Category
page 2Deaths from smallpox

David II of Imereti
King of Imereti
Fujiwara no Ishi
Empress consort of Emperor Go-Ichijo
Prince Antasari
20th Sultan of Banjar (1862) and National Hero of Indonesia
Prince Christian Charles of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Plön-Norburg
Officer in the Brandenburg-Prussian army
Casimir VI, Duke of Pomerania
Non-reigning Duke of Pomerania and Lutheran Administrator of Cammin Prince-Bishopric (1557-1605)
Albert Dubois-Pillet
French Neo-impressionist painter, army officer (1846-1890)
Prince Carlo, Duke of Calabria
Heir to the Thrones of Naples and Sicily (1775 - 1778)
Akaba of Dahomey
king of Dahomey
James Waldegrave, 2nd Earl Waldegrave
British earl
Kpengla
Kpengla was a King of the Kingdom of Dahomey, in present-day Benin, from 1774 until 1789. Kpengla followed his father Tegbessou to the throne and much of his administration was defined by the increasing Atlantic slave trade and regional rivalry over the profits from this trade. His attempts to control the slave trade generally failed, and when he died of smallpox in 1789, his son Agonglo came to the throne and ended many of his policies.
Élisabeth Charlotte of Lorraine
French princess
Iyasu III
Emperor of Ethiopia
Magdalena Sibylla of Neidschutz
German countess (1675-1694)

Louis of Lorraine
French prince
Nadezhda Rimskaya-Korsakova
Russian musician (1848–1919)
James Wirth
Founder of the Franciscan Brothers of the Holy Cross (1830–1871)
Najabat Ali Khan
nawab Nazim of Bengal, Bihar and Orissa (Nawab of Bengal)
Borommarachathirat IV
King of Ayutthaya
Maria Menshikova
Russian noble

Archduchess Maria Josepha of Austria
daughter of Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor and his third wife Eleonore Magdalene of the Palatinate (1687-1703)

Hermann Cohen
German-Jewish pianist and Carmelite priest (1820-1871)
Ann Hasseltine Judson
American missionary
Shō Sei
King of Ryūkyū (1800–1803)
Thadominbya
King of Ava

Wild Cat
Seminole chief
Giulia Centurelli
Italian painter (1832-1872)
Francis Hincks
Canadian politician
Arabanoo
Arabanoo ( – 1789) was an Aboriginal Australian man of the Eora forcibly abducted on New Year's Eve 1788 by British colonists who arrived with the First Fleet at Port Jackson. His capture was organised to force communication and relations between the Aboriginal people and the British. Governor Arthur Phillip came to esteem Arabanoo highly. He was the first Aboriginal Australian to live among Europeans.

Thomas Babington Macaulay
Yoruba priest and educator
Ahutoru
Ahutoru ( 1740 – 6 November 1771) was a Raiatean man, brother and adopted son of Ereti, the chief of the village where Louis Antoine de Bougainville anchored. He became the foremost intermediary between the Tahitians and the French during the visit, and volunteered to accompany Bougainville on his journey back to France. After one year in Paris, Ahutoru undertook the journey back to Tahiti, but he died of smallpox on the way.
Aniello Califano
Italian poet (1870–1919)
Caterina Martinelli
Italian opera singer
Princess Maria Anna of Naples and Sicily
Sicillian princess

Ferdinando Hastings, 6th Earl of Huntingdon
English politician
John Churchill, Marquess of Blandford
British noble
Abraham Ulrikab
Canadian Inuit attraction (1845-1881)
Louis Du Guernier
French artist
Francis Scott
Earl of Dalkeith