Lord Byron—that is, George Gordon Byron, 6th…
April 1824 CE
Lord Byron—that is, George Gordon Byron, 6th baron Byron (1788-1824)—is an English born redhead whose personality and Romantic poetry has captured the imagination of Europe.
Renowned in the nineteenth century as the “gloomy egoist” of his autobiographical poem Childe Harold's Pilgrimage (1812-18), he will be more generally esteemed in the twentieth century for the satiric realism of his Don Juan (1819-24).
A champion of Greek independence from Turkish rule, Byron makes efforts to unite the various Greek factions and assumes personal command of a brigade of Souliot soldiers, reputedly the bravest of the Greeks, but a serious illness in February 1824 weakens him, and in April he contracts the fever from which he dies at Missolonghi on April 19.