Quota Acts oblige magistrates to find a specified quota of men to serve in the Royal Navy.[5]
English Benedictine monks expelled from the Priory of St. Gregory's at Douai, France are permitted to proceed to England where they settle as guests of Sir Edward Smythe at Acton Burnell, Shropshire; later they will establish Downside Abbey in Somerset. This year also English Benedictine nuns expelled from the Priory of Our Lady of Good Hope in Paris settle initially in Dorset; later they will form Saint Mary's Abbey, Colwich.
13–14 March – Battle of Genoa: the British and Neapolitan fleets are victorious over the French.
Riots over shortages of bread in many towns across Britain.[8]
Only 12.9 millimetres or 0.51 inches of rain fall in September but as much as 173.2 millimetres or 6.82 inches in October, creating the largest month-to-month rise in the England and Wales Precipitation series.[11]
^ abMcCranie, Kevin (2009). "Recruitment for the British Navy 1793–1815". In Stoker, Donald; Schneid, Frederick C.; Blanton, Harold D. (eds.). Conscription in the Napoleonic Era: A Revolution in Military Affairs?. London: Routledge. p. 96. ISBN9781134270101.
^Heathcote, Tony (1999). The British Field Marshals 1736–1997: a biographical dictionary. London: Leo Cooper. ISBN0-85052-696-5.