On two different occasions, Mendel presents a paper entitled "Experiments on Plant Hybridization" at the Natural History Society of Brno in Moravia. His work is received favorable, although he wouldn't receive critical acclaim until after his death.
Law of Dominance
Mendel dies in Brno, Moravia from a chronic case of nephritis.
Law of Segregation
16 years after his death, in the year 1900, he was finally recognized as one of the founding fathers of genetics.
Law of Independent Assortment
States that in a heterozygote, one trait will conceal the presence of another trait for the same characteristic. Rather than both alleles contributing to a phenotype, the dominant allele will be expressed exclusively.
States that each individual that is a diploid has a pair of alleles (copy) for a particular trait. Each parent passes an allele at random to their offspring resulting in a diploid organism.
States that the alleles of two (or more) different genes get sorted into gametes independently of one another.