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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1715.
Events
- c. August – Nicholas Rowe becomes the Poet Laureate of Great Britain.
 - The first record of the actress and writer Eliza Haywood tells of her performing in Thomas Shadwell's Shakespeare adaptation, Timon of Athens; or, The Man-Hater at the Smock Alley Theatre, Dublin.[1]
 
New books
Prose
- Joseph Addison – The Free-Holder (periodical)
 - Jane Barker – Exilius; or, The Banished Roman
 - Richard Bentley – A Sermon upon Popery
 - Samuel Croxall – The Vision
 - Daniel Defoe 
- An Appeal to Honour and Justice
 - The Family Instructor
 - A Hymn to the Mob
 
 - Elizabeth Elstob – The Rudiments of Grammar for the English-Saxon Tongue, first given in English; with an apology for the study of northern antiquities, the first grammar of Old English
 - Thomas-Simon Gueullette – Les Mille et un quarts-d’heure, contes tartares (The Thousand and One Quarters of an Hour, Tartarian Tales)
 - Alain-René Lesage (anonymous) – L'Histoire de Gil Blas de Santillane (Books 1–6)
 - Charles Montagu – The Works and Life of the Late Earl of Halifax
 - Jonathan Richardson – An Essay on the Theory of Painting
 - "Captain" Alexander Smith – The Secret History of the Lives of the Most Celebrated Beauties, Ladies of Quality, and Jilts
 - Richard Steele
- The Englishman: Second Series (periodical)
 - Town-Talk (periodical)
 
 
Children
Drama
- Christopher Bullock – A Woman's Revenge[2]
 - Henry Carey – The Contrivances[2]
 - Susanna Centlivre – The Gotham Election (not performed because of political content)
 - Chikamatsu Monzaemon – The Battles of Coxinga (国姓爺合戦, Kokusen'ya Kassen)
 - Charles Rivière Dufresny – La Coquette de village
 - John Gay – The What D'Ye Call It[2]
 - Benjamin Griffin 
- Injured Virtue; or, The Virgin Martyr
 - Love in a Sack[2]
 
 - Newburgh Hamilton – The Doating Lovers[2]
 - Charles Johnson – The Country Lasses[2]
 - Charles Knipe – A City Ramble[2]
 - Charles Molloy – The Perplexed Couple[2]
 - Nicholas Rowe -The Tragedy of Lady Jane Grey[2]
 - Lewis Theobald – The Perfidious Brother (allegedly plagiarized, staged the following year)
 - John Vanbrugh – The Country House
 
Poetry
- Charles Cotton – The Genuine Works of Charles Cotton
 - Alexander Pope 
- The Temple of Fame (based on Chaucer)
 - The Iliad of Homer vol. i.
 
 - Thomas Tickell – The First Book of Homer's Iliad
 - Isaac Watts 
- Divine Songs
 - A Guide to Prayer
 
 
Births
- January 14 (baptised) – Frances Vane, Viscountess Vane (Lady Fanny), English memoirist (died 1788)
 - January 26 or February 26 – Claude Adrien Helvétius, French philosophical writer (died 1771)
 - June 4 (c. 1715–1724) – Cao Xueqin, Chinese writer (died 1763)
 - September 30 – Étienne Bonnot de Condillac, French philosophical writer (died 1780)
 - October 1 – Richard Jago, English poet (died 1781)
 - Probable year of birth
- John Hawkesworth, English writer and editor (died 1773)[3]
 - Alexander Russell, Scottish physician and naturalist (died 1768)
 
 
Deaths
- January 7 – François Fénelon, French archbishop, theologian, poet and writer (born 1651)
 - February 25 – Pu Songling (蒲松齡), Qing Dynasty Chinese writer (born 1640)
 - March 8 – William Dampier, English explorer and writer (born 1651)
 - March 17 – Gilbert Burnet, Scottish theologian and historian (born 1643)
 - July 30 – Nahum Tate, Irish poet and hymnist (born 1652)
 - October 13 – Nicolas Malebranche, French priest and rationalist philosopher (born 1638)
 - Unknown date – Mary Monck, Irish poet (date of birth unknown)[4]
 
References
- ↑ Blouch, Christine (Summer 1991). "Eliza Haywood and the Romance of Obscurity". SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900. 31 (3): 535–551. doi:10.2307/450861. JSTOR 450861.
 - 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 William J. Burling (1992). A Checklist of New Plays and Entertainments on the London Stage, 1700-1737. Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press. pp. 57–60. ISBN 978-0-8386-3451-6.
 - ↑ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 97.
 - ↑ Joanne Shattock; Senior Lecturer Department of English Joanne Shattock (1993). The Oxford Guide to British Women Writers. Oxford University Press. p. 299. ISBN 978-0-19-214176-7.
 
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