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Born near Horsham, Sussex, he was educated at Eton and University College, Oxford, where his collaboration in a pamphlet The Necessity of Atheism (1811) caused his expulsion. While living in London he fell in love with 16-year-old Harriet Westbrook, whom he married in 1811. He visited Ireland and Wales, writing pamphlets defending vegetarianism and political freedom, and in 1813 published privately Queen Mab, a poem with political freedom as its theme. Meanwhile he had become estranged from his wife and in 1814 left England with the English writer Mary Wollstonecraft Godwin, whom he married after Harriet drowned herself in 1816 (see Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley). Alastor, written in 1815, was followed by the epic The Revolt of Islam. By 1818 Shelley was living in Italy where he produced The Cenci; the satire on English poet William Wordsworth, Peter Bell the Third (1819); and Prometheus Unbound. Other works of the period are Ode to the West Wind (1819); The Cloud and The Skylark (both 1820); The Sensitive Plant and The Witch of Atlas; Epipsychidion and, on the death of the English poet John Keats, Adonais (1821); the lyric drama Hellas (1822); and the prose Defence of Poetry (1821). In 1816, the Shelleys stayed beside Lake Geneva, Italy, with English writer Lord Byron, and their friendship continued until Percy Shelley's death by drowning while sailing in Italy in July 1822. His ashes were buried in Rome.
The red, white, and black tricolour formed the basis of the flags of both North and South Yemen. Effective date: 22 May 1990.
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