Category
page 11829 deaths

Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck
French naturalist (1744-1829)
Humphry Davy
British chemist
Niels Henrik Abel
Norwegian mathematician (1802–1829)

Leo XII
Pope of the Catholic Church from 1823 to 1829

Thomas Young
English polymath (1773-1829)
Friedrich Schlegel
German poet, critic and scholar, editor
Alexander Griboyedov
Russian diplomat, playwriter, poet, and composer (1795–1829)
John Jay
Founding Father, U.S. Chief Justice from 1789 to 1795

Maria Anna Mozart
Austrian musician

Paul François Jean Nicolas, vicomte de Barras
French politician (1755-1829)
Josef Dobrovský
Czech historian, lexicographer, linguist, literature historian, religion writer, science writer and roman catholic priest (1753-1829)

Louis Nicolas Vauquelin
French professor of chemistry (1763-1829)
François Joseph Gossec
French composer and conductor

Maria Josepha Amalia of Saxony
Queen consort of Spain

Mauro Giuliani
Italian guitarist, cellist, singer, and composer

Timothy Pickering
American statesman (1745-1829)
Maria Beatrice d'Este, Duchess of Massa
Austrian archduchess (1750-1829)
Jean-Baptiste Regnault
French painter (1754–1829)
Francis Buchanan-Hamilton
Scottish physician, traveller and naturalist (1762-1829)
Mahmud Shah Durrani
1801 to 1803 and 1809 to 1818

Johann Heinrich Wilhelm Tischbein
German painter (1751–1829)
Princess Henrietta of Nassau-Weilburg
Archduchess of Austria (1797-1829)

James Smithson
British chemist
Wojciech Bogusławski
Polish actor, director, dramatist
Juan Ignacio Molina
Chilean priest, naturalist, historian, botanist, ornithologist and geographer (1740-1829)
Kittur Chennamma
Indian freedom fighter, warrior queen
Peter I of Oldenburg
Prince-Bishop and Grand Duke (first as regent, then officially after 1823) of Oldenburg (1755-1829)
George Dawe
British artist (1781-1829)
Cristóbal Mendoza
President of Venezuela (1772-1829)
Adam Müller
German publicist, literary critic, political economist, and theorist of the state
John Adams
British seaman and mutineer, last survivor of the Bounty mutineers (1767–1829)
Infanta Benedita of Portugal
Portuguese infanta (1746-1829)
Sophia Albertina of Sweden
Princess-Abbess of Quedlinburg (1753–1829)
Asaf Jah III of Hyderabad
Nizam of Hyderabad
Nikolay Raevsky
Russian military commander
Princess Louise of Hesse-Darmstadt
German salonnière, daughter of Landgrave George William of Hesse-Darmstadt (1761-1829)
Richard Anthony Salisbury
British botanist and gardener (1761-1829)
Baltasar Hidalgo de Cisneros
Spanish naval officer (1756–1829)
Matsudaira Sadanobu
[松平定信] Daimyo and Roju (1759-1829)
Frederick VI, Landgrave of Hesse-Homburg
German general (1769-1829)
Henry Dearborn
American politician (1751-1829)
Cornelio Saavedra
Platian general (1759-1828)
John Mawe
British mineralogist and dealer in minerals (1764–1829)
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Anouvong
Chao Anouvong (; ; ), or regnal name Xaiya Setthathirath V (; ; ), (1767 – 1829), led the Lao rebellion (1826–28) against Siam as the last monarch of the Kingdom of Vientiane. Anouvong succeeded the throne in 1805 upon the death of his brother, Chao Inthavong (; ), Xaiya Setthathirath IV, who had succeeded their father, Ong Bun or Phrachao Siribounyasan (; ) Xaiya Setthathirath III. Anou was known by his father's regnal number until recently discovered records disclosed that his father and brother had the same regnal name.
Bushrod Washington
U.S. Supreme Court justice from 1798 to 1829
Mikiel Anton Vassalli
Maltese writer

Pedro Blanco Soto
President of Bolivia (1795-1829)
Albrecht Berblinger
German aviation pioneer
Sachal Sarmast
Sindhi poet
Adam Albert von Neipperg
Austrian marshall and nobleman (1775-1829)
Josefa Ortiz de Domínguez
Mexican insurgent (1768–1829)
Alexandre-Théodore-Victor, comte de Lameth
French soldier and politician (1760-1829)
Georg Wolfgang Franz Panzer
German botanist and entomologist (1755-1829)
Giuseppe Raddi
Italian botanist (1770-1829)
Pierre Daru
French writer, academic and statesman (1767-1829)
Therese Huber
German author
Anna Bunina
Russian poet
Louis Friant
French military commander (1758-1829)
Elizabeth Freeman
American former slave and abolitionist

Chōbunsai Eishi
thumb|300px|alt=|Three Women and a Boy Along the Sumida River, colour woodblock print,