1764

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Featured events in 1764
1764·Europe·Science

Hargreaves Invents the Spinning Jenny

A Lancashire weaver named James Hargreaves watched his daughter's spinning wheel topple, saw the spindle keep spinning, and built a frame with eight spindles driven from one wheel. Soon one woman could do the work of eight. Cottage weavers rioted; the thread poured out; the Industrial Revolution quietly started in a workshop.

1764Enlightenment
1764·South Asia·War

Battle of Buxar

On a plain in Bihar, 7,000 Company troops under Hector Munro defeated the combined armies of Mughal emperor Shah Alam II, Awadh's nawab, and Bengal's Mir Qasim - some 40,000 men. Plassey had been a bribe; Buxar was a real battle. It confirmed British military dominance over northern India. The Treaty of Allahabad that followed gave the Company revenue rights over Bengal, Bihar, and Orissa.

October 22, 1764Enlightenment
1764·North America·Politics

Sugar Act Passed by Parliament

George Grenville's revenue act cut the molasses duty but enforced it seriously, hoping to raise 45,000 pounds a year from American smugglers. Boston merchants, who had been smuggling profitably for decades, discovered a sudden passion for constitutional principle. The phrase 'taxation without representation' entered the pamphlet war. James Otis argued in a widely reprinted essay that Parliament had no right to tax subjects who elected no members.

April 5, 1764Enlightenment
1764·Europe·Culture

Beccaria's On Crimes and Punishments

A young Milanese marquis, writing anonymously, argued that punishment should be proportionate, certain, and never torturous - and that the death penalty was almost never justified. The little book was banned by the Inquisition and translated into every European language. Modern criminal justice reform begins in its 104 pages. Catherine the Great quoted it in her legislative instructions; the American founders studied it while drafting their Bill of Rights.

1764Enlightenment
1764·Europe·Culture

Mozart Composes First Symphony at Eight

Touring London with his father, young Wolfgang composed a small symphony in E-flat while isolated by his father's illness. The British museum still holds the manuscript, in a child's careful hand. Leopold charged admission to hear his son play blindfolded; the proceeds funded the next leg. The symphony, though modest, shows a command of orchestral texture remarkable in a boy who had been alive barely three thousand days.

1764Enlightenment
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