1829
Stephenson's Rocket Wins the Rainhill Trials
Five locomotives competed on a stretch of track near Liverpool to prove that steam engines could reliably haul passengers. George and Robert Stephenson's Rocket reached thirty miles per hour, the fastest any human had ever traveled on land. The Liverpool and Manchester Railway opened the following year. The railway age had a starting gun.
Treaty of Adrianople
After another Russo-Turkish war, the sultan ceded the Danube delta and recognized the autonomy of Serbia, Moldavia, Wallachia, and - most consequentially - an independent Greek state. The Ottoman Empire had just lost its first European province. The Eastern Question, which would poison Europe until 1914, was open. Russia gained effective control of the Danube mouth, giving it a chokehold on southeastern Europe's trade that alarmed both Britain and Austria.
Bentinck Bans Sati
Lord William Bentinck, Governor-General of India, signed Regulation XVII, making the burning of Hindu widows on their husbands' funeral pyres a culpable homicide. Ram Mohan Roy, the Bengali reformer, had campaigned for years. The ban was enforced unevenly, but it was the first large colonial intervention in Indian religious custom.
Catholic Emancipation
Wellington's Tory government, faced with Daniel O'Connell's mass meetings and the threat of civil war in Ireland, pushed through a bill allowing Catholics to sit in Parliament. The king cried when he signed it. It was the first great victory of organized popular pressure in nineteenth-century Britain, and the last of Anglican monopoly.