September 13 – The
Treaty of the Three Black Eagles or the Treaty of Berlin, a secret treaty between the Austrian Empire, the Russian Empire and Prussia against the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
October 16 – Russia approves the second Kamchatka expedition of Danish-born cartographer
Vitus Bering, and the Admiralty orders him to sail east and try to claim uncharted lands in North America.
December 19 –
Benjamin Franklin, in the Pennsylvania Gazette, first advertises the publication of Poor Richard's Almanack, purportedly written by "Richard Saunders", a pen name used by Franklin. [10] The book goes on sale on December 28. [11] The annual publication will continue until 1758.
Date unknown
Herman Boerhaave publishes the authorized edition of his Elementa chemiae, recognised as the first text on chemistry.[12]
^Quintano, Anton (2003). The Maltese-Hospitaller Sailing Ship Squadron 1701-1798. Publishers Enterprises Group. p. 17.
ISBN9789990903485.
^Grinëv, Andreĭ Valʹterovich (translated by Richard L. Bland) (2018). Russian Colonization of Alaska: Preconditions, Discovery, and Initial Development, 1741-1799. University of Nebraska Press.
^Brant, Clare (2007). Walking the streets of eighteenth-century London : John Gay's Trivia (1716. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. p. 10.
ISBN9780199280490.
September 13 – The
Treaty of the Three Black Eagles or the Treaty of Berlin, a secret treaty between the Austrian Empire, the Russian Empire and Prussia against the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
October 16 – Russia approves the second Kamchatka expedition of Danish-born cartographer
Vitus Bering, and the Admiralty orders him to sail east and try to claim uncharted lands in North America.
December 19 –
Benjamin Franklin, in the Pennsylvania Gazette, first advertises the publication of Poor Richard's Almanack, purportedly written by "Richard Saunders", a pen name used by Franklin. [10] The book goes on sale on December 28. [11] The annual publication will continue until 1758.
Date unknown
Herman Boerhaave publishes the authorized edition of his Elementa chemiae, recognised as the first text on chemistry.[12]
^Quintano, Anton (2003). The Maltese-Hospitaller Sailing Ship Squadron 1701-1798. Publishers Enterprises Group. p. 17.
ISBN9789990903485.
^Grinëv, Andreĭ Valʹterovich (translated by Richard L. Bland) (2018). Russian Colonization of Alaska: Preconditions, Discovery, and Initial Development, 1741-1799. University of Nebraska Press.
^Brant, Clare (2007). Walking the streets of eighteenth-century London : John Gay's Trivia (1716. Oxford New York: Oxford University Press. p. 10.
ISBN9780199280490.