Ebenezer Elliott
© National Portrait Gallery, London
Ebenezer Elliott
after Unknown artist
wood engraving, published 3 April 1847
10 1/4 in. x 6 7/8 in. (261 mm x 175 mm) paper size
Given by Henry Witte Martin, 1861
Reference Collection
NPG D8656
Sitterback to top
- Ebenezer Elliott (1781-1849), Called the 'Corn Law Rhymer', poet and bar-iron merchant. Sitter in 1 portrait.
Events of 1847back to top
Current affairs
The 10 Hours Factory Act passed, regulating working hours for women and children under the age of eighteen to a maximum of ten hours a day.The Communist League is founded in London, and drew up a set of rules and aims, including overthrowing the bourgeoisie and empowering the Proleteriat, and ending class division, forming the basis of Karl Marx's The Communist Manifesto (1848).}
Death and emigration resulting from starvation, plague and disease during worst year of the Great Famine in Ireland, known as Black 47.
Art and science
A good year for novels: Emily Bronte's passionate, rebellious and gothic Wuthering Heightsis published, followed shortly by her sister Charlotte's 'Jane Eyre, a story of a governess's struggle for liberty from social and gender constrictions. Drawing on a similar vein of revolution and rebellious women, William Thackeray's satirical novel Vanity Fair is serialised.International
The Don Pacifico affair sparks an international incident, when the Jewish trader's business was burned in an anti-semitic attack in Athens. When the Greek government refused to compensate him, Gibraltar-born Pacifico appealed to the British government. Foreign Minister Palmerston sent a squadron into the Aegean in 1850 to seize goods of the equivalent value, leading to strained relations with Turkey and Russia, and heated debates in Parliament.
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