campbell – The Present State of Europe
 - Zachary Grey – A Free and Familiar Letter to William Warburton
 - Eliza Haywood – A Present for Women Addicted to Drinking (on the Gin crisis)
 - Francis Hutcheson – Reflections Upon Laughter (philosophy of humor)
 - Jean-Jacques Rousseau – Discourse on the Arts and Sciences[5]
 - George Savile, 1st Marquess of Halifax (died 1695), edited by Alexander Pope – A Character of King Charles the Second: and political, moral and miscellaneous thoughts and reflections
 - Laurence Sterne – The Abuses of Conscience
 - Madeleine de Puisieux – La Femme n’est pas inférieure à l'homme (Woman is not inferior to man)
 
Births
    
- January 7 – Robert Anderson, Scottish critic (died 1803)
 - June 13 – James Burney, English rear-admiral and naval writer (died 1821)
 - September 5 – Robert Fergusson, Scottish poet writing in Braid Scots (died 1774)
 - October 21 – Juraj Fándly, Slovak non-fiction writer, entomologist and priest (died 1811)
 - October 31 – Leonor de Almeida Portugal, 4th Marquise of Alorna, Portuguese noblewoman, painter, and poet (died 1839)[6]
 - unknown date – Henrietta Maria Bowdler, English author and expurgator (died 1830)
 
Deaths
    
- February 8 – Aaron Hill, English dramatist (born 1685)
 - May 3 – John Willison, Scottish Christian writer (born 1680)
 - June 15 – Marguerite De Launay, Baronne Staal, French writer (born 1684)
 - November 11 – Apostolo Zeno, Venetian poet and journalist (born 1668)[7]
 - November 18 – Susanna Highmore, English poet (born 1690)
 
References
    
- Thomas Lockwood; Ronald Paulson (31 October 2013). Henry Fielding: The Critical Heritage. Routledge. p. 13. ISBN 978-1-136-17124-6.
 - Kenrick, John. "Theatre in NYC: A Brief History I". Musicals101. Retrieved 2015-10-16.
 - "Walking with the greats". MQ magazine. July 2004. Retrieved 2011-02-14.
 - Holme, Timothy (1976). A Servant of Many Masters: The Life and Times of Carlo Goldoni. London: Jupiter. ISBN 0-904041-61-1.
 - "Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712—1778)". Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved 23 March 2019.
 - Avila e de Bolama, Antonio José de Avila (1916). A marqueza d'Alorna; algumas noticias authenticas para a historia da muito illustre e eminente escriptora que os poetas seus contemporaneos denominaram Alcipe. Lisboa Impr. de M.L. Torres. p. 52. Retrieved 24 March 2019.
 - John Lauris Blake (1840). A General Biographical Dictionary... James Kay, Jun. & Bro. p. 1019.
 
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