January 2 – King Amangkurat II of Mataram (located on the island of Java, part of modern-day Indonesia), invites Trunajaya, who had led a failed rebellion against him until his surrender on December 26, for a ceremonial visit to the royal palace. After Trunajaya arrives, King Amangkurat stabs his guest to death.
January 24 – William Harris, one of the four English Puritans who established the Plymouth Colony and then the Providence Plantations at Rhode Island in 1636, is captured by Algerian pirates, when his ship is boarded while he is making a voyage back to England. After being sold into slavery on February 23, he remains a slave until ransom is paid. He dies in 1681, three days after his return to England.
February 12 – The Marquis de Croissy, Charles Colbert, becomes France's Minister of Foreign Affairs and serves for 16 years until his death, when he is succeeded as Foreign Minister by his son Jean-Baptiste Colbert.
February 16 – Rev. Ralph Davenant's will provides for foundation of the Davenant Foundation School for poor boys in Whitechapel, in the East End of London.[1]
February 22 – Catherine Deshayes Monvoisin, a fortune teller in France who organized a ring of killers in what became known as the "Affair of the Poisons" that killed at least 1,000 people, is burned at the stake after being convicted of witchcraft. In all, 36 people are executed for their role in the poisoning.
February 24 – The German Duchy of Saxe-Coburg is divided by treaty among the sons of the late Ernest I, Duke of Saxe-Gotha, who had died in 1675. The oldest son, Frederick, receives Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg. The rest is divided among Albert (Duke of Saxe-Coburg); Bernhard (Saxe-Meiningen); Henry (Saxe-Römhild); Christian (Saxe-Eisenberg); Ernest (Saxe-Hildburghausen); and John Ernest (Saxe-Coburg-Saalfeld).
March 24 – The Earl of Shaftesbury informs the Privy Council of England that the Roman Catholics of Ireland were about to launch a rebellion, backed by France. The investigation leads to the arrest and ultimate execution of the Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh, Oliver Plunkett.
March 25 – Troops sent by the Sultan of Morocco, Ismail Ibn Sharif, begin a blockade of the port of Tangier, occupied by the English and located on the North African coast. Palmes Fairborne is dispatched to defend Tangier as the colonial governor and commander-in-chief of English forces.
March 27 – The London Penny Post delivery service begins operations after being created by Robert Murray and William Dockwra, with a policy of delivering letters to any part of London or its suburbs for the price of one English penny.
March 30 – A total eclipse of the Sun takes place and is visible over central Africa, with totality over the Opala Territory in the modern-day Democratic Republic of the Congo.
April–June
April 21 – Prince Rajaram Bhosle, the 10-year-old son of the Shivaji, the Chhatrapati (Emperor) of the Maratha Empire in India, is installed on the throne as the new Emperor, less than three weeks after the death of his father. Sambhaji Bhosle, the eldest son of Shivaji, learns the news while imprisoned at Panhala and makes plans to escape prison and take over the throne.
April 27 – Prince Sambhaji and fellow prisoners kill the commander of the Panhala prison and take control of the fort, as he makes plans to become ruler of the Maratha Empire.
April 30 – The first French Huguenots in the New World arrive at Charleston, South Carolina, as 45 of the religious exiles arrive at Oyster Point on the ship Richmond, after being sent there by King Charles II of England.[2]
May 6 – King Charles XI of Sweden marries Princess Elonora, daughter of the late King Frederick III of Denmark-Norway and sister of King Christian V.
May – The volcano Krakatoa erupts, probably on a relatively small scale.
June 4 – Tokugawa Tsunayoshi becomes the new Shōgun of Japan upon the death of his older brother, Tokugawa Ietsuna, who had been shōgun for 29 years.
June 10 – England and Spain sign a mutual defense treaty.[3]
June 11 – Elizabeth Cellier, an English Catholic midwife, is tried and acquitted of treason for pamphleting against the government.
June 16 – Sambhaji Bhosle and his troops capture Raigad, the capital of the Maratha Empire and Sambhaji becomes the new Chhatrapati or Emperor. Sambhaji deposes his younger brother Rajaram I and places Rajaram and Rajaram's mother under house arrest.
June 22 – The Sanquhar Declaration, written by Richard Cameron, leader of the Covenanters who oppose the control of religion in Scotland by King Charles, is read aloud by Richard's brother Michael Cameron at the public square in the village of Sanquhar in Dumfriesshire.
July 8 – The first documented tornado in America kills a servant at Cambridge, Massachusetts.
August 10 – A Pueblo medicine man named Popé begins an attack by the Puebloans and their Apache allies on Spanish outposts throughout what is the modern-day U.S. state of New Mexico, choosing the campaign to begin before a supply caravan can reach the Spaniards.[4]
August 20 (August 10 Old Style) – The settlement of Karlskrona in Sweden is founded,[5] as the Royal Swedish Navy relocates there.
August 21 – In the Pueblo Revolt, the native Pueblo people capture Santa Fe (now in New Mexico) from the Spanish colonists.
August 24 – Comédie-Française is founded by decree of Louis XIV of France as La maison de Molière in Paris.
September 15
A four month truce between England and Morocco expires and the Alcaid Omar, Viceroy of Morocco, begins a bombardment of the English fort at Tangier.[6]
A treaty is concluded between the Dutch Republic and the Ottoman Empire for Ottoman Sultan Mehmed IV and his subjects to apply Dutch law to Dutch visitors to Ottoman territory.[7]
September 21 – Spanish troops make a counterattack on Santa Fe in the modern-day U.S. state of New Mexico, allowing the remaining Spanish troops in the besieged city to flee to El Paso (now in Texas).[4]
September 30 – Robert Boyle, having rediscovered the process of manufacturing phosphorus from bone ash, deposits his summary of the directions with The Royal Society of London for Improving Natural Knowledge.[8] Boyle's assistant, Ambrose Godfrey, later develops Boyle's discovery to produce phosphorus commercially.
October–December
October 9 – A massive 9.0 magnitude Mw earthquake destroys part of Málaga and other cities in the province of the same name.[9]
October 29 – At the request of King Charles XI of Sweden, the Riksdag in Sweden enacts the Great Reduction, returning fiefs which had been granted to the Swedish nobility to the Crown. The nation becomes an absolute monarchy under the rule of Charles. [10]
November 14 – The Great Comet of 1680 is first sighted by Gottfried Kirch, the first comet discovered by telescope.[11]
November 17 – The Green Ribbon Club, a predecessor of the British Whigs, organizes a procession to burn an effigy of the Pope in London for the second year running.[12]
December 17 (December 7 O.S.) – The trial for treason of William Howard, 1st Viscount Stafford before his fellow members of the House of Lords having concluded after seven days, the Lords vote on whether to convict him of the articles of impeachment. The Lords vote, 55 to 31 to convict him and to impose the death sentence [13] and Lord Stafford is beheaded on 29 December (8 January 1681 N.S.)
Date unknown
Chambers of Reunion (French courts under Louis XIV) decide on the complete annexation of Alsace.
The first Portuguese governor is appointed to Macau.
Johann Pachelbel writes his Canon in D Major
1681
January–March
January 1 – Prince Muhammad Akbar, son of the Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb, initiates a civil war in India. With the support of troops from the Rajput states, Akbar declares himself the new Mughal Emperor and prepares to fight his father, but is ultimately defeated.
January 3 – The Treaty of Bakhchisarai is signed, between the Ottoman vassal Crimean Khanate and the Russian Empire.
January 18 – The "Exclusion Bill Parliament", summoned by King Charles II of England in October, is dissolved after three months, with directions that new elections be held, and that a new parliament be convened in March in Oxford.
February 2 – In India, the Mughal Empire city of Burhanpur (now in the Indian state of Madhya Pradesh) is sacked and looted by troops of the Maratha Empire on orders of the Maratha emperor, the Chhatrapati Sambhaji. General Hambirrao Mohite began the pillaging three days earlier.
March 4 – In order to settle a debt of £16,000, King Charles II of England grants a land charter to William Penn, for territory west of Delaware River in America between 40° N and 42° N, later to be called Pennsylvania.[14]
March 21 – The "Oxford Parliament" is summoned in England by King Charles II and meets in Oxford rather than in Westminster, but is dissolved seven days later. No further sessions of parliament are held until after the death of Charles in 1685.
April–June
April 11 – Following the death of its last count, the Palatinate-Landsberg passes to the King of Sweden.
May 15 – The Canal du Midi in France is opened officially, as the Canal Royal de Languedoc.[15]
June 23 – The Church of the East, an Eastern Orthodox rite in Mesopotamia (now Iraq), already split between two patriarchs in the Eliya line and the Shimun line, is split along a third line by the Roman Catholic Church when Mar Yousip of the Archdiocese of Amid (now Diyarbakır in Turkey) is proclaimed by Pope Innocent XI as Joseph I, "Patriarch of the Chaldean nation deprived of its patriarch", creating the "Josephite line" of the Chaldean Catholic Church.
July–September
July 1 – Oliver Plunkett, Roman Catholic Archbishop of Armagh and Primate of All Ireland, falsely convicted in June of treason, is hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn, London, the last Catholic martyr to die in England;[16] he is canonised in 1975.
July 23 – The Bombardment of Chios during the French-Tripolitania War (1681-1685) is part of a wider campaign by France against the Barbary Pirates in the 1680s.
August 10 – English sea captain Robert Knox of the East India Company publishes his book An Historical Relation of the Island Ceylon, about his adventures, 20-years imprisonment and escape from Ceylon.[17]
August 12 – Ahom King Gadadhar Singha (or Gadapani), who takes the Tai name Supaatphaa, ascends the throne.
August 31 – English perjurer Titus Oates is told to leave his state apartments in Whitehall; his fame begins to wane, and he is soon arrested and imprisoned for sedition.
October 27 – Sir John Child of England becomes the new Governor of Bombay province and, unofficially, Governor-General of all of the settlements of the East India Company in India. With the exception of a rebellion by Captain Richard Keigwin during the year 1684, Child expands British control until involving the British in a war with the Mughal Empire.
November 20 – Don Melchor de Navarra, Duke of Palata arrives in Lima after a voyage of almost 10 months from Spain and becomes the new Viceroy of Peru, succeeding the Archbishop of Lima, Melchor Liñán y Cisneros, who had administered the area since 1678.
November 25 – Cornelis Speelman of the Netherlands becomes the new Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies (now Indonesia) and concludes an alliance with the Sultan Amangkurat II of the Mataram Sultanate on the island of Java, then uses the Dutch Army to suppress the rebellion started by the Sultan's half-brother, Prince Puger. Puger surrenders on November 28 to the ranking Dutch officer, Jacob Couper.
November 29 – A storm strikes the Isthmus of Panama and overwhelms the Spanish Navy's Flota de Tierra Firma, sinking the ship Nuestra Señora de Encarnación in the Chagres River. The Encarnación wreckage is not found until almost 340 years later, in 2011, mostly intact and still loaded with most of its cargo.
December 3 – Another ship in the Flota de Terra Firma, Nuestra Señora de la Soledad, sinks in the Chagres River with the loss of its 280 crew.
December 7 – Wu Shifan, grandson of Chinese general Wu Sangui, commits suicide at Kunming in Yunnan province, ending the 8-year Revolt of the Three Feudatories against the Kangxi Emperor and the Qing dynasty in China. [18]
December 22 – King Charles II of England signs a warrant for the building of the Royal Hospital Chelsea in London for wounded and retired soldiers.
Date unknown
Savery sketch of three dodos from c. 1626, Crocker Art Gallery
Collections are made in England for needy French refugees.
Havertown and Bryn Mawr are founded in Pennsylvania by Welsh Quakers.
The bell Emmanuel in Notre-Dame de Paris is recast.
The Port of Honfleur, France, is re-modelled by Abraham Duquesne.
The basilica of Santa Maria della Salute in Venice, designed by Baldassare Longhena in 1631, is dedicated.
The dodo becomes extinct.
1682
January–March
January 7 – The Republic of Genoa forbids the unauthorized printing of newspapers and all handwritten newssheets; the ban is lifted after three months.
January 12 – Scottish minister James Renwick, one of the Covenanters resisting the Scottish government's suppression of alternate religious views, publishes the Declaration of Lanark.
January 21 – The Ottoman Empire army is mobilized in preparation for a war against Austria that culminates with the 1683 Battle of Vienna.
January 24 – The first public theater in Brussels, the Opéra du Quai au Foin, is opened.
February 5 – In Japan, on the 28th day of the 12th month in the year Tenna 1, a major fire sweeps through Edo (now Tokyo).
February 9 – Thomas Otway's classic play Venice Preserv'd or A Plot Discover'd is given its first performance, premiering at the Duke's Theatre.
March 11 – Work begins on construction of the Royal Hospital Chelsea for old soldiers in London, England.[19]
April–June
April 7 – René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, exploring rivers in America, reaches the mouth of the Mississippi River.
April 9 – At the mouth of the Mississippi River, near modern Venice, Louisiana, Robert de La Salle buries an engraved plate and a cross, claiming the territory as La Louisiane for France.
May 6 – Louis XIV of France moves his court to Versailles.
May 7 (April 27 O.S.) – Upon the death of the Tsar Feodor III of Russia, Feodor's younger brother, 15-year-old Ivan is passed over in favor of a half-brother, 10-year-old Peter.
May 11 – The Moscow uprising of 1682 occurs when a mob, outraged by the rejection of Prince Ivan and upset over rumors that Ivan has been strangled, invades the Kremlin and lynches the leading boyars and military commanders. Ivan V and Peter I are named co-rulers of Russia as a result of a compromise between Peter's mother Natalya Naryshkina and Ivan's mother Maria Miloslavskaya and both are crowned a month later.
June 8 – The English trading freighter Johanna is wrecked off of the coast of South Africa with the loss of 10 of her 114 crew, becoming the first of Britain's East India Company fleet to be lost.
June 17 – The Indonesian city of Bandar Lampung is founded on the island of Sumatra.
June 25 (June 15 O.S.) – Ivan V and Peter I are crowned as joint Tsars of Russia at the Cathedral of the Dormition in Moscow, with actual power exercised by their older sister, Sophia Alekseyevna for the next seven years.
July–September
July 19 – Iyasus succeeds his father Yohannes I as Emperor of Ethiopia.
August 6 – The Ottoman Empire declares war on the Holy Roman Empire and makes plans to attack Vienna.
August 12 – Vesuvius begins a period of volcanic activity lasting for 10 days.
August 23 – A comet that will later become known as Comet Halley, is observed from several locations on Earth after reaching magnitude 2 and becoming visible to the naked eye. Arthur Storer sees it from the North American colony of Maryland, while German astronomer Johannes Hevelius measures it from Danzig (now Gdansk in Poland). [20] Edmond Halley successfully predicts that it will return in 1758.
August 25 – Following the Bideford witch trial, three women (probably) become the penultimate known to be hanged for witchcraft in England, at Exeter.[21]
September 14 – Bishop Gore School is founded in Swansea, Wales.
September 24 – Trịnh Căn becomes the new ruler of Tonkin (located in the northern part of Vietnam as far south as the Hà Tĩnh province upon the death of his father, Trịnh Tạc, and begins a program of reforms.
October 19 – Kara Mustafa departs with the Ottoman army to Adrianople.
October 27 – The city of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania is founded by William Penn.
November 22 – Nearly 1,000 houses in Wapping, London are destroyed in a fire.[22]
December 11 – William Penn meets with Charles Calvert, 3rd Baron Baltimore for the first discussion of the boundary between the colonies of Pennsylvania and Maryland, fixed at 40 degrees north. Recognizing that 40° north would remove Pennsylvania's access to the sea, Penn proposes a purchase of some of Maryland's territory.
December 27 – Colonists from the German electorate of Brandenburg arrive at Akwidaa on the Brandenburger Gold Coast at what is now Ghana and, five days later, begin building a fort at what is now Princes Town.
Date unknown
Celia Fiennes, noblewoman and traveller, begins her journeys across Britain, in a venture that will prove to be her life's work. Her aim is to chronicle the towns, cities and great houses of the country. Her travels continue until at least 1712, and will take her to every county in England, though the main body of her journal is not written until the year 1702.
The Richard Wall House, believed to be the longest continuously inhabited residence in the US, is built in Pennsylvania.
1683
January–March
January 5 – The Brandenburger-African Company, of the German state of Brandenburg, signs a treaty with representatives of the Ahanta tribe (in modern-day Ghana), to establish the fort and settlement of Groß Friedrichsburg, in honor of Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg. The location is later renamed Princes Town, also called Pokesu.
January 6 – The tragic opera Phaëton, written by Jean-Baptiste Lully and Philippe Quinault, is premiered at the Palace of Versailles.
January 27 – Gove's Rebellion breaks out in the Province of New Hampshire in North America as a revolt against the Royal Governor, Edward Cranfield. Most of the participants, and their leader Edward Gove, are arrested. Gove is convicted of treason but pardoned three years later.
February 7 – The opera Giustino by Giovanni Legrenzi and about the life of the Byzantine Emperor Justin, premieres in Venice.
March 14 – Ageng Tirtayasa, Sultan of Banten on the island of Java (part of modern-day Indonesia), is captured by soldiers hired by the Dutch East India Company.
March 17 – In a battle at Kalyan (near Bombay) between the Maratha Empire and the Mughal Empire in India, Maratha General Hambirrao Mohite defeats the local Mughal official, Ranamast Khan.
March 22 – Great fire in Newmarket, Suffolk, England, consuming half the houses and forcing King Charles II (who is in residence) to flee the town.[23]
March 31 – Authorized representatives of King John III Sobieski of Poland and Emperor Leopold I of the Holy Roman Empire sign a military alliance treaty in Warsaw.
April–June
April 10 – Charles V, Duke of Lorraine is appointed commander of the Imperial Army of the Holy Roman Empire.
May 3 – Sultan Mehmed IV of the Ottoman Empire enters Belgrade.
May 24 – The Ashmolean Museum opens in Oxford (England), as the world's second university museum, after the establishment of the Kunstmuseum Basel in 1661 by the University of Basel.
June 12 – The Rye House Plot to assassinate Charles II of England is discovered.[24]
July–September
July 8 – Admiral Shi Lang of Qing dynasty China leads 300 ships with 20,000 troops out of Tongshan, Fujian, and sails towards the Kingdom of Tungning, in modern-day Taiwan and Penghu, in order to quell the kingdom in the name of the Qing.
July 14 – A 173,000-man Ottoman force arrives at Vienna, and starts to besiege the city.
July 16–17 – Battle of Penghu: Qing Chinese admiral Shi Lang defeats the naval forces of Zheng Keshuang decisively.
July 21 – The gruesome execution of Lord Russell, for his role in the 1683 Rye House Plot to assassinate King Charles II of England, is carried out by the royal executioner Jack Ketch, who wields his axe in a manner requiring multiple blows to make Russell suffer as much as possible during the beheading. [25]
August 4 – Turhan, in the powerful role of the Valide sultan of the Ottoman Empire since 1648 as the mother of Sultan Mehmed IV, dies at the age of 56, bringing an end to the era in Ottoman history known as the "Sultanate of Women". Upon the overthrow of Mehmed IV four years later, the role of the mother of the Ottoman Sultan is less powerful.
August 18 – Francesco Maria Imperiale Lercari becomes the new Doge of the Republic of Genoa.
August 20 – Bahadur, son of the Emperor Aurangzeb of the Mughal Empire in India, is dispatched along with other Mughal nobles on an invasion of Konkan, the area on the southwestern Indian coast under the control of the Maratha Empire.
August 25 – The Earl of Limerick, Irishman Thomas Dongan, takes office as the new British Colonial Governor of the Province of New York and makes major reforms to restore public order and rescue the province from bankruptcy.
September 5 – Qing Chinese admiral Shi Lang receives the formal surrender of Zheng Keshuang, ushering in the collapse of the Kingdom of Tungning, which is then incorporated into the Qing Empire.
September 12
Battle of Vienna: The Ottoman siege of the city is broken with the arrival of a force of 70,000 Poles, Austrians and Germans under Polish–Lithuanian king Jan III Sobieski, whose cavalry turns their flank. The victory marks a turning point in the Ottoman Empire's fortunes and the end of the Turkish attempt to expand its control into Western Europe. [26]
Pedro II becomes the King of Portugal after having served as regent since 1668 for his older brother Afonso VI.
October–December
October 3 – Shi Lang reaches Taiwan and occupies modern-day Kaohsiung.
October 6 – Germantown, Philadelphia is founded as the first permanent German settlement in North America (in 1983 U.S. President Ronald Reagan declares a 300th Year Celebration, and in 1987, it becomes an annual holiday, German-American Day).
October 9 (possible date) – Louis XIV of France makes a morganatic marriage with Madame de Maintenon in a secret ceremony following the death on July 30 of his queen consort, Maria Theresa of Spain.[27]
November 1 – The English crown colony of the Province of New York is subdivided into 12 counties: Albany, Dutchess, Orange, Ulster, and Westchester (upstate); Kings, New York County, Queens, Richmond (within New York City); Suffolk (eastern Long Island), and two areas not in New York state, Dukes County (now in Massachusetts) and Cornwall County (now 11 counties in Maine). [28]
December 7 – Algernon Sidney, opponent of King Charles II of England and author of the rebel tract Discourses Concerning Government is beheaded after having been arrested on June 25 and found guilty on November 7.
December 25
Kara Mustafa Pasha, Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire since 1676, is executed on orders of Sultan Mehmed IV after being blamed for the Ottoman loss of the Battle of Vienna on September 12. The execution is carried out in Belgrade as Kara Mustafa is strangled with a silk cord. The Sultan appoints Bayburtlu Kara Ibrahim Pasha as the new Grand Vizier.
George Ducas, the Prince of Moldavia installed by the Ottomans in 1678, is arrested by Polish authorities while on his way back to Bucharest from the defeat by Poland in the Battle of Vienna. Ducas is replaced by Ștefan Petriceicu.
December 27 – Richard Keigwin leads a rebellion against the East India Company to take over as Governor of Bombay and most of the British territory in India, driving out Governor Sir John Child and arresting the Deputy Governor, Charles Ward. Keigwin surrenders the office less than a year later.
December – The River Thames in England freezes, allowing a frost fair to be held.
Date unknown
Wild boars are hunted to extinction in Britain.[24]
1684
January–March
January 5
King Charles II of England gives the title Duke of St Albans to Charles Beauclerk, his illegitimate son by Nell Gwyn.
The earliest form of what is now the University of Tokyo (formally chartered in 1877), the Tenmongata, is established in Japan.[29][30]
January 15 (January 5 O.S.) – To demonstrate that the River Thames, frozen solid during the Great Frost that started in December, is safe to walk upon, "a Coach and six horses drove over the Thames for a wager" and within three days "whole streets of Booths are built on the Thames and thousands of people are continually walking thereon." Sir Richard Newdigate, 2nd Baronet, records the events in his diary.[31]
January 26 – Marcantonio Giustinian is elected Doge of Venice.[32]
January – Edmond Halley, Christopher Wren and Robert Hooke have a conversation in which Hooke later claimed not only to have derived the inverse-square law, but also all the laws of planetary motion attributed to Sir Isaac Newton.[33] Hooke's claim is that in a letter to Newton on 6 January 1680, he first stated the inverse-square law.[34]
February 7 – Morocco retakes control of the city of Tangier from England, which had controlled the North African port since 1661.[35] During the five months prior to evacuation of the English from the city, the Governor, Lord Dartmouth had ordered the destruction of the wall around the city, its fortifications and port facilities that had been built by the English during the occupation.
February 8 – Prince Dumitrașcu Cantacuzino returns to the throne of the principality of Moldavia for a third reign but is overthrown 14 months later on June 25. In 1859, Moldavia will unite with neighboring Wallachia to form the Kingdom of Romania.
February 15 (February 5 O.S.) – The Great Frost in Britain, during which the River Thames was frozen in London and the sea as far as 2 miles (3.2 km) out from land and which started the previous December, ends as the Thames begins to thaw. William Maitland later writes that the Frost, which started in December 1683, "congealed the river Thames to that degree that another city, as it were, was erected thereon; where by the great number of streets and shops, with their rich furniture, it represented a great fair, with a variety of carriages, and diversions of all sorts."[36] During the freeze, there had been great loss of beast and of wildlife, especially birds, and similar reports from across Northern Europe.[37] The Chipperfield's Circus dynasty began during the freeze, with James Chipperfield introducing performing animals to the country at the Frost Fair on the Thames in London.
February 24 – A treaty is signed between European German colonists in Brandenburg-Prussia, and the African chiefs in what is now Ghana to permit the German colonists to build a second fort on the Brandenburger Gold Coast, and the fortress of Dorotheenschanze is built. The area is now the Ghanaian city of Akwida.[38]
March 5 – Pope Innocent XI forms a Holy League with the Habsburg Empire, Venice and Poland, to end Ottoman Turkish rule in Europe.[39]
March 19 – In Japan, the Tenna era ends on the 21st day of the 2nd month of the Chinese calendar of the 4th year of the Tenna era and the Jōkyō era begins as Japan's royal astronomer, Shibukawa Shunkai institutes the Jōkyō calendar to replace Chinese calendar which had been used in Japan since 859 AD, after calculating that the length of the solar year is 365.2417 days.[40]
April–June
April 25 – The Morean War begins as the Republic of Venice declares war on the Ottoman Empire for control of the Peloponnese area of Greece, a peninsula which includes Corinth and Sparta and has been referred to by the Ottomans as Morea.
May 18 – The French Navy begins a 10-day bombardment of the Italian city of Genoa in the course of the War of the Reunions between France and the Republic of Genoa. During the fight, the French fleet, commanded by Abraham Duquesne, fires almost 13,000 cannonballs, pausing only during a cease-fire on May 21 and May 22, and uses the new technology of explosive bombs. When the bombardment ends on May 28, two-thirds of the city has been destroyed or damaged.[41]
June 7 – After a siege of six weeks that began on April 27, Luxembourg City is taken by the French Army from control by Spain, and the Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, previously part of the Spanish Netherlands (now Belgium) is acquired by France.
June 27 – Francisco de Távora, the Viceroy of Portuguese India, a small colony located in southwestern India at Goa, issues an order prohibiting indigenous residents from speaking their native language, Konkani, and directs them to learn Portuguese within the next three years.[42]
July–September
July 21–August 6 – Morean War: Siege of Santa Maura – The Republic of Venice captures the Ottoman island fortress of Santa Maura.[43]
July 24 – René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle sails again from France, with a large expedition designed to establish a French colony on the Gulf of Mexico, at the mouth of the Mississippi River.[44]
August – Edmond Halley goes to Cambridge to discuss the problem of planetary motion with Isaac Newton.[45]
August 15
France under Louis XIV makes the Truce of Ratisbon separately with the Holy Roman Empire (Habsburg) and Spain.[46]
Louis XIV decrees the foundation of the Maison royale de Saint-Louis, a boarding school for girls at Saint-Cyr, at the urging of Madame de Maintenon.
October 7 – Japanese Chief Minister Hotta Masatoshi is assassinated, leaving Shōgun Tokugawa Tsunayoshi without any adequate advisors, leading him to issue impractical edicts and create hardships for the Japanese people.
November 8 – James Renwick, a Scottish minister and one of the "Covenanters" challenging the attempt by Kings James VI and Charles I to take over churches in Scotland, posts his "Apologetical Declaration" on church doors and market crosses in and around Cambusnethan, Lanarkshire.[47]
November 19 – Richard Keigwin, who had arrested the East India Company's Governor of Bombay in 1683, Josiah Child and had taken over as the unauthorized administrator of Bombay, turns control back to the company and its envoy, Sir Thomas Grantham, receiving a general pardon.[48][49]
December 10 – Isaac Newton's derivation of Kepler's laws from his theory of gravity, contained in the paper De motu corporum in gyrum, is read to the Royal Society by Edmond Halley.[50]
December 17 – The Tibet–Ladakh–Mughal War, which had been going on since 1679, ends with the signing of the Treaty at Tingmosgang between the 5th Dalai Lama (Desi Sangye Gyatso) and King Delek Namgyal of Ladakh. The Ladakh kingdom agrees to not invite foreign armies into the area (now part of the Indian union territory of Jammu and Kashmir) in return for a respect for its sovereignty.
Date unknown
Japanese poet Ihara Saikaku composes 23,500 verses in 24 hours at the Sumiyoshi-taisha (shrine) at Osaka; the scribes cannot keep pace with his dictation and just count the verses.[51]
The British East India Company receives Chinese permission to build a trading station at Canton.[52] Tea sells in Europe for less than a shilling a pound, but the import duty of 5 shillings makes it too expensive for most English people to afford; hence smuggled tea is drunk much more than legally imported tea.
John Bunyan publishes the second part of The Pilgrim's Progress.[53]
1685
January–March
January 6 – American-born British citizen Elihu Yale, for whom Yale University in the U.S. is named, completes his term as the first leader of the Madras Presidency in India, administering the colony on behalf of the East India Company, and is succeeded by William Gyfford.
January 8 – Almost 200 people are arrested in Coventry by English authorities for gathering to hear readings of the sermons of the non-conformist Protestant minister Obadiah Grew
February 4 – A treaty is signed between Brandenburg-Prussia and the indigenous chiefs at Takoradi in what is now Ghana to permit the German colonists to build a third fort on the Brandenburger Gold Coast. [54]
February 6 – Catholic James Stuart, Duke of York, becomes King James II of England and Ireland, and King James VII of Scotland, in succession to his brother Charles II (1660–1685), King of England, Scotland, and Ireland since 1660. James II and VII reigns until deposed, in 1688.
February 20 – René-Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle, intending to establish a colony near the mouth of the Mississippi River, lands with 200 surviving colonists at Matagorda Bay on the Texas coast, believing the Mississippi to be near. He establishes Fort St. Louis.[55]
February–March – Morean War (part of the Great Turkish War): The Ottomanserasker Halil Pasha invades the Mani Peninsula, and forces it to surrender hostages.
March 28 – An attack on a Mughal Empire envoy, Khwajah Abdur Rahim, outside of the Maratha fortress at the Bijapur Fort in India leads to a siege of the city by the forces of Mughal Emperor Aurangzeb. The siege lasts for 15 months before Bijapur surrenders.
March – Louis XIV passes the Code Noir, allowing the full use of slaves in the French colonies.
April–June
April 16 – Wara Dhammaraza becomes the new King of Arakan on the western coast of Burma upon the death of his brother, Thiri Thuriya.
April 23 – The coronation of King James II of England (and his Queen Consort, Mary of Modena) takes place at Westminster Abbey.
May 7 – Morean War – Battle on Vrtijeljka: Advancing Ottoman forces prevail over defending Venetian irregulars, on a hill in the Sanjak of Montenegro.
May 11 – The Killing Time: Five Covenanters in Wigtown, Scotland, notably Margaret Wilson, are executed for refusing to swear an oath declaring King James of England, Scotland and Ireland as head of the church, becoming the Wigtown martyrs.[56]
June 11 – Monmouth Rebellion: James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth, illegitimate son of King Charles II of England, Scotland and Ireland, lands at Lyme Regis with an invasion force brought from the Netherlands, to challenge his uncle, James II, for the Crown of England.[57]
June 16 – A lunar eclipse is observed in the evening by François-Timoléon de Choisy, amongst others, onboard his ship in the vicinity of Madagascar. The ship was at a latitude of 37 degrees 40 minutes, and the eclipse was not visible from Europe.[58]
June 20 – Monmouth Rebellion: James, Duke of Monmouth declares himself at Taunton to be King, and heir to his father's Kingdoms as James II of England and Ireland, and James VII of Scotland.[57]
July–September
July 6 – Monmouth Rebellion: In the Battle of Sedgemoor, the last pitched battle fought on English soil, the armies of King James II of England defeat rebel forces under James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth, and capture the Duke himself shortly after the battle.
July 15 – James Scott, 1st Duke of Monmouth, is executed at Tower Hill, London, England.
August 11 – Morean War: The 49-day Siege of Coron ends with the surrender and massacre of its garrison by the Venetians.[59]
August 25 – The Bloody Assizes begin in Winchester: Lord Chief Justice of England George Jeffreys tries over 1000 of Monmouth's rebels and condemns them to death or transportation.
September 29 – The first organised street lighting is introduced by the city of London in England, as Edward Hemming begins carrying out his contract to be paid for lighting an oil lamp "at every tenth house on main streets between 6 PM and midnight between September 29 and March 25" on nights in the autumn and winter without adequate moonlight. [60]
October–December
October 22 – Louis XIV of France issues the Edict of Fontainebleau, which revokes the Edict of Nantes and declares Protestantism illegal, thereby depriving Huguenots of civil rights. Their Temple de Charenton-le-Pont is immediately demolished and many flee to England, Prussia and elsewhere.
November 8 (October 29 O.S.) – The Edict of Potsdam is issued by Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg in response to France's Edict of Fontainebleau, welcoming the Protestant Huguenots of France to resettle in eastern Germany in Brandenburg. The French Colony of Magdeburg is established on December 1 in Saxony as a community separate from Magdeburg.
November 11 – Morean War: The Republic of Venice captures the fortress town of Igoumenitsa from the Ottoman Empire, and razes it to the ground.
December 3 – King Charles XI of Sweden issues an order banning Jews from settling in Sweden, particularly in the capital at Stockholm "on account of the danger of the eventual influence of the Jewish religion on the pure evangelical faith." [61]
December 10 – In what is now Thailand, King Narai of Ayutthaya signs a treaty with representatives of France at Lopburi, allowing Roman Catholic missionaries to preach the Gospel and exempting Thai Catholics from work on Sunday, as well as appointing a special court to settle disputes between Thai Christians and non-Christians.
Date unknown
The Chinese army of the Qing dynasty attacks a Russian post at Albazin, during the reigns of the Kangxi Emperor and the dual Russian rulers Ivan V of Russia and Peter I of Russia. The event leads to the Treaty of Nerchinsk in 1689.[62]
Adam Baldridge founds a pirate base at Île Sainte-Marie, Madagascar.
Alice Molland becomes the last known person in England to be sentenced to death for witchcraft, in Exeter.[63]
The Old Dutch Church of Sleepy Hollow in the State of New York is constructed by the original Dutch settlers (later to become famous as the site of the rampage of the "Headless Horseman" spirit in the novel The Legend of Sleepy Hollow).
1686
January–March
January 3 – In Madras (now Chennai) in India, local residents employed by the East India Company threaten to boycott their jobs after corporate administrator William Gyfford imposes a house tax on residences within the city walls. Gyfford places security forces at all entrances to the city and threatens to banish anyone who fails to pay their taxes, as well as to confiscate the goods of merchants who refuse to make sales.[64] A compromise is reached the next day on the amount of the taxes.[65]
January 17 – King Louis XIV of France reports the success of the Edict of Fontainebleau, issued on October 22 against the Protestant Huguenots, and reports that after less than three months, the vast majority of the Huguenot population had left the country.[66]
January 29 – In Guatemala, Spanish Army Captain Melchor Rodríguez Mazariegos leads a campaign to conquer the indigenous Maya people in the rain forests of Lacandona, departing from Huehuetenango to rendezvous with the colonial governor at San Mateo Ixtatán.
January 31 – In the wake of the success of France's campaign against Protestantism, Victor Amadeus II, the Duke of Savoy, issues an edict against the Valdesi, the Duchy's Protestant minority, setting a 15-day deadline for members of the Valdesi to publicly renounce their beliefs as erroneous, or face banishment or death.[67] The February 15 deadline is ignored.
February 15 – After the Valdesi in the Duchy of Savoy decline to obey the edict to convert to Catholicism, Duke Victor Amadeus dispatches a force of 9,000 French and Piedmontese soldiers to enforce the edict.
February 22 – Sweden's Council of State endorses the reforms proposed by King Charles XI for the Swedish Church Law 1686, after having debated it in three sessions on February 18, 19 and 20.[68] The law confirms and describes the rights of the Lutheran Church and confirms Sweden as a Lutheran state; all non-Lutherans are banned from immigration unless they convert to Lutheranism; the Romani people are to be incorporated to the Lutheran Church; the poor care law is regulated; and all parishes are forced by law to teach the children within them to read and write, in order to learn the scripture, which closely eradicates illiteracy in Sweden.[69]
February 27 – Gabriel Milan, the controversial Governor of the Danish West Indies since 1684, is removed from office by order of King Frederick III and placed under arrest for treason. Three years later, after being found guilty in a trial after being brought back to Copenhagen, Milan is beheaded on March 26, 1689.[70]
March 3 – A group of 107 French Canadian soldiers, under the command of Pierre de Troyes, begins the Hudson Bay expedition, departing from Montreal on an 800-mile (1,300 km) journey to take control of the properties of British North American settlers of the Hudson's Bay Company.[71] The group marches for 82 days and arrives at the first Hudson's Bay fort, at Moose Factory on June 19.[72]
April–June
April 9 – As the Valdesi rebellion continues, the Duke of Savoy issues a second edict, giving the Protestant Valdesi eight days to lay down their arms and allows safe passage into exile for those who agree.
April 22 – In the wake of Savoy's newest repression of the Protestant Valdesi, a third war breaks out and Protestant pastor Henri Arnaud leads the resistance with 3,000 rebel soldiers against 8,500 Savoyard soldiers and mercenaries. The Valdesi are overwhelmed within one month.
May 4 – The Municipality of Ilagan is founded in the Philippines.[73]
May 6 – The Treaty of Perpetual Peace (1686) is signed between the Tsardom of Russia and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, recognizing the former's possession of Left-bank Ukraine and the city of Kiev, as agreed upon in the earlier Treaty of Andrusovo in 1667.[74] The treaty also brings the Tsardom of Russia into the Great Turkish War, on the side of the Holy League of 1684.[75]
May 14 – Joseph Dudley formally begins his tenure, as President of the Council of the newly formed Dominion of New England.[76]
May 25 – The third war against the Protestant Valdesi ends. Soon afterward, 2,000 of the Valdesi are massacred, 8,500 taken prisoner and about 3,000 surviving civilians forcibly resettled and converted to Catholicism.
June 20 – French Canadian soldiers on the Hudson Bay expedition capture the first of the British Hudson's Bay Company outposts, with the surrender the unarmed inhabitants of the fortress at Moose Factory, Ontario.[77]
July–September
July 9 – The Grand Alliance (League of Augsburg) is founded, in response to claims made by Louis XIV of France on the Electorate of the Palatinate in western Germany. It comprises the Holy Roman Empire, the Netherlands, Sweden, Spain, the electors of Bavaria, Saxony and the Electorate of the Palatinate.[78][79]
July 17 – King James II of England appoints four Roman Catholics to the Privy Council of England,[80] in defiance of the Test Acts, which bar Catholics from public office. Suspicions about James's intentions lead to a group of conspirators meeting at Charborough House in Dorset, to plan his overthrow and replacement with the Protestant Dutch Stadtholder, William III of Orange-Nassau (James's son-in-law).
July 18 – An army of 3,000 Chinese troops demand Russian surrender of a Russian Empire fortress at Albazino on the Amur River. The fortress is manned by only 736 Russian soldiers and militia but is armed with cannons. Over the next several weeks, the Chinese troops are joined by another 3,000 men in supply boats, but the Russians hold off the attacks for the next five months. By December, only 24 Russians remain, and Albazino is ceded to China in 1689.
July 22 – Albany, New York, is granted a city charter by the colonial governor.[81]
August 4 – Portuguese soldiers hired by the East India Company mutiny rather than follow orders to join the war in Bengal. The ringleaders are quickly arrested and executed, and the mutiny ends.
August 15 – Christina, who had ruled as the monarch of Sweden until her abdication in 1654 in favor of her cousin Charles, responds to the revocation in France of the Edict of Nantz and declares that Jews within Sweden will be under her protection.
August 16 – King James VII of Scotland dismisses the Parliament of Scotland after the members refuse to remove restrictions on Roman Catholics and on Protestants outside of the Church of Scotland and the Church of England. The Parliament does not meet again for more than two and a half years.
August 17 – Spanish troops attack and plunder the Scottish colony of Stuarts Town in the Province of Carolina (now Port Royal, South Carolina) and plunder the city.[82] After three days, the Spaniards begin a march of over 75 miles (121 km) toward the larger port city of Charles Town.
September 2 – Great Turkish War: Battle of Buda – Imperial forces of the Holy League of 1684 (Russia, Saxony, Brandenburg and Bavaria under Austrian leadership) liberate Buda (now part of Budapest) from Ottoman Turkish rule (leading to the end of Ottoman rule in Hungary during subsequent years).[83]
September 4 – A hurricane saves Charleston, South Carolina from attack by Spanish vessels.[84]
September 30 – The Ottoman fortress of Sinj in Dalmatia falls to the army of the Republic of Venice.[85]
October–December
October 17 – As the Savoyard–Waldensian wars, draw to a close, the Duke of Savoy announces that the Protestant Valdisi defenders will be granted safe passage to Switzerland, and that children taken during the war will be allowed to return to their families.[86] By January, a little more than 2,500 Valdisi take the offer.
October 22 – In the Great Turkish War, the Siege of Pécs ends when the Ottoman-held city, located across the Danube River from the recent liberated Buda, surrenders[87] to Austrian troops of the Holy League, continuing the Austrian assumption of control of Hungary.[88] Buda and Pécs are later combined to form the Hungarian city (and now capital) of Budapest.
October 23 – Szeged, now the second largest city in Hungary, is liberated from Turkish Ottoman rule.[89]
October 31 – Anglurah Agung, the virtual leader of the island of Bali as king of the paramount state of Gelgel, is killed in battle fighting Batu Lepang (who also dies in the fighting), ending the unification of the island (now part of Indonesia) and causing Bali to split into several principalities.
November 26 – The Treaty of Whitehall, more formerly the Treaty of Neutrality for America, is signed at the Palace of Whitehall in Westminster between representatives of King Louis XIV of France and King James II of England, with both sides pledging that "though the two Countries might be at war in Europe their Colonies in America should continue in peace and Neutrality".[90] The treaty is broken less than two years later when King William's War breaks out in what is now the U.S. state of Maine.
November 30 – Melchor Portocarrero, 3rd Count of Monclova becomes the new Viceroy of New Spain (encompassing what is now Mexico and much of the southwestern United States) as he arrives in Mexico City to take over at the end of the term of Tomás de la Cerda, 3rd Marquess of la Laguna.[91]
December 20 – Edmund Andros arrives in Boston to become the British Governor of the newly created Dominion of New England, which includes most of the what are now the U.S. states of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Rhode Island, Vermont and much of the eastern portion of New York.[92] The unpopular Andros, who reigns as a dictator after being appointed by King James II, is driven out of office in 1689 after the overthrow of James, and the Dominion of New England is broken up into its constituent colonies.
December 22 – Frederick William, Elector of Brandenburg and Duke of Prussia, head of the House of Hohenzollern, enters into an alliance with the Holy Roman Empire.
Date unknown
English historian and naturalist Robert Plot publishes The Natural History of Staffordshire, a collection of illustrations and texts detailing the history of the county.[93] It is the first document known to mention crop circles[94] and a double sunset.[95]
The Café Procope, which remains in business in the 21st century, is opened in Paris by Procopio Cutò, as a coffeehouse.[96]
1687
January–March
January 3 – With the end of latest of the Savoyard–Waldensian wars in the Duchy of Savoy between the Savoyard government and Protestant Italians known as the Waldensians, Victor Amadeus III, Duke of Savoy, carries out the release of 3,847 surviving prisoners and their families, who had forcibly been converted to Catholicism, and permits the group to emigrate to Switzerland.
January 8 – Richard Talbot, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell, is appointed as the last Lord Deputy of Ireland by the English crown, and begins efforts to include more Roman Catholic Irishmen in the administration. Upon the removal of King James II in England and Scotland, the Earl of Tyrconnell loses his job and is replaced by James, who reigns briefly as King of Ireland until William III establishes his rule over the isle.
January 27 – In one of the most sensational cases in England in the 17th century, midwife Mary Hobry murders her abusive husband, Denis Hobry, after he beats her up for the last time. Mary then dismembers his body and scatters the remains in a dunghill and in several outhouses (or privies) in the area. Despite a defense of justifiable homicide, Mary is convicted of murder and burned at the stake.
February 7 – The Arjeplog blasphemy trial begins for Erik Eskilsson and Amund Thorsson, two practitioners of the Sami religion who had resisted Sweden's efforts at their conversion to Christianity. Eskilsson and Thorsson are acquitted of the charges after agreeing to convert to Christianity.
February 11 – In India, troops under the command of Job Charnock of the East India Company, preparing to go to war against the Nawab of Bengal, Shaista Khan of the Mughal empire, destroy his fortresses located at Thana. [97]
February 12 – The Declaration of Indulgence is issued in Scotland by King James VII as one of the first steps in establishing freedom of religion in the British Isles, eliminating enforcement of criminal penalties against persons who failed to conform with Anglicanism. As King James II of England, he issues a similar declaration on April 4.
March 19 – The men under explorer Robert Cavelier, Sieur de La Salle mutiny, while searching for the mouth of the Mississippi River. Pierre Duhaut murders La Salle, near what is now Navasota, Texas.
April–June
April 4 – King James II of England issues the Declaration of Indulgence (or Declaration for the Liberty of Conscience), suspending laws against Roman Catholics and nonconformists.[98]
April 23 – Ignatius George II becomes Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch (or April 22).[99][100]
April 26 – The Spanish city of Guayaquil (now part of Ecuador) is attacked and looted by English and French pirates under the command of George Hout (English) and Pierre Le Picard and Francois Groniet (French). [101] Of more than 260 pirates, 35 are killed and 46 were wounded; 75 defenders of the city died and more than 100 are wounded.
May 6 – Emperor Higashiyama succeeds Emperor Reigen, on the throne of Japan.
June 14 – In one of the few actions on land in the Anglo-Siamese War, English sailors on the coast of Mergui in Burma (now Myeik, Myanmar) are massacred by Siamese troops.
July–September
July 11 – Isaac Newton's Philosophiæ Naturalis Principia Mathematica, known as the Principia, is published by the Royal Society of London. In it, Newton describes his law of universal gravitation, explains the laws of mechanics, and gives a formula for the speed of sound. The writing of Principia Mathematica ushers in a tidal wave of changes in thought, significantly accelerating the Scientific Revolution by providing new and practical intellectual tools, and becomes the foundation of modern physics.
July 24 – Morean War: Battle of Patras – The Republic of Venice defeats the Ottomans, which flee in panic, allowing the Venetians to capture the fortresses of Patras, Rio, Antirrio, and Lepanto unopposed.
August 12 – Great Turkish War: Battle of Mohács – The Habsburg imperial army, and allies under Charles V, Duke of Lorraine, defeat the Ottoman Turks, and enable Austria to conquer most of Ottoman-occupied Hungary.
September 21 – Morean War: The navy of the Republic of Venice raids the Dalmatian coast, and attacks Ottoman Turkish strongholds in Greece.
September 22 – The Siege of Golconda, ordered by Emperor Aurangzeb of India's Mughal Empire against the capital of the Golconda sultanate, ends after nine months when a traitor inside the walled city, Sarandaz Khan, opens the first of several entrances into the fortress. The Sultan Abul Hasan Qutb Shah is taken prisoner by General Mir Shahab ud-Din, and Golconda (now part of Hyderabad in the Telangana state).
September 26 – Half of the Parthenon is destroyed in Athens after mortar shells are fired by Republic of Venice forces under the command of Francesco Morosini in a battle against the Ottoman Empire for control of the city. The strike ignites a stock of gunpowder that the Ottomans had stored inside the 2,200-year-old temple, which had been completed in 438 BC as a shrine to the goddess Athena. During the fighting September 23 and September 29 for control of the Acropolis in the Morean War, the Temple of Athena Nike is demolished and the Propylaea suffers damage.
October–December
October 20 – An estimated 8.7 magnitude earthquake strikes 50 kilometres (31 mi) off of the coast of Peru and kills at least 5,000 people, primarily from a tsunami that washes away the city of Pisco and causes severe damage to the Spanish colonial cities of Lima, Callao and Ica. [102]
October 31 – The legend of the Charter Oak begins as a successful attempt to hide the 1662 Royal Charter of the British colony (and now a U.S. state) of Connecticut after Edmund Andros, the Governor of the Dominion of New England, makes a mission of attempting to confiscate the founding documents for the seven colonies that make up the new administrative area. After Governor Andros arrives in Hartford and comes to the tavern of Zachariah Sanford to demand the Connecticut Colony charter, Captain Joseph Wadsworth spirits the parchment away from the and hides the Charter in a hollowed out portion of a white oak tree on Wyllys Hyll until Andros is recalled to London. [103]
November 8 – Suleiman II succeeds the deposed Mehmed IV, as Ottoman Emperor.
December 31 – In response to the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685, a group of Huguenots set sail from France, and settle in the recently established Dutch colony at the Cape of Good Hope, where, using their native skills, they establish the first South African vineyards.
1688
January–March
January 2 – Fleeing from the Spanish Navy, French pirate Raveneau de Lussan and his 70 men arrive on the west coast of Nicaragua, sink their boats, and make a difficult 10 day march to the city of Ocotal.[104]
January 5 – Pirates Charles Swan and William Dampier and the crew of the privateer Cygnet become the first Englishmen to set foot on the continent of Australia.[105]
January 11 – The Patta Fort and the Avandha Fort, located in what is now India's Maharashtra state near Ahmednagar, are captured from the Maratha clan by Mughul Army commander Matabar Khan. The Mughal Empire rules the area 73 years.
January 17 – Ilona Zrínyi, who has defended the Palanok Castle in Hungary from Austrian Imperial forces since 1685, is forced to surrender to General Antonio Caraffa.
January 29 – Madame Jeanne Guyon, French mystic, is arrested in France and imprisoned for seven months.[106]
January 30 (January 20, 1687 old style) – King James II of England and Scotland issues a proclamation offering amnesty to pirates in the West Indies who surrender to Sir Robert Holmes.[107]
February 7 – Six French Jesuit scientists, Joachim Bouvet, Jean-François Gerbillon, Louis-Daniel Lecomte, Guy Tachard, Claude de Visdelou and the leader, Jean de Fontaney, arrive in Beijing and are welcomed by the Emperor of China, Kangxi.[108]
February 17 – James Renwick, the last of the Covenanters in Scotland to be martyred for opposing the authority of King Charles II, is publicly hanged at Grassmarket square in Edinburgh.
February 23 – Abaza Siyavuş Pasha, the Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire, is assassinated by the Janissaries, the Turkish troops who had placed him in power in September, after the new Sultan fails to make payment of an expected bonus.
February 28 – The French opera David et Jonathas, composed by Marc-Antoine Charpentier, is performed for the first time.[109]
March 1 – A great fire devastates Bungay, England.[110]
March – William Dampier makes the first recorded visit to Christmas Island, now a territory of Australia, located south of the island of Java (now part of Indonesia).
April–June
April 3 – Francesco Morosini becomes Doge of Venice.[111]: 346 [112]
April 9 – Morean War: The Venetian forces under Francesco Morosini evacuate Athens[113] and Piraeus.
April 18 (Julian calendar) – The Germantown Quaker Protest Against Slavery is drafted by four Germantown Quakers.[114]
May 4 – King James II of England orders his Declaration of Indulgence, suspending penal laws against Catholics, to be read from every Anglican pulpit in England.[115] The Church of England and its staunchest supporters, the peers and gentry, are outraged; on June 8 the Archbishop of Canterbury, William Sancroft, is imprisoned in the Tower of London for refusing to proclaim it.
May 9 (April 29 OS) – Friedrich Wilhelm, the Great Elector of Brandenburg-Prussia, dies.[116] Friedrich III becomes Elector of Brandenburg-Prussia until 1701, when he becomes the first King of Prussia, as Friedrich I.
May 10 – King Narai of Ayutthaya nominates Princess Sudawadi as his successor, with Constantine Phaulkon, Mom Pi and Phetracha acting as joint regents.[117]: 444 [118]
May 17 – The arrest of King Narai of Ayutthaya launches a coup d'état.
June 5
A 7.0 magnitude earthquake[119] strikes southern Italy at 6:30 in the evening and kills at least 10,000 people in the Kingdom of Naples in what is now the province of Benevento.
Constantine Phaulkon is beheaded after having been arrested in May.[120]
June 10 – The birth of James Francis Edward Stuart (later known as the Old Pretender), son and heir to James II of England and his Catholic wife Mary of Modena, at St James's Palace in London, increases public disquiet about a Catholic dynasty, particularly when the baby is baptised into the Catholic faith. Rumours about his true maternity swiftly begin to circulate.
June 24 – French forces under Chevalier de Beauregard abandon their garrison at Mergui, following repeated Siamese attacks; this ultimately leads to their withdrawal from the country.[121]
June 30 – A high-powered conspiracy of notables (the Immortal Seven) invite Dutch stadtholder William III of Orange and Princess Mary to "defend the liberties of England", and depose King James VII and II.[122]
July–September
July 13 – The siege of Negroponte by the Venetians begins.[123]
August 1 – Phetracha becomes king of Ayutthaya, after a coup d'état.[124]
August 27 – The funding of the armed invasion of William III in England causes a financial crisis in the Dutch Republic.[125]
September 24 – Louis XIV publishes his manifesto Memoire de raisons, which lists his grievances and demands. He cites three major things as grievances: Wilhelm Egon von Fürstenberg, who had been earlier elected to be the coadjutor-archbishop of Cologne with support of Louis being vetoed by the pope, the continued aggressions and forming of alliances against France and providing an alternative to Fürstenberg in the Cologne election by the Holy Roman Empire, and Philip William becoming Elector Palatine and seizing the territory, which he believed belonged to Elizabeth Charlotte.[127]
September 27 – The Nine Years' War begins in Europe and America after Louis XIV attacks Philippsburg in the Holy Roman Empire.[128]
October–December
October 21 – The Venetians raise the siege of Negroponte.[111]: 358
October 26 – King James II of England dismisses his minister Robert Spencer, 2nd Earl of Sunderland.[129]
November 11 (November 1 OS) – Glorious Revolution: William III of Orange sets sail a second time from Hellevoetsluis, the Netherlands, to take over England, Scotland and Ireland from King James II of England.[130][131]
November 15 (November 5 OS) – The Glorious Revolution begins: William of Orange lands at Torbay, England with a multinational force of 20,000 soldiers.[132] He makes no claim to the British Crown, saying only that he has come to save Protestantism and to maintain English liberty, and begins a march on London.
November 19 (November 9 OS) – William of Orange captures Exeter, after the magistrates flee the city.[133]
November 20 (November 10 OS) – The Wincanton Skirmish between forces loyal to James II led by Patrick Sarsfield and a party of Dutch troops is one of the few armed clashes in England during the Glorious Revolution.[134]
November 23 – A group of 1,500 Old Believers immolate themselves to avoid capture, when troops of the tsar lay siege to their monastery on Lake Onega.
November 26 – Hearing that William of Orange has landed in England, Louis XIV declares war on the Netherlands.[135]
December 7 – December 7: The shutting of the gates in Derry in a stained glass window of the Guildhall[136] The gates of Derry are shut in front of the Jacobite Earl of Antrim and his "redshanks".[137] This initiates the siege of Derry, which is the first major event in the Williamite War in Ireland.
December 9 – The Battle of Reading takes place in Reading, Berkshire. It is the only substantial military action in England during the Glorious Revolution and ends in a decisive victory for forces loyal to William of Orange.
December 11 – Having led his army to Salisbury and been deserted by his troops, James VII and II attempts to flee to France.
December 18 – William of Orange, Stadtholder of the Dutch Republic and the future King William III of the United Kingdom, enters London.[138]
Date unknown
The Austrians incite the Chiprovtsi Uprising against the Ottomans in Bulgaria after the siege of Belgrade.[139]
Neuruppin becomes a Prussian garrison town.
The earliest known mention of the balalaika is made.[140]
Oroonoko, one of the first English novels and the first by a professional female author (Aphra Behn) is published.
1689
Notable events during this year include:
Coup, war, and legislation in England and its territories.
The overthrow of Catholic king James of England, Ireland, and Scotland in the Glorious Revolution.
The latter realms entering the Nine Years War and its expansion to the American colonies in the King William's War.
The Bill of Rights becomes law in England.
Japanese writer Bashō goes on a voyage, resulting in the classic Narrow Road to the Interior.
The death of Pope Innocent XI and the election of the 241st Pope Alexander VIII.
Morocco wins in the Siege of Larache against Spain.
Peter the Great decrees the construction of the Great Siberian Road to China.
January–March
January 22 (January 12, 1688 O.S.) – Glorious Revolution in England: The Convention Parliament is convened to determine if King James II of England, the last Roman Catholic British monarch, vacated the throne when he fled to France, at the end of 1688. The settlement of this is agreed on 8 February.[141]
January 30 – The first performance of the opera Henrico Leone composed by Agostino Steffani takes place in Hannover to inaugurate the new royal theatre in the Leineschloss.
February 12 – John Locke returned to London from exile in Holland.[142]
February 23 (February 13, 1688 O.S.) – William III and Mary II are proclaimed co-rulers of England, Scotland and Ireland.[141]
March 2 – Nine Years' War: As French forces leave, they set fire to Heidelberg Castle, and the nearby town of Heidelberg.
March 22 (March 12 O.S.) – Start of the Williamite War in Ireland: The deposed James II of England lands with 6,000 French soldiers in Ireland, where there is a Catholic majority, hoping to use it as the base for a counter-coup.[143] However, many Irish Catholics see him as an agent of Louis XIV of France, and refuse to support him.
March 27 – Japanese haiku master Bashō sets out on his last great voyage, which will result in the prose and verse classic Oku no Hosomichi ("Narrow Road to the Interior").
April–June
April 4 – A total lunar eclipse is visible in central Asia.[144]
April 11 (O.S.) – William III and Mary II are crowned in London as King and Queen of England, Scotland and Ireland.[19] Ireland does not recognise them yet, while the Estates of Scotland declare King James VII of Scotland deposed.
April 18
Boston revolt: Unpopular New England Governor Sir Edmund Andros and other officials are overthrown by a "mob" of Bostonians. Andros, an appointee of James II of England, is disliked for his support of the Church of England and revocation of various colonial charters.
The Siege of Derry begins in Ireland as former King James II arrives at the gates of Derry and asks for its surrender during the Williamite War in Ireland. The Protestant defenders refuse and the siege lasts until August 1 when it is abandoned. .[145]
April 19 - A fire in Amalienborg-palace in Copenhagen killed 180 people.
May 11 (May 1 O.S.)
The Battle of Bantry Bay begins during the Williamite War in Ireland as the French fleet under the Marquis de Châteaurenault is able to protect its transports, unloading supplies for James II, from the English Royal Navy under the Earl of Torrington, and withdraws unpursued.[146]
William and Mary accept the Scottish throne a month after the Scottish Parliament votes to depose King James VII
May 12 – Nine Years' War: With England and the Netherlands now both ruled by William III, they join the Grand Alliance (League of Augsburg), thus escalating the conflict, which continues until 1697. This is also the effective beginning of King William's War, the first of four North American Wars (until 1763) between English and French colonists, both sides allied to Native American tribes. The nature of the fighting is a series of raids on each other's settlements, across the Canadian and New England borders.
May 24 – The Act of Toleration, drawn up by the Convention Parliament of England to protect Protestants but with Roman Catholics intentionally excluded, is passed; this effectively concludes the Glorious Revolution.
May 25 – The last hearth tax is collected in England and Wales.
May 31 – Leisler's Rebellion: Calvinist Jacob Leisler deposes lieutenant governor Francis Nicholson and assumes control of the Province of New York.
June 5 – The Convention of Estates adjourns in Scotland after 11 weeks and its members form a new Scottish parliament.
June 14 – The Duke of Gordon, a Scottish peer and Jacobite supporter, surrenders Edinburgh Castle to Protestant attackers after holding out for 20 days following the Glorious Revolution.
July–September
July 25 – The Council of Wales and the Marches is abolished.
July 27 – First Jacobite rising: Battle of Killiecrankie near Pitlochry in Perthshire – Scottish Covenanter supporters of William III and Mary II (under Hugh Mackay) are defeated by Jacobite supporters of James II, but the latter's leader, John Graham, Viscount Dundee, is killed. Hand grenades are used in action.[147]
July 28 – English sailors break through a floating boom across the River Foyle, to end the siege of Derry after 105 days.[148]
August 2 – Boston Revolt: Edmund Andros, former governor of the Dominion of New England, escapes from Boston to Connecticut, but is recaptured.
August 5 – Beaver Wars: Lachine massacre – A force of 1,500 Iroquois largely destroys the village of Lachine, New France.
August 12 – Innocent XI (Benedetto Odescalchi, b. 1611), Pope since 1676, dies. He played a major part in founding both the League of Augsburg, against Louis XIV, and the Holy League, against the Ottoman Empire.
August 20 – A large Williamite force under Marshal Schomberg begins the siege of Carrickfergus in the north of Ireland, which surrenders on August 27.
August 21 – First Jacobite rising: Battle of Dunkeld – Covenanters defeat the Jacobites in Scotland.[149]
August 23
Roman Catholic cardinals convene in Rome for a papal conclave to elect a successor to Pope Innocent XI. The conclave lasts until October 6.
Gravely ill, the Empress Xiaoyiren is proclaimed empress by her husband, China's Kangxi Emperor, after having been Imperial Noble Consort since 1682. She dies the next day.
August 27 – China and Russia sign the Treaty of Nerchinsk.
September 3–12 – Messengers from over 100 Baptist churches assembled in the City of London to discuss and endorse the 1677 document that would become known as the 1689 Baptist Confession of Faith.[150]
September 8 – The Siege of Mainz (in the modern-day Rheinland-Pfalz state of Germany), which had started on June 1, ends after almost three months, as French General Nicolas Chalon du Blé surrenders the walled city to the armies of Austria and the Dutch Republic.
September 9 – King William brings England into a military alliance with the Holy Roman Empire in a fight against France in the Nine Years War.
September 24 – The Holy Roman Empire wins the Battle of Niš, fought against the Ottoman Empire during the Great Turkish War in modern-day Serbia.
September 28–29 – A total lunar eclipse is visible in eastern America, western Europe and west Africa.[151]
October–December
October 6 – The papal conclave in Rome unanimously elects Pietro Vito Ottoboni as the new Pope. Ottoboni takes the name Alexander VIII and succeeds Pope Innocent XI, to become the 241st pope, the first Venetian to hold the office in over 200 years.
October 26 – Skopje fire of 1689 occurs, lasting for two days and burning much of the city.
November 11 – The Siege of Larache in Morocco ends when the Spanish troops surrender to Mawlay Ismail and the Moroccan forces.
November 22 – Peter the Great decrees the construction of the Great Siberian Road to China.
December 10 – A great comet is visible from Pekin and sightings continue until December 24th, including many from Dutch ships near the equator.[152]
December 16 – The Bill of Rights (An Act Declaring the Rights and Liberties of the Subject and Settling the Succession of the Crown), drawn up by the Convention Parliament of England to establish constitutional monarchy in England, but with Roman Catholics barred from the throne, receives royal assent; it will remain substantially in force into the 21st century.
December 22 – A serious earthquake strikes Innsbruck, Austria.[153]
Date unknown
Peter the Great plots to overthrow his half-sister Sophia as regent of Russia.
Supporters of William of Orange seize Liverpool Castle in the north west of England.[154]
The English East India Company expands its influence, and a Committee of the House of Commons is formed to deal with the concerns of the Company.[155]
Valvasor's The Glory of the Duchy of Carniola is printed in Nuremberg.
The first documented performance of the opera Dido and Aeneas by Henry Purcell takes place at Josias Priest's girls' school in Chelsea, London, with a libretto based on Virgil's Aeneid.[156]
November 15 (bapt.) – Charles Rivington, English publisher (d. 1742)[295]
1689
Montesquieu born 18 JanuaryPierre-Joseph Alary born 19 MarchRichard Ward (governor) born 15 AprilMarie Anne de Bourbon born 18 AprilAntoine Louis Rouillé born 7 JuneMary Montagu, Duchess of Montagu born 15 JulySzymon Czechowicz born 22 JulyPrince William, Duke of Gloucester born 24 JulyHenric Benzelius born 7 AugustKilian Ignaz Dientzenhofer born 1 SeptemberAnna Sophie Schack born 4 SeptemberCatharina Backer born 22 SeptemberNijō Yoshitada born 26 SeptemberFrans van Mieris the Younger born 24 December
January 7 – Robert Murray, Brigadier-General, Scottish soldier, Member of Parliament (d. 1738)
January 11 – Charles Parkin, English clergyman and antiquarian (d. 1765)
January 15 – Giovanni Gaetano Bottari, Italian scholar and critic (d. 1775)
January 16 – Edmond Jean François Barbier, French historian (d. 1771)
January 18
Montesquieu, French social commentator and political thinker (d. 1755)
Jan Abel Wassenbergh, painter from the Northern Netherlands (d. 1750)
January 21 – Daniel Henchman, bookseller (d. 1761)
January 22 – Philibert Orry, French politician (d. 1747)
January 23 – Joseph Ames, English bibliographer and antiquary (d. 1759)
January 24 – Gaspare Diziani, Italian painter (d. 1767)
January 29 – James Rait, Bishop of Brechin (d. 1777)
February 1 – Thomas Jenner, English academic (d. 1768)
February 3 – Blas de Lezo, admiral of the Spanish Empire (d. 1741)
February 23 – Leonardo Antonio Olivieri, Italian painter (d. 1752)
c. February 23 – Samuel Bellamy, English pirate captain (d. 1717)
February 27
Pietro Gnocchi, Italian composer (d. 1775)
John Roosevelt, American businessman and alderman (d. 1750)
Maximilian Emanuel of Württemberg-Winnental, German noble (d. 1709)
March 3 – Thomas Ingoldsby, British politician (d. 1768)
March 3 – Mattias Alexander von Ungern-Sternberg, Swedish politician and field marshal (d. 1763)
March 7 – Charles-Michel Mesaiger, Jesuit priest (d. 1766)
March 11
Roger Handasyd, British Army officer (d. 1763)
Nanbu Toshimoto, mid-Edo period Japanese samurai, the 6th daimyō of Morioka Domain (d. 1725)
March 19 – Pierre-Joseph Alary, French ecclesiastic and writer (d. 1770)
March 20 – Thomas Robie, Colonial American scientist and physician (d. 1729)
March 25 – Peder Hersleb, Norwegian bishop (d. 1757)
March 26 – Archduchess Maria Magdalena of Austria, Austrian Royal (d. 1743)
April 2 – Arthur Dobbs, Irish politician, governor of the Province of North Carolina (d. 1765)
April 5 – William Holmes, English academic and Dean of Exeter (d. 1748)
April 14 – William Murray, Marquess of Tullibardine, Scottish army officer and Jacobite leader (d. 1746)
April 15 – Richard Ward, American colonial governor (d. 1763)
April 18 – Marie Anne de Bourbon, French noble (d. 1720)
April 21 – Johann Jakob Fried, German obstetrician (d. 1769)
April 24 – Giovanni Antonio Faldoni, Italian painter and engraver (d. 1770)
April 30 – Jean-Jacques Amelot de Chaillou, French politician (d. 1749)
May 1 – Martha Fowke, English poet (d. 1736)
May 2 – Franz de Paula Ferg, Austrian painter (d. 1740)
May 5 – John Tufts, American minister and music educator (d. 1750)
May 10 – José Manso de Velasco, 1st Count of Superunda, Royal Governor of Chile (d. 1767)
May 11 – Heinrich Karl Ludwig de Herault, Prussian Army general (d. 1757)
May 15 – Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, writer and poet from England (d. 1762)
May 16 – Samuel Adams Sr., American brewer (d. 1748)
May 21 – André-François Deslandes, French philosopher (d. 1757)
May 24 – Daniel Finch, 8th Earl of Winchilsea, British politician (d. 1769)
May 27 – Andreas Jakob von Dietrichstein, Archbishop of Salzburg (d. 1753)
May 28 – Maximilian of Hesse-Kassel, German prince (d. 1753)
May 29 – Louis de Gramont, 6th Duke of Gramont, French general (d. 1745)
June 1 – Henri François, comte de Ségur, French general (d. 1751)
June 2 – Edward Harley, 2nd Earl of Oxford and Earl Mortimer, British politician, bibliophile, collector and patron of the arts (d. 1741)
June 6 – Algernon Coote, 6th Earl of Mountrath, Irish politician (d. 1744)
June 7 – Antoine Louis Rouillé, French noble (d. 1761)
June 12 – Sir Richard Grosvenor, 4th Baronet, British politician; (d. 1732)
June 19 – Montague Blundell, 1st Viscount Blundell, Irish Viscount (d. 1756)
June 23 – George Hay, 8th Earl of Kinnoull, British diplomat (d. 1758)
June 24 – Giovanni Casini, Portrait painter and sculptor (d. 1748)
June 26
Edward Holyoke, American academic administrator, 9th president of Harvard (d. 1769)
James Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Derwentwater, English noble (d. 1716)
July 6 – Johann Friedrich Karl von Ostein, Roman Catholic archbishop (d. 1763)
July 9 – Alexis Piron, French writer (d. 1773)
July 14 – Antoine Gaubil, French missionary (d. 1759)
July 15 – Mary Montagu, Duchess of Montagu (d. 1751)
July 16 – Samuel Molyneux, Irish politician (d. 1728)
July 17 – Christian, Landgrave of Hesse-Wanfried-Rheinfels (d. 1755)
July 21 – John Quincy, American soldier and politician (d. 1767)
July 22 – Szymon Czechowicz, Polish artist (d. 1775)
July 24 – Prince William, Duke of Gloucester, son of Queen Anne (d. 1700)
July 26 – Maria Anna Josepha Althann, Spanish noble (d. 1755)
August 1 – Pedro de Calatayud, writer (d. 1773)
August 3 – Ladislas Ignace de Bercheny, Marshal of France (d. 1778)
August 4 – James Cotter the Younger, Leader of the Catholics of Cork (d. 1720)
August 7 – Henric Benzelius, Swedish archbishop (d. 1758)
August 8 – Wenzel Lorenz Reiner, Czech painter (d. 1743)
August 19 – Samuel Richardson, English writer and printer (d. 1761)
August 21 – Josep Prades i Gallent, Organist and composer (d. 1757)
September 1
Kilian Ignaz Dientzenhofer, Czech architect (d. 1751)
Philipp Segesser, Swiss missionary (d. 1762)
September 4
Hugh Bethell, British Member of Parliament (d. 1747)
Thomas Lawrence, American mayor (d. 1754)
Anna Sophie Schack, Danish noblewoman (d. 1760)
September 13 – Johan Fredrik Peringskiöld, Swedish translator (d. 1725)
September 17 – Ferdinand Charles, comte d'Aspremont-Lynden, army general (d. 1772)
September 18 – Gabriel Malagrida, Italian missionary (d. 1761)
September 21 – Jan Klemens Branicki, Polish noble (d. 1771)
September 22 – Catharina Backer, painter from the Northern Netherlands (d. 1766)
September 23 – Antonio Denzio, Italian opera singer (d. 1763)
September 24 – Johann Adam Steinmetz, German pastor (d. 1762)
September 26 – Nijō Yoshitada, Japanese noble (d. 1737)
September 27 – Edward Stanley, 11th Earl of Derby, English noble and politician (d. 1776)
September 29 – Henry Perrot, British Member of Parliament (d. 1740)
September 30 – Jacques Aubert, French composer and violinist (d. 1753)
October 10 – Francesco Maria Pratilli, Italian priest, antiquarian, famed for skilled forgeries (d. 1763)
October 15 – Nicolas-Ignace de Beaubois, French missionary (d. 1770)
October 22
King John V of Portugal, Portuguese king (d. 1750)
Matthew Skinner, English serjeant-at-law, judge and politician (d. 1749)
October 29 – Tokugawa Yoshimichi, daimyo (d. 1713)
October 31 – Mildmay Fane, British politician (d. 1715)
November 2
Michael Cox, Anglican archbishop in Ireland (d. 1779)
Charles-François Panard, French chansonnier and poet (d. 1765)
Joan Paul Schaghen, Dutch governor (d. 1746)
November 3
Jan Josef Ignác Brentner, Czech composer (d. 1742)
John Crowley, British Member of Parliament (d. 1728)
November 4 – Luís Carlos Inácio Xavier de Meneses, 1st Marquis of Louriçal, Portuguese nobleman and statesman (d. 1742)
November 6
Reynolds Calthorpe, politician (d. 1714)
Christoph Schütz, German theologian (d. 1750)
November 8 – Henry XXXV, Prince of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen (d. 1758)
November 17 – Jean François Foppens, Flemish historian (d. 1761)
November 21 – Jacques I, Prince of Monaco, Prince consort of Monaco (d. 1751)
November 29 – Johann Theodor Eller, German chemist and physician (d. 1760)
November 30
Lars Gathenhielm, Swedish privateer (d. 1718)
Joseph Wamps, French painter (d. 1744)
December 1 – Hieronymus Albrecht Hass, harpsichord maker (d. 1752)
December 4 – Gottfried Lengnich, historian and politician (d. 1774)
December 8 – Albert Wolfgang of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, Titular margrave of Brandenburg, imperial general (d. 1734)
December 11 – Ignatius van der Beken, Flemish painter (d. 1774)
December 14 – Agostino Veracini, Italian painter (d. 1762)
December 21 – Arthur Ingram, 6th Viscount of Irvine, British peer and politician (d. 1736)
December 23 – Joseph Bodin de Boismortier, French composer (d. 1755)
December 24 – Frans van Mieris the Younger, Dutch painter (d. 1763)
December 27 – Jacob August Franckenstein, Encyclopedia editor, professor (d. 1733)
Deaths
1680
Ann, Lady FanshaweShivajiFerdinand BolEmperor Go-Mizunoo
January 2
John Jolliffe, English politician and businessman (b. 1613)
Trunajaya, Maduran prince and rebel leader, murdered (b. 1649)
January 18 – John Hervey, English courtier and politician (b. 1616)
January 20 – Ann, Lady Fanshawe, English memoirist (b. 1625)
January 23 – Capel Luckyn, English Member of Parliament (b. 1622)
February – Ralph Davenant, English rector and founder of Davenant Foundation School
February 11 – Elisabeth of the Palatinate, German princess, philosopher and Calvinist (b. 1618)
February 17
Denzil Holles, 1st Baron Holles, English statesman and writer (b. 1599)
Frans Post, Dutch painter (b. 1612)
Jan Swammerdam, Dutch scientist (b. 1637)
February 22 – Catherine Monvoisin, French fortune teller and poisoner (b. c. 1640)
February 27 – Philippe Balthazar de Gand, French noble (b. 1616)
March 14 – René Le Bossu, French critic (b. 1631)
March 17
William Brereton, 3rd Baron Brereton, English politician (b. 1631)
François de La Rochefoucauld, French writer (b. 1613)[296]
March 23 – Nicolas Fouquet, French statesman (b. 1615)
April 1 – David Denicke, German jurist and hymnwriter (b. 1603)
April 3 – Chhatrapati Shivaji Bhosale, founder of the Maratha Empire (b. 1630)
April 19 – Marie Hedwig of Hesse-Darmstadt, Duchess consort of Saxe-Meiningen (1671–1680) (b. 1647)
April 25
Louise of Anhalt-Dessau, Duchess suo jure of Oława and Wołów (1672–1680) (b. 1631)
Simon Paulli, Danish physician (b. 1603)
April 29 – Nicolas Cotoner, Spanish 61st Grandmaster of the Knights Hospitaller (b. 1608)
May 29 – Abraham Megerle, Austrian composer and organist (b. 1607)
May 31 – Joachim Neander, German Calvinist clergyman (b. 1650)
June 4
Augustus, Duke of Saxe-Weissenfels, administrator of the archbishopric of Magdeburg (b. 1614)
Tokugawa Ietsuna, Japanese Tokugawa shōgun (b. 1641)
June 18 – Samuel Butler, English poet (b. 1612)
June 10
Johan Göransson Gyllenstierna, Swedish statesman (b. 1635)
Louis Moréri, French encyclopedist (b. 1643)
July 26
John Wilmot, 2nd Earl of Rochester, English poet (b. 1647)
Sir Hugh Smith, 1st Baronet, English Member of Parliament (b. 1632)
July 30 – Thomas Butler, 6th Earl of Ossory (b. 1634)
August 19 – John Eudes, French missionary (b. 1601)
August 20 – William Bedloe, English informer (b. 1650)
August 22 – John George II, Elector of Saxony (b. 1613)
August 24
Ferdinand Bol, Dutch painter, etcher and draftsman (b. 1616)
Thomas Blood, thief of the English Crown Jewels (b. 1618)
August 25 – Symeon of Polotsk, Belarusian churchman and poet (b. 1629)
August 27 – Joan Cererols, Catalan musician and Benedictine monk (b. 1618)
August 28 – Charles I Louis, Elector Palatine (b. 1617)
September 1 – Anna Sophia I, Abbess of Quedlinburg, Dutch abbess (b. 1619)
September 2 – Per Brahe the Younger, Swedish soldier and statesman (b. 1602)
September 3
Anna Elisabeth of Anhalt-Bernburg, duchess consort of Württemberg-Bernstadt (b. 1647)
Paul Ragueneau, French Jesuit missionary (b. 1608)
September 9 – Henry Marten, English regicide (b. 1602)
September 10 – Baldassare Ferri, Italian castrato (b. 1610)
September 11
Roger Crab, English Puritan political writer (b. 1621)
Emperor Go-Mizunoo of Japan (b. 1596)
September 26 – John Dury, Scottish-born Calvinist minister (b. 1596)
September 30 – Johann Grueber, Austrian Jesuit missionary and astronomer (b. 1623)
October 4 – Pierre-Paul Riquet, French engineer and canal builder (b. 1609)
October 13 – Lelio Colista, Italian composer and lutenist (b. 1629)
October 16 – Raimondo Montecuccoli, Italian general (b. 1609)
October 17 – Charles FitzCharles, 1st Earl of Plymouth, illegitimate son of King Charles II (b. 1657)
October 30 – Antoinette Bourignon, Flemish mystic (b. 1616)
November 9 – Hungerford Dunch, English politician (b. 1639)
November 27 or November 28 – Athanasius Kircher, German Jesuit scholar (b. 1602)
November 28
Gian Lorenzo Bernini, Italian sculptor (b. 1598)[297]
Giovanni Francesco Grimaldi, Italian architect and painter (b. 1606)[298]
November 30 – Peter Lely, Dutch painter (b. 1618)
December 4 – Thomas Bartholin, Danish physician, mathematician, and theologian (b. 1616)
December 8 – Henry Pierrepont, 1st Marquess of Dorchester, English politician (b. 1606)
December 10 – Marco Uccellini, Italian composer and violinist (b. 1603 or 1610)
December 20 – Princess Elisabeth Sophie of Saxe-Altenburg, German princess (b. 1619)
December 29
Arent Berntsen, Norwegian statistician (b. 1610)
William Howard, 1st Viscount Stafford of England (b. 1614)
November 30 – Christopher Sandius, Dutch Arian writer (b. 1644)
Zhou Youde, Chinese official
Marie Meurdrac, French chemist and alchemist (b. 1610)
1681
Frans van Mieris the ElderJahanara Begum
January 5 – Pietro Vidoni, Italian Catholic cardinal (b. 1610)
January 7 – Magdalena Sibylla of Saxe-Weissenfels, German noblewoman (b. 1648)
January 27 – Edmund Bowyer, English politician (b. 1613)
January 28 – Richard Allestree, English royalist churchman (b. c. 1621)
March 6 – Michel de Marolles, French translator and churchman (b. 1600)
March 12 – Frans van Mieris the Elder, Dutch painter (b. 1635)
March 17 – Zheng Jing, Chinese pirate (b. 1642)
April 3 – Lucas Franchoys the Younger, Flemish painter (b. 1616)
April 8 – Gabriel Druillettes, French missionary (b. 1610)
April 10 – Philip I, Count of Schaumburg-Lippe (1640–1681) (b. 1601)
April 11 – Frederick Louis, Count Palatine of Zweibrücken (b. 1619)
April 12 – Pietro Paolini, Italian painter (b. 1603)
April 22
Jeffrey Daniel, English politician (b. 1626)
Marie Fouquet, French medical writer and philanthropist (b. 1590)
April 23 – Justus Sustermans, Flemish painter (b. 1597)
April 26 – Charles Howard, 3rd Earl of Nottingham, son of Charles Howard (b. 1610)
May 4 – Johannes Musaeus, German theologian (b. 1613)
May 6 – Catherine Trianon, French fortune teller and poisoner (b. 1627)
May 6 – Sir Philip Wodehouse, 3rd Baronet, English baronet (b. 1608)
May 24 – Nicodemus Tessin the Elder, Swedish architect (b. 1615)
May 25 – Pedro Calderón de la Barca, Spanish dramatist and poet (b. 1600)
June 9 – William Lilly, English astrologer (b. 1602)
June 12 – Sigmund von Birken, German Baroque poet (b. 1626)
July 1 – Oliver Plunkett, Irish saint (b. 1629)
July 8 – Georg Neumark, German poet and composer of hymns (b. 1621)
July 10 – Christian Lupus, Flemish historian (b. 1612)
July 20 – Louis Günther II, Count of Schwarzburg-Ebeleben (1642–1681) (b. 1621)
July 25 – Urian Oakes, English-born president of Harvard University (b. 1631)
July 31 – Sir Baynham Throckmorton, 3rd Baronet, English Member of Parliament (b. 1629)
August 12 – Sir George Wharton, 1st Baronet, English baronet (b. 1617)
August 17 – Patriarch Nikon of Moscow, Patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church (b. 1605)
August 18 – Thomas Allen, English politician (b. 1603)
August 22 – Philippe Delano, Dutch Plymouth Colony settler (b. 1602)
August 27 – William Christoph, Landgrave of Hesse-Homburg (b. 1625)
September 11
Dirk van Bleiswijk, Dutch politician, writer (b. 1639)
Godfrey Henschen, Jesuit hagiographer (b. 1601)
September 16 – Jahanara Begum, Mughal princess (b. 1614)
September 27 – Jacob Masen, German poet (b. 1606)
October 7 – Nicolaas Heinsius the Elder, Dutch scholar (b. 1620)
October 15 – Johann Ludwig Schönleben, Carniolan priest (b. 1618)
November 2 – Eleanor of Anhalt-Zerbst, duchess consort of Schleswig-Holstein-Sønderburg-Norburg (b. 1608)
November 13 – Arnold Braemes, English politician (b. 1602)
November 17 – Tito Livio Burattini, Italian inventor, Egyptologist and instrument-maker (b. 1617)
November 23 – Hedwig of the Palatinate-Sulzbach, Archduchess of Austria, Duchess of Saxe-Lauenburg (b. 1650)
November 26
Jean Garnier, French historian (b. 1612)
Giovanni Paolo Oliva, Italian Jesuit (b. 1600)
December 4 – Maurice, Duke of Saxe-Zeitz (b. 1619)
December 5 – Agatha Christine of Hanau-Lichtenberg, German noblewoman (b. 1632)
December 8 – Gerard ter Borch, Dutch painter (b. 1617)
December 12 – Hermann Conring, German philosopher (b. 1606)
December 15 – James Compton, 3rd Earl of Northampton, English politician (b. 1622)
December 16 – François Vavasseur, French writer (b. 1605)
December 18 – Olimpia Aldobrandini, Italian Aldobrandini family member, heiress (b. 1623)
December 21 – Lacuzon, Franche-Comté military leader (b. 1607)
December 22 – Richard Alleine, English Puritan clergyman (b. 1611)
c. December – John Pordage, Anglican vicar (b. 1607)
date unknown – Fatima Soltan, sovereign queen of the Qasim Khanate
1682
Prince Rupert of the Rhine
January 1 – Jacob Kettler, German noble (b. 1610)
January 3 – Olaus Verelius, scholar of Old Norse and Scandinavian studies (b. 1618)
February 2 – Jean Le Pautre, French designer and engraver (b. 1618)
February 10 – Sir William Hickman, 2nd Baronet, Member of the House of Commons of England (b. 1629)
February 15
Claude de la Colombière, French Jesuit priest and saint (b. 1641)
Gu Yanwu, Chinese philologist and geographer (b. 1613)
February 18 – Pierre Dupuis, French painter (b. 1610)
February 19 – Frederick of Hesse-Darmstadt, German Catholic cardinal (b. 1616)
November 26 – Philippe Quinault, French dramatist (b. 1635)[405]
November 29 – Bohuslav Balbín, Czech writer and Jesuit (b. 1621)[406]
December 4 – Sir Edward Seymour, 3rd Baronet, Member of Parliament (b. 1610)[407]
December 8 – Thomas Flatman, British artist (b. 1635)[408]
December 15 – Gaspar Fagel, Dutch statesman (b. 1634)[409]
December 15 – Louis Victor de Rochechouart de Mortemart, French military man, brother of Madame de Montespan (b. 1636)[410]
1689
Seth Ward (bishop of Salisbury) died 6 JanuaryMarie Louise d'Orléans died 12 FebruarySambhaji died 11 MarchKazimierz Łyszczyński died 30 MarchArchduchess Maria Anna Josepha of Austria died 4 AprilLorenzo Onofrio Colonna died 14 AprilAphra Behn died 16 AprilChristina, Queen of Sweden died 19 AprilConyers Darcy, 1st Earl of Holderness died 14 JuneSong Si-yeol died 19 JulyPope Innocent XI died 12 AugustJohn Lake (bishop) died 30 AugustJane Lane, Lady Fisher died 9 SeptemberGeorge Ent died 13 OctoberStephan Farffler died 24 OctoberThomas Sydenham died 29 December
January 6
Cristoforo Ivanovich, Venetian historian and librettist of Serb origin (b. 1628)
Bishop Seth Ward, Bishop of Salisbury, mathematician and astronomer (b. 1617)
January 9 – Sir Hugh Cholmeley, 4th Baronet, English politician (b. 1632)
January 16 – Gilbert Holles, 3rd Earl of Clare, English politician (b. 1633)
January 18
Ernest Günther I, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Augustenburg (b. 1609)
Humphrey Lloyd, British bishop (b. 1610)
January 24 – Henry Waldegrave, 1st Baron Waldegrave, English peer and Jacobite supporter (b. 1661)
January 27
Robert Aske, merchant & haberdasher in the City of London (b. 1619)
Sir Henry Beaumont, 2nd Baronet, English politician (b. 1638)
Thomas Colepeper, 2nd Baron Colepeper, English noble and colonial governor of Virginia (b. 1635)
January 28 – Bernardino Corniani, Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Pula (b. 1626)
January 29 – Maria van Cortlandt van Rensselaer, Dutch director of Rensselaerswyck (Albany, New York) (b. 1645)
January 31 – Manuel de Herrera, Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Durango (b. 1635)
February 1 – Sir John Borlase, 2nd Baronet, English politician (b. 1642)
February 4 – Moshe ben Yonatan Galante, Ottoman rabbi (b. 1621)
February 5 – William Coddington Jr., Rhode Island colonial governor (b. 1651)
February 6 – Metcalfe Robinson, English politician (b. 1629)
February 8 – Sir John Gell, 2nd Baronet, English politician (b. 1613)
February 12 – Marie Louise d'Orléans, Queen of Spain as the wife of King Charles II (b. 1662)
February 13 – Carlo Pio di Savoia, Italian Catholic cardinal (b. 1622)
February 18 – Alexander Farnese, Prince of Parma, Spanish politician and military personnel (b. 1635)
February 19 – Khushal Khattak, Afghan poet (b. 1613)
February 21 – Isaac Vossius, Dutch classical scholar (b. 1618)
February 22 – Willem Ogier, Flemish playwright (b. 1618)
February 24 – Elsa Elisabeth Brahe, Swedish countess and duchess (b. 1632)
February 28 – Thomas Benedict, American settler (b. 1617)
March 7 – Franz Johann von Vogt von Altensumerau und Prasberg, Bishop of Constance (b. 1611)
March 8 – Alexander Parker, British minister (b. 1628)
March 9 – François Adhémar de Monteil, French priest, Bishop of Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux (b. 1603)
March 10 – Philip Louis, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Wiesenburg (b. 1620)
March 11
Kim Ik-hun, Korean General and philosopher, soldier, politician (b. 1619)
Sambhaji, High Protector of the Maratha Empire (b. 1657)
March 14 – Anthony Coucheron, Norwegian engineer (b. 1650)
March 15 – Yolo, Qing dynasty prince (b. 1625)
March 18 – John Dixwell, regicide (b. 1607)
March 24
Thomas Ballard, American politician (b. 1630)
Michiel ten Hove, Grand Pensionary of Holland (b. 1640)
March 26 – Gabriel Milan, Governor of the Danish West Indies (b. 1631)
March 29 – Sir John Hotham, 2nd Baronet, Member of the House of Commons of England (b. 1632)
March 30 – Kazimierz Łyszczyński, Polish philosopher (b. 1634)
March 31 – Tommaso Caracciolo, Bishop of Gerace (b. 1640)
April 4 – Archduchess Maria Anna Josepha of Austria, youngest surviving daughter of Ferdinand III (b. 1654)
April 12 – John Hunting, first ruling elder of the church of Dedham, Massachusetts (b. 1602)
April 14 – Lorenzo Onofrio Colonna, Italian noble (b. 1637)
April 16 – Aphra Behn, British playwright, poet and spy (b. 1640)
April 18 – George Jeffreys, 1st Baron Jeffreys, Welsh judge, aka the Hanging Judge (b. 1645)
April 19 – Christina, Queen of Sweden, ruled from 1632 until abdication in 1654 (b. 1626)
April 22 – Thomas Proby, English politician (b. 1632)
May 11 – Charles Goodall, English poet (b. 1671)
May 12 – Sir John Reresby, 2nd Baronet, English politician and diarist (b. 1634)
May 15 – Jean Paul Médaille, French Jesuit missionary (b. 1618)
May 20 – Estevão Brioso de Figueiredo, Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Funchal of Olinda (b. 1630)
May 23 – Charles Erskine, Earl of Mar, Scottish noble (b. 1650)
May 25 – Charles Errard, French painter (b. 1606)
June 4 – René Gaultier de Varennes, New France governor (b. 1635)
June 7 – Alphonse de Berghes, Roman Catholic archbishop (b. 1624)
June 8 – Decio Azzolino, Italian Catholic cardinal (b. 1623)
June 9 – François Bonnemer, French painter and engraver (b. 1638)
June 10 – Christophe Veyrier, sculptor (b. 1637)
June 13 – William Annand, Minister of the Church of Scotland and the Church of England (b. 1633)
June 14 – Conyers Darcy, 1st Earl of Holderness, English noble (b. 1598)
June 17
Jan Baptist de Crépu, Flemish painter and army officer (b. 1631)
Marcin Zamoyski, Polish noble (b. 1637)
June 20
Willem Coucheron, Dutch general in the Dano-Norwegian army (b. 1600)
Richard Sherlock, English Anglican priest (b. 1612)
June 21 – Thomas Blanchet, French painter (b. 1614)
June 25 – William Thomas, Welsh Anglican bishop (b. 1613)
June 27 – Richard Waldron, colonial settler, acting President of the Province of New Hampshire (b. 1615)
June 28 – Thomas Mainwaring, English politician (b. 1623)
July 1 – Anne Crawford-Lindsay, Scottish nobility (b. 1631)
July 2 – Edward Villiers, 1st Duke of Buckingham (b. 1620)
July 7 – Princess Louise of Savoy, Hereditary Princess of Baden-Baden (b. 1627)
July 8
Menahem Mendel Auerbach, Austrian banker and rabbi (b. 1620)
Edward Wooster, English Connecticut pioneer (b. 1622)
July 19 – Song Si-yeol, Korean philosopher (b. 1607)
July 23 – Frederick Wilhelm von Pfalz-Neuburg, German noble (b. 1665)
July 27 – John Graham, 1st Viscount Dundee, Scottish general (b. 1648)
August 6 – Princess Dorothea Sophie of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Glücksburg, Electress of Brandenburg (b. 1636)
August 9 – Dionisio Lazzari, Italian sculptor and architect (b. 1617)
August 12 – Pope Innocent XI, pope of the Catholic Church (b. 1611)
August 13 – Count Maximilian I, Prince of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen, Count of Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen (b. 1636)
August 15 – John Gregory, Connecticut settler (b. 1612)
August 17
William Boynton, English politician (b. 1641)
Thomas Street, astronomer (b. 1621)
August 20 – Antonio Marinari, Roman Catholic prelate, Auxiliary Bishop of Ostia-Velletri, Titular Bishop of Thagaste (b. 1605)
August 21 – William Cleland, Scottish poet and soldier (b. c. 1661)
August 28
Claude-Jean Allouez, French Jesuit missionary and explorer of North America (b. 1622)
Alexander Coosemans, Flemish still life painter (b. 1627)
August 29 – Curwen Rawlinson, English politician (b. 1641)
August 30 – John Lake, English bishop (b. 1624)
September 6 – Torii Tadanori, Daimyo who ruled the Takatō Domain in Shinano Province (b. 1646)
September 9 – Jane Lane, Lady Fisher, English Royalist (b. 1626)
September 10 – John Belasyse, 1st Baron Belasyse, English politician and noble (b. 1614)
September 13 – Ciro Ferri, Italian painter, engraver, sculptor and architect (b. 1634)
September 15
Balthasar Cellarius, German theologian (b. 1614)
Timoléon Cheminais de Montaigu, French theologian (b. 1652)
September 18 – Sir Richard Head, 1st Baronet, English politician (b. 1600)
September 26 – August, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Beck (b. 1652)
September 30 – Julius Francis, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg, Bohemian noble (b. 1641)
October 1 – Alexander Voet the Elder, Flemish engraver (b. 1608)
October 4 – Quirinus Kuhlmann, German Baroque poet and mystic (b. 1651)
October 11 – Fyodor Shaklovity, Russian diplomat (b. 1640)
October 13 – George Ent, English scientist and physician; (b. 1604)
October 14 – Adolph John I, Count Palatine of Kleeburg, Swedish prince (b. 1629)
October 15 – Sir Edward Dering, 3rd Baronet, English politician (b. 1650)
October 24 – Stephan Farffler, German inventor (b. 1633)
October 25 – Joseph Maynard, English politician (b. 1639)
October 30 – Pier Antonio Capobianco, Roman Catholic prelate, Bishop of Lacedonia (b. 1619)
November 9 – Enea Silvio Piccolomini, imperial general (b. 1651)
November 12 – Justus de Verwer, Dutch painter and illustrator (b. 1625)
November 13
Matteo Borboni, Italian painter (b. 1610)
Philipp von Zesen, German poet (b. 1619)
November 16 – Cornelis Mahu, Flemish painter (b. 1613)
November 18 – Jacob van der Ulft, painter from the Northern Netherlands (b. 1621)
November 19 – Elizabeth Cavendish, Countess of Devonshire, English noblewoman; (b. 1619)
November 20 – Samuel Peterson, American city founder (b. 1639)
November 24 – Carey Dillon, 5th Earl of Roscommon, Irish nobleman and professional soldier (b. 1627)
November 26 – Marquard Gude, German archaeologist (b. 1635)
December 2 – George Speke, English politician (b. 1623)
December 6 – Pjetër Bogdani, Albanian priest and writer (b. c. 1630)
December 12 – Louis Ferdinand Elle the Elder, French painter (b. 1612)
December 15 – Anne Neville, abbess of Pontoise (b. 1605)
December 16
Cornelis Geelvinck, Dutch mayor (b. 1621)
Thomas Wyndham, English Member of Parliament (b. 1640)
December 25 – Oliver Montagu, English Member of Parliament (b. 1655)
December 27 – Gervase Bryan, English clergyman (b. 1622)
December 28 – Pietro Montanini, Italian painter (b. 1626)
December 29
Olfert Dapper, Dutch physician and writer (b. 1636)
George Kinnaird, 1st Lord Kinnaird, Scottish aristocrat (b. 1622)
Françoise Bertaut de Motteville, French writer (b. 1621)
Thomas Sydenham, English physician (b. 1624)
December 31
Felipe Fernandez de Pardo, Roman Catholic prelate, Archbishop of Manila (b. 1611)
Gilbert de Choiseul Duplessis Praslin, Roman Catholic bishop (b. 1613)
Anders Sinclair, Scottish soldier who joined Swedish service during the Thirty Years' War (b. 1614)
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