This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1709.
Events
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February 1 or 2 – Alexander Selkirk, the inspiration for Robinson Crusoe, is rescued from the Juan Fernández Islands, where he was marooned, and begins his return to civilization.
April 12 – The magazine The Tatler is founded in London by Richard Steele, writing as Isaac Bickerstaff. On July 8 "Mrs. (Phoebe) Crackenthorpe" (perhaps Delarivier Manley)[1] begins publication of The Female Tatler.
April 26 – An act of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland provides for public libraries in presbyteries.[2]
May–October 20 – Delarivier Manley's roman à clefThe New Atalantis (Secret Memoirs and Manners of Several Persons of Quality, of both Sexes, From The New Atalantis, an Island in the Mediterranean) is published in London (in two volumes, anonymously), purporting to be translated from Italian. Its satire of the Whigs is so scurrilous that the author is detained for questioning from October 29 to November 5.[1] It goes through seven editions.
May 2 – Alexander Pope's career as a poet is launched with the publication of the anthology Poetical Miscellanies, The Sixth Part, edited by John Dryden and published by Jacob Tonson in London.
June 28 – Historian Gustaf Adlerfelt is killed at the Battle of Poltava; his eyewitness account is continued by his son.[3]
unknown dates
The Works of Mr William Shakespear edited by dramatist Nicholas Rowe appears. It is the first modern edition of Shakespeare's plays, including scene divisions, dramatis personæ and a prefatory account of Shakespeare's life, the first substantial biography of him. An unauthorised seventh volume, including Shakespeare's poems, is perhaps edited by Charles Gildon.
Ælfric of Eynsham's An English-Saxon Homily on the Birth-day of St. Gregory is translated from Old English by Elizabeth Elstob.
Two lines from Mihai Iștvanovici's Romanian poem in his version of the Georgian script
Anthim the Iberian, Metropolitan of Ungro-Wallachia, sends his pupil Mihai Iștvanovici to establish the first printing press in the Kingdom of Kartli and in Georgia at large. Operating out of Tbilisi Iștvanovici produces the Gospel (Sahareba), designing his own fonts for Georgian scripts (the first ones, done by Miklós Tótfalusi Kis, had never reached Tbilisi);[4] his letters are also used for his Romanian-language poem, written as a postface to the Gospel.[5]
New books
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Prose
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Abbé Olivier – Memoirs of the Life and Adventures of Signor Rozelli
Mary Astell – Bart'lemy Fair
Thomas Baker – Reflections on Learning, showing the Insufficiency thereof in its several particulars, in order to evince the usefulness and necessity of Revelation, vol. 1
George Berkeley – An Essay Towards a New Theory of Vision
Richard Blackmore – Instructions to Vander Beck
Samuel Cobb – The Female Reign
Anthony Ashley Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury – Sensus Communis (philosophy)
Daniel Defoe – The History of the Union of Great Britain
Charles Gildon – The Golden Spy (satire)
White Kennett – A Vindication of the Church and Clergy of England
William King – Miscellanies in Prose and Verse
John Lawson – A New Voyage to Carolina
Delarivier Manley – The New Atalantis
John Strype – Annals of the Reformation and Establishment of Religion
Jonathan Swift
A Famous Prediction of Merlin
A Project for the Advancement of Religion and the Reformation of Manners ("By a Person of Quality")
A Vindication of Isaac Bickerstaff
William Temple – Memoirs: Part III (ed. Jonathan Swift)
John Trenchard – The Natural History of Superstition
Giambattista Vico – De Nostri Temporis Studiorum Rationae (On the Study Methods of Our Times)
Drama
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Anthony Aston – Love in a Hurry
Susanna Centlivre
The Busie Body
The Man's Bewitched
Colley Cibber – The Rival Fools
Prosper Jolyot de Crébillon – Electre
John Dennis – Appius and Virginia
Thomas d'Urfey – The Modern Prophets
Juan Claudio de la Hoz y Mota – José, salvador de Egipto
Charles Johnson – Love and Liberty (not performed)
Alain-René Lesage – Turcaret
Mary Pix – The Adventures in Madrid
Poetry
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Main article: 1709 in poetry
John Reynolds – Death's Vision Represented in a Philosophical Sacred Poem
Poetical Miscellanies: The Sixth Part (also called Tonson's Miscellanies)
Births
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Samuel Johnson's birthplace in Market Square, Lichfield
April 14 – Charles Collé, French dramatist (died 1783)
July 24 – James Harris, English grammarian (died 1780)
August 7 – Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan, French polymath, author and poet (died 1784)
August 29 – Jean-Baptiste-Louis Gresset, French poet and dramatist (died 1777)
September 3 – Joan Claudi Peiròt, French writer in Occitan (died 1795)
September 18 – Samuel Johnson, English author, critic, lexicographer and poet (died 1784)
November 1 – Ignatius von Weitenauer, German Jesuit writer, exegete and Orientalist (died 1783)
November 23 – Julien Offray de La Mettrie, French philosopher and physician (died 1751)
December 14 – Caspar Friedrich Hachenberg, German grammarian (died 1793)
^Haiman, György (1985). "Notes and Comments. International Assistance in the Establishment of Georgian Printing". Acta Litteraria Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae. 27 (1–2): 222–227.
^Cartojan, Nicolae (1944). "Epoca lui Brâncoveanu". Revista Fundațiilor Regale. XI (10): 157–158.