to taxes, ib.; the Greek patriarch deposed by the Sultan, ib.; insurrec- tion against Mehemet Ali, Pacha of Egypt, at Naplous, [465]; Mehemet himself proceeds against the insur- gents, who are reduced to obedience, ib.; revolt in Aleppo, &c., ib.; at- tempt on the part of the Sultan to engage Russia against Egypt, [466] Ude, M., cook, at Crockford's, sum- mons against, 101
Union, the, Mr. O'Connell's motion for repeal of, and debate on, [18] Unions, trades', assemblage and pro- cession of, with petition, to Lord Melbourne, 58
Unionists, trades', riot of, at Oldham, 58 United States, the bill for satisfying its pecuniary claims on France, rejected by the Chamber of Deputies, [361]; the Bank question, [467]; contest between the president and Senate, ih.; substitution of a metallic cur- rency, [468]; elections for a new Congress, [469]; disturbances at New York occasioned by the hostility to negro emancipation, ib.; American banks, 350; table of United States' Debt, &c., 351; president's message, 352; relations with European govern- ments, ib.; indemnity received from that of the Two Sicilies, 353; survey of the boundary line between the United States and Mexico, 854 ; non- performance of its promises of pay- ment on the part of the French go- vernment, 355; the conduct to be pursued in regard to it, by the American government, 361, state of the finances, 362; mal-practices on the part of the bank of the United States, 363; ecommended that it be separated from the government, 364; gold coinage, 366; repulse of the predatory Indian tribes, 367; ar- rangements for the removal of various tribes, ib.; regulations as to pen- sions, 368
Universities, examinations at Oxford, 284, at Cambridge, 286
Universities, petitions for admitting Dissenters to [169], [171]; counter- petitions, [174], [175]; Mr. Wood's bill for granting their admission, [175]; consequences of the American system of excluding religious instruction, [184]; the bill passed in the Com- mons, [191]
Upham, Edw., death, 207
Uregg, Count, extraordinary murder of, in Germany, 28
Vienna, congress of the German States, at, [654]
Voyage, extraordinary one accomplished by the Circe,' 57
Ward, Mr., his motion for a reduction of the Irish Church Establishment, [37]
Wathen, Capt. Aug., tried by court- martial, and consequent removal of Lord Brudenell from the command of the 15th Hussars, 11 Wellesley, Marquis, his correspondence with Earl Grey respecting the Irish Coercion Act, [101]; his change of opinion relative to do., [111] Wellington, Duke of, speech on the ad- dress, [3]; remarks on affairs of Spain and Portugal, [4]; Egypt,[5]; church property, ib.; Irish coercion bill, ib.; Irish tithes, [6]; speech relative to the Irish commission, [63]; observa- tions on Earl Grey's speech on his resignation, [119]; speech on Lord Althorp's modified Coercion bill, [142]; speech on the Irish Tithe bill, [160]; on the Poor Laws bill, [243]; his installation as chancellor of Ox- ford, 78
Westmeath, Marchioness of, amount of alimony awarded to, by the privy council, 173
Wexford election, transactions respect- ing, between Mr. Littleton and Mr. O'Connell, [103], [108] Wharncliffe, Lord, speech relative to Irish Coercion bill, and the ensuing change in the ministry, [127] Wicklow, Earl of, moves for a copy of the Irish church commission, [56] Will, trial respecting forgery of one, 311 Williams, Dr. G., death, 206 Wood, Mr., brings in a bill for the ad-
mission of Dissenters to the Univer- sities, [175]; unable to explain the purport of some of its clauses, [187] Wordsworth, poems by, 327 Workhouses, effect of the new Poor Laws' bill in regard to, [230] Wynford, Lord, his motion and speech against the Poor Laws' bill, [241] Wynn, Mr. C, W., his speech against the bill for admitting Dissenters to the Universities, [179]
Zumalacarregui, commander of the Car- list troops, defeated by the royalists in Spain, [378]; his ordinance against the royalists, [379]
T. C. HANSARD, 32, PATER-NOSTER-ROW.
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