1790 in Great Britain
Events from the year 1790 in Great Britain.Incumbents
- Monarch – George III
- Prime Minister – William Pitt the Younger
- Parliament – 16th, 17th
Events
- 1 January – the 91-mile Oxford Canal is opened throughout, providing an important link between the River Thames at Oxford and Coventry in the English Midlands.
- 30 January – Henry Greathead's Original rescue life-boat is tested on the River Tyne.
- 14 March – William Bligh arrives back in Britain with the first report of the Mutiny on the Bounty.
- April–May – Josiah Wedgwood shows off his first reproductions of the Portland Vase.
- 16 June – 28 July: a general election is held, giving Pitt an increased majority.
- 23 June – alleged London Monster arrested in London: he later receives two years for three assaults.
- 28 June – Forth and Clyde Canal opened.
- 4 July – Third Anglo-Mysore War: in India, Britain allies with the Nizam of Hyderabad against the Mysore.
- 27 July – the Treaty of Reichenbach is signed between Britain, Prussia, Russia and the Dutch Republic allowing Austria to retake the Austrian Netherlands.
- 4 August – Lord North becomes Earl of Guildford upon the death of his father and moves from the House of Commons to the House of Lords.
- undated
- * First organised otter hunt established, at Culmstock, Devon.
- * James Wyatt erects a cast-iron footbridge at Syon Park, Isleworth, the first known British example.
Publications
- 1 November – Edmund Burke's work Reflections on the Revolution in France.
- William Blake's work The Marriage of Heaven and Hell.
Births
- 2 February – William Elford Leach, zoologist and marine biologist
- 6 September – John Green Crosse, surgeon
- 21 November – Edmund Lyons, 1st Baron Lyons, admiral
- 19 December – William Edward Parry, Arctic explorer
Deaths
- 15 January – John Landen, mathematician
- 20 January – John Howard, prison reformer
- 5 February – William Cullen, physician and chemist
- 4 March – Flora MacDonald, Jacobite
- 16 May – Philip Yorke, 2nd Earl of Hardwicke, politician
- 21 May – Thomas Warton, poet
- 17 July – Adam Smith, economist and philosopher
- 4 August – Francis North, 1st Earl of Guilford, peer and politician
- 24 November – Robert Henry, historian