| COTTONGIN | Invention of 1793 |
| MARAT | Assassination victim of 1793 |
| VAUCLUSE | Department of SE France created in 1793 out of parts of the departments of Bouches-du-Rhone, Drome and Basses-Alpes |
| MACKENZIE | Alexander _, Scottish explorer; the first European to achieve an east-to-west crossing of America north of Mexico (1793) |
| BRUMAIRE | Second month of the French revolutionary calendar (1793-1805), extending from Oct 23 to Nov 21; the month of mist (8) |
| ECCLES | Greater Manchester town known for the invention, in 1793, of a pastry filled with dried fruit (6) |
| MARIEANTOINETTE | Archduchess of Austria who became Queen of France in 1774, executed in 1793 during the French Revolution (5,10) |
| CORDAY | Surname of the killer of Jean Paul Marat in 1793 (6) |
| JACOBIN | Member of the radical French political club that oversaw the Reign of Terror (1793-4) |
| SLAVE | Fugitive ___ Law (1793 act of Congress) |
| TERROR | Reign of ___: 1793-94 |
| ANTOINETTE | Queen of France executed in 1793, Marie ... |
| LOUISCAPET | King of France from 1774 to 1793 (5,5) |
| LOUISSEIZE | King of France from 1774 to 1793 (5,5) |
| LOUISXVI | King of France who was guillotined in 1793, around nine months prior to his wife Marie Antoinette (5 |
| NOYADE | Execution by drowning as carried out during the Reign of Terror at Nantes, France, from 1793-94 (6) |
| TOULON | Town of southern France, freed from Anglo-Spanish occupation in 1793 by forces that included a young Napoleon Bonaparte (6) |
| CAPET | Widow ___"; name given to Marie Antoinette following the execution of her husband Louis XVI in 1793 (5) |
| BONHAM | A founder in 1793 of the auction house with a flagship saleroom in Mayfair; or, a former Led Zeppelin drummer (6) |
| MARIE | And 5 Wife of Louis XVI executed during the French Revolution in 1793 (5,10) |