1783
Treaty of Paris Recognizes American Independence
Britain, France, Spain, and the new United States signed at the Hotel d'York in Paris. The British negotiators, eager to split the Americans from their French ally, conceded generous boundaries to the Mississippi. Benjamin West painted the signing; the British delegates refused to pose. A nation existed on paper. The treaty doubled the territory available to American settlers and laid the groundwork for westward expansion.
Laki Eruption in Iceland
The Laki fissure tore open and poured lava and poisonous gas across southeastern Iceland for eight months. A quarter of Iceland's population died; livestock perished by the hundreds of thousands. The sulfuric haze drifted across Europe, dimming the sun, killing crops, and contributing to the famine that helped ignite the French Revolution six years later.
First Manned Balloon Flight
Over Paris, Pilatre de Rozier and the Marquis d'Arlandes rose into the air in the Montgolfier brothers' paper balloon, tending a straw fire in its belly. They drifted five miles before landing in a vineyard. Humans had left the ground under their own contraption for the first time. Within weeks Jacques Charles flew a hydrogen balloon higher and longer, and the race between hot air and gas was on.
Russia Annexes Crimea
Nine years after Kucuk Kaynarca made the Crimean Khanate 'independent,' Catherine simply annexed it. Potemkin led Russian troops into Bakhchisarai without a fight. For the first time since the Mongol conquest, the northern Black Sea coast was Russian. The Ottoman Empire lost a centuries-old vassal and a fleet base. Sevastopol would be built as the new Black Sea naval headquarters, a city whose strategic value endures.
William Pitt the Younger Becomes Prime Minister
At 24, Pitt took office in London as the youngest prime minister in British history. His father had been the great war minister of the Seven Years' War; the son would rebuild national finances, pass India reform, and eventually lead Britain in the long duel with Napoleon. He would die in office at 46.