1610s

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The 1610s decade ran from January 1, 1610, to December 31, 1619.

Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
  • 16th century
  • 17th century
  • 18th century
Decades:
  • 1590s
  • 1600s
  • 1610s
  • 1620s
  • 1630s
Years:
  • 1610
  • 1611
  • 1612
  • 1613
  • 1614
  • 1615
  • 1616
  • 1617
  • 1618
  • 1619
Categories:
  • Births
  • Deaths
  • By country
  • By topic
  • Establishments
  • Disestablishments

Events

1610

August 2: Henry Hudson sails into Hudson Bay.

January–June[]

  • January 6Nossa Senhora da Graça incident: A Portuguese carrack sinks near Nagasaki, after fighting Japanese samurai for four nights.
  • January 7Galileo Galilei first observes the four Galilean moons of Jupiter: Ganymede, Callisto, Europa and Io, but is unable to distinguish the latter two until the following day.
  • February 24 – English courtier Thomas Roe sets out on an expedition to The Guianas and Amazon River.
  • May 14François Ravaillac assassinates Henry IV of France who is succeeded by his 8-year-old son Louis XIII.
  • May 23Jamestown, Virginia: Acting as temporary Governor, Thomas Gates, along with John Rolfe, Captain Ralph Hamor, Sir George Somers, and other survivors from the Sea Venture (wrecked at Bermuda) arrive at Jamestown; they find that 60 have survived the "starving time" (winter), the fort palisades and gates have been torn down, and empty houses have been used for firewood, in fear of attacks by natives outside the fort area.
  • May 24Jamestown, Virginia: The temporary Governor, Thomas Gates, issues The Divine, Moral, and Martial Laws.
  • May 27 – Regicide François Ravaillac is executed by being pulled apart by horses in the Place de Grève, Paris.
  • June 5 – The masque Tethys' Festival is performed at Whitehall Palace to celebrate the investiture of Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales.[1]
  • June 7Jamestown: Temporary Governor Gates decides to abandon Jamestown.
  • June 8Jamestown: Temporary Governor Gates' convoy meets the ships of Governor Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr (Delaware) at Mulberry Island.
  • June 10Jamestown: The convoy of temporary Governor Gates, and the ships of Governor Lord De La Warr, land at Jamestown.

July–December[]

  • July – Monteverdi's Vespro della Beata Vergine (Marian Vespers) are published in Venice.
  • July 4Polish–Muscovite WarBattle of Klushino: The outnumbered forces of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth defeat the combined Russian and Swedish armies; Polish troops go on to occupy Moscow.[2]
  • July 5John Guy sets sail from Bristol, with 39 other colonists, for Newfoundland.
  • July 9Lady Arbella Stuart, a claimant to the throne of England, is imprisoned for clandestinely marrying William Seymour, 2nd Duke of Somerset, another claimant, without royal permission on June 22.[3]
  • August 2Henry Hudson sails into what is now known as Hudson Bay, thinking he has made it through the Northwest Passage and reached the Pacific Ocean.
  • August 9Anglo-Powhatan Wars: The English launch a major attack on the Paspahegh village, capturing and executing the native queen and her children, burning houses and chopping down the corn fields; the subsequent use of the term "Paspahegh" in documents refers to their former territory.
  • October 9Poland, under the command of Hetman Stanisław Żółkiewski, take control of the Kremlin during the Polish–Muscovite War.
  • October 17Louis XIII of France is crowned.[4]
  • November – Dr. Bonham's Case is decided by Edward Coke, Chief Justice of the Common Pleas of England. Coke affirms the supremacy of the common law, which limits the power of Parliament as well as the king.[5]

Date unknown[]

  • The Manchu tribal leader Nurhaci breaks his relations with the Ming dynasty of China, at this time under the aloof and growingly negligent Wanli Emperor; Nurhaci's line later becomes the emperors of the Qing dynasty, which overthrows the short-lived Shun dynasty in 1644, and the remnants of the Ming throne in 1662.
  • The Orion Nebula is discovered by Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc.
  • Publication is completed of the Douay–Rheims Bible (The Holie Bible Faithfully Translated into English), a translation of the Bible from the Latin Vulgate into English made by members of the English College, Douai, in the service of the Catholic Church.[6]
  • Jakob Böhme experiences another inner vision, in which he believes that he further understands the unity of the cosmos, and that he has received a special vocation from God.
  • Work starts on the Wignacourt Aqueduct, in Malta.
  • Santa Fe, New Mexico, capital of New Mexico, is founded as capital of Kingdom of Nuevo México.[7]
  • Henri Membertou, Grand Chief of Mi'kmaq nation signs Concordat of 1610, an agreement with the Roman Catholic Church recognizing the Mi'kmaq as an independent nation.

1611

May: King James Version of the Bible.

January–June[]

  • February 27Sunspots are observed by telescope, by Frisian astronomers Johannes Fabricius and David Fabricius. Johannes publishes the results of these observations, in De Maculis in Sole observatis in Wittenberg, later this year.[8] Such early discoveries are overlooked, however, and the first sighting is claimed a few months later, by Galileo Galilei and Christoph Scheiner.
  • March 4George Abbot is enthroned as Archbishop of Canterbury.[9]
  • March 9 – Battle of Segaba in Begemder: Yemana Kristos, brother of Emperor of Ethiopia Susenyos I, ends the rebellion of Melka Sedeq.
  • April 4Denmark declares war on Sweden, then captures Kalmar.
  • April 28 – The Colegio de Nuestra Señora del Santísimo Rosario is established in Manila, the Philippines (later renamed Colegio de Santo Tomas, now known as the University of Santo Tomas).[10]
  • May 2 – The Authorized King James Version of the Bible is published for the first time in London, England, printed by Robert Barker.
  • May 9 – In Japan, sixteen-year-old Emperor Go-Mizunoo succeeds Emperor Go-Yōzei.
  • June 22 – English explorer and sea captain Henry Hudson, his teenage son John, and seven crewmen are set adrift in or near Hudson Bay, after a mutiny on his ship Discovery. They are never seen again.

July–December[]

  • August 2 – Jamestown: Deputy Governor Sir Thomas Gates returns to Virginia with 280 people, provisions and cattle on six ships and assumes control, ruling that the fort must be strengthened.
  • September – Jamestown: Thomas Dale, with 350 men, starts building Henricus.
  • October 30Gustavus Adolphus succeeds his father Charles IX as King of Sweden.
  • November 1 – At Whitehall Palace in London, William Shakespeare's last solo play The Tempest is performed, perhaps for the first time.

Date unknown[]

  • An uprising occurs in Moscow, Russia against occupying Polish forces, resulting in a major fire.
  • Jamestown: John Rolfe imports tobacco seeds from the island of Trinidad (Nicotiana tabacum); the native tobacco is Nicotiana rustica.
  • The Aix-en-Provence possessions takes place in France.
  • Famine in Ethiopia resulting from crop failure due to weather conditions and the outbreak of a plague.
  • Thomas Dale founds the city of Henricus on the James River, a few miles south of present day Richmond, Virginia.
  • Construction begins on Naqsh-e Jahan Square in Isfahan, Persia.
  • Thomas Sutton founds Charterhouse School, on the site of the old Carthusian monastery in Charterhouse Square, Smithfield, London.
  • Itoh Gofuku Shop, a predecessor of Matsuzakaya, a famous department store, founded in Nagoya, Japan.[11]

1612

January–June[]

  • January 6Axel Oxenstierna becomes Lord High Chancellor of Sweden. He persuades the Riksdag of the Estates to grant the Swedish nobility the right and privilege to hold all higher offices of government.
  • January 20Matthias becomes Holy Roman Emperor, upon the death of Rudolf II.[12]
  • January 20November 4An uprising in Moscow expels Polish troops.
  • March 2False Dmitry III is recognised as tsar by the Cossacks.
  • April 11Edward Wightman, a radical Anabaptist, is the last person to be executed for heresy in England, by burning at the stake in Lichfield.[12]
  • May 10Shah Jahan marries Mumtaz Mahal.[13]
  • May 2325 – A SicilianNeapolitan galley fleet defeats the Tunisians at La Goulette.
  • June 13Matthias, Holy Roman Emperor, is formally elected.[12]

July–December[]

  • July 22 – Four women and one man are hanged, following the Northamptonshire witch trials in Northampton, England.
  • August 20 – Ten Pendle witches are hanged, having been found guilty of practising witchcraft in Lancashire, England.
  • August 26Battle of Kringen: A Scottish mercenary force is destroyed in Norway.
  • November 29Battle of Swally, in which the English fleet beat the Portuguese
  • November 29 – The Treaty of Nasuh Pasha is signed, between the Ottoman Empire and the Safavid Empire.
  • November 30Battle of Swally: Forces of the English East India Company and Portugal engage off the coast of India, resulting in an English victory.[14]
  • December 15Simon Marius is the first to observe the Andromeda Galaxy through a telescope.
  • December 28Galileo Galilei becomes the first astronomer to observe the planet Neptune when in conjunction with Jupiter, yet he mistakenly catalogues it as a fixed star, because of its extremely slow motion along the ecliptic. Neptune is not truly discovered as a planet until 1846, about 234 years later when Johann Gottfried Galle first sights it in the Berlin Observatory.

Date unknown[]

  • Jamestown: John Rolfe exports the first crop of improved tobacco (seeds from Trinidad).
  • The Nagoya Castle is completed in Japan.
  • The Okamoto Daihachi incident in Japan.
  • Thomas Shelton's English translation of the first half of Don Quixote is published. It is the first translation of the Spanish novel into any language.

1613

January–June[]

  • January 11 – Workers in a sandpit in the Dauphiné region of France discover the skeleton of what is alleged to be a 30-foot tall man (the remains, it is supposed, of the giant Teutobochus, a legendary Gallic king who fought the Romans).[15]
  • January 20 – King James I of England successfully mediates the Treaty of Knäred between Denmark and Sweden.[16]
  • February 14Elizabeth, daughter of King James I of England, marries Frederick V, Elector Palatine.[17]
  • March 3 (February 21 O.S.) – An assembly of the Russian Empire elects Mikhail Romanov Tsar of Russia, ending the Time of Troubles. The House of Romanov will remain a ruling dynasty until 1917.
  • March 27 – The first English child is born in Canada at Cuper's Cove, Newfoundland to Nicholas Guy.
  • March 29Samuel de Champlain becomes the first unofficial Governor of New France.
  • April 13Samuel Argall captures Algonquian princess Pocahontas in Passapatanzy, Virginia, to ransom her for some English prisoners held by her father, Chief Powhatan. She is brought to Henricus as an hostage.[18]
  • June – From Jamestown, John Rolfe makes the first shipment of West Indian tobacco grown in Virginia to England.
  • June 29 – Fire destroys London's famed Globe Theatre, during a performance of Shakespeare's Henry VIII.[19]

July–December[]

  • July 28 – Gregor Richter, the chief pastor of Görlitz, denounces Jacob Boehme as a heretic, in his Sunday sermon.
  • August 29 – The Sicilians under de Aragon defeat the trade fleet of the Ottoman Empire, ending the Battle of Cape Corvo.
  • September 29 – The New River is opened, to supply London with drinking water from Hertfordshire.
  • October 28Keichō embassy: Hasekura Tsunenaga sets out in the Date Maru with a Japanese diplomatic mission to the Holy See, first traveling to Acapulco in New Spain; this follows soon after an agreement between Tokugawa Ieyasu and the East India Company, permitting English merchants to live and trade in Japan.
  • November 3 – English royal favourite Robert Carr is created 1st Earl of Somerset.
  • December 26The Earl of Somerset marries Frances Howard, following her divorce from Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex; the event is the inspiration for John Donne's Eclogue.[20]

Date unknown[]

  • The Ottoman Empire invades Hungary.[citation needed]
  • A locust swarm destroys La Camarque, France.
  • The territory of Kuwait is founded.
  • Sultan Agung of Mataram takes the throne of the kingdom of Mataram on Java.
  • Near Jamestown, Virginia, Sir Thomas Dale starts a settlement called Bermuda City, which later becomes part of Hopewell, Virginia.

1614

December 4: Start of the Siege of Osaka

January–June[]

  • February – King James I of England condemns duels, in his proclamation Against Private Challenges and Combats.
  • April 5Pocahontas marries English colonist John Rolfe in Jamestown, Virginia.

July–December[]

  • July 6Raid of Żejtun: Ottoman forces make a final attempt to conquer the island of Malta, but are beaten back by the Knights Hospitaller.
  • August 23 – The University of Groningen is established in the Dutch Republic.[21]
  • September 1 – In England, Sir Julius Caesar becomes Master of the Rolls.
  • October 11Adriaen Block and a group of Amsterdam merchants petition the States General of the Northern Netherlands for exclusive trading rights, in the area he explored and named "New Netherland".
  • November 12 – The Treaty of Xanten ends the War of the Jülich Succession.[22]
  • November 19 – Hostilities resulting from an attempt by Toyotomi Hideyori to restore Osaka Castle begin. Tokugawa Ieyasu, father of the shōgun, is outraged at this act, and leads three thousand men across the Kizu River, destroying the fort there.
  • December 4 – The Siege of Osaka begins.

Date unknown[]

  • The French Estates General meets for the last time before the era of the French Revolution. In the interim, the Kingdom of France will be governed as an absolute monarchy.
  • Scottish mathematician John Napier publishes Mirifici Logarithmorum Canonis Descriptio (Description of the Admirable Table of Logarithms), outlining his discovery of logarithms, and incorporating the decimal mark. Astronomer Johannes Kepler soon begins to employ logarithms, in his description of the Solar System.
  • Tisquantum,[23] a Native American of the Wampanoag Nation, is kidnapped and enslaved by Thomas Hunt, an English sea captain working with Captain John Smith. Freed in Spain, Tisquantum (a.k.a. Squanto) will travel for five years in Europe and North America, before returning to his home in Plymouth, Massachusetts. Twenty months later, he will be able to teach the Pilgrims[24] the basics of farming and trade in the New World.
  • The Rosicrucian Order is instituted in the Holy Roman Empire, according to Fraternitas Rosae Crucis.
  • Christianity is banned throughout Japan.
  • The Duchess of Malfi is performed at the Globe theatre

1615

January–June[]

  • January 1 – The New Netherland Company is granted a three-year monopoly in North American trade, between the 40th and 45th parallels.
  • February – Sir Thomas Roe sets out to become the first ambassador from the court of the King of England to the Mughal Emperor Jahangir,[25][26] sailing in the Lyon under the command of captain Christopher Newport.
  • March 10John Ogilvie, a Jesuit priest, is hanged and drawn at Glasgow Cross in Scotland for refusing to pledge allegiance to King James VI of Scotland; he will be canonised in 1976, becoming the only post-Reformation Scottish saint.
  • April 21 – The Wignacourt Aqueduct is inaugurated in Malta.
  • May 6 – The Peace of Tyrnau is signed between Matthias, Holy Roman Emperor, and Gábor Bethlen.[27]
  • June 2 – The first Récollet missionaries arrive at Quebec City, from Rouen, France.
  • June 3 – The Eastern Army of Tokugawa Ieyasu and the Osaka Army of Toyotomi Hideyori clash during the Battle of Dōmyōji and the Battle of Tennōji.
  • June 4 – Forces under shōgun Tokugawa Ieyasu take Osaka Castle in Japan, beginning a period of peace which lasts nearly 250 years. Bands of Christian samurai support Ieyasu's enemies at the Battle of Osaka.
  • June 21 – The Peace of Asti is concluded between the Spanish Empire and Savoy.[28]

July–December[]

  • OctoberSpánverjavígin: 31 Spanish Basque whalers are killed, after a conflict with the people of Iceland, in the Westfjords Peninsula.
  • September
    • 17: Los Banos, Laguna was founded.
  • November
    • The Mughals under Jahangir launch the first offensive against Kajali, a border post of the Ahom kingdom.
    • Hasekura Tsunenaga visits Pope Paul V in Rome, to request a trade treaty between Japan and Mexico.
  • December 6 – In England, John Winthrop, later governor of the future Massachusetts Bay Colony, marries his second wife (of four), Thomasine Clopton, daughter of William Clopton of Castleins, near Groton, Suffolk.

Date unknown[]

  • Easter – Persian Safavid hordes led by Shah Abbas the Great kill all the monks at the David Gareja monastery complex in Georgia and set fire to its collection of manuscripts and works of art.
  • Mary Talbot, Countess of Shrewsbury, is released from the Tower of London, in recognition of her role in helping to discover the murder of Sir Thomas Overbury.
  • The Somers Isles Company is founded to administer Bermuda.
  • John Browne is created the first King's Gunfounder in England.
  • Austrian merchants receive economic privileges in the Ottoman Empire.
  • The Perse School in Cambridge, England, is founded by Dr Stephen Perse.
  • Wilson's School in Wallington, near London, is founded by Royal Charter.
  • The Grolsch Brewery is founded in Groenlo, Netherlands.
  • Konoike Shinroku opens an office in Osaka, and begins shipping tax-rice from western Japan to Osaka.
  • Johannes Kepler publishes Dissertatio cum Nuncio Sidereo, in response to Galileo's discovery of Jupiter's moons.[29]
  • Manuel Dias, a Portuguese Jesuit missionary, introduces for the first time in China the telescope, in his book Tian Wen Lüe (Explicatio Sphaerae Coelestis).
  • The second volume of Miguel de Cervantes's Don Quixote ("El ingenioso hidalgo Don Quijote de la Mancha") is published, and is as successful as the first. Don Quixote eventually becomes the only truly famous work its author ever writes.

1616

January–June[]

  • January
    • Six-year-old António Vieira arrives from Portugal, with his parents, in Bahia (present-day Salvador) in Colonial Brazil, where he will become a diplomat, noted author, leading figure of the Church, and protector of Brazilian indigenous peoples, in an age of intolerance.
    • Officials in Württemberg charge astronomer Johannes Kepler with practicing "forbidden arts" (witchcraft). His mother had also been so charged and spent 14 months in prison.
  • January 1 – King James I of England attends the masque The Golden Age Restored, a satire by Ben Jonson on fallen court favorite the Earl of Somerset. The king asks for a repeat performance on January 6.[30]
  • January 3 – In the court of James I of England, the king's favorite George Villiers becomes Master of the Horse (encouraging development of the thoroughbred horse); on April 24 he receives the Order of the Garter; and on August 27 is created Viscount Villiers and Baron Waddon, receiving a grant of land valued at £80,000. In 1617, he will be made Earl of Buckingham. After the Earl of Pembroke, he is the second richest nobleman in England.
  • January 10 – English diplomat Sir Thomas Roe presents his credentials to the Mughal Emperor Jahangir, in Ajmer Fort, opening the door to the British presence in India.[31][32] Roe sailed in the Lyon under the command of captain Christopher Newport, best known for his role in the Virginia colonies.
  • January 12 – The city of Belém, Brazil is founded on the Amazon River delta, by Portuguese captain Francisco Caldeira Castelo Branco, who had previously taken the city of São Luís in Maranhão from the French.
  • January 15 – After overwintering with the Huron Indians, Samuel de Champlain and Recollect Father Joseph Le Caron visit the Petun and Ottawa Indians of the Great Lakes. This is Champlain's last trip in North America before returning to France. Having secured Canada, he helps create French America, New France, or L'Acadie.
  • January 29Dutch captain Willem Schouten, in the Eendracht, rounds the southern tip of South America, and names it Kaap Hoorn, after his birthplace in Holland.
  • February – English merchants of the East India Company complain that the great troubles and wars in Japan since their arrival have put them to much pains and charges. Two great cities, Osaka and Sakaii, have been burned to the ground, each one almost as big as London, and not one house left standing, and it is reported above 300,000 men have lost their lives, “yet the old Emperor Ogusho Same hath prevailed and Fidaia Same either been slain or fled secretly away, that no news is to be heard of him.” Jesuits, priests, and friars are banished by the emperor and their churches and monasteries pulled down; they put the fault on the arrival of the English; it is said if Fidaia Same had prevailed against the emperor, he promised them entrance again, when without doubt all the English would have been driven out of Japan.[33]
  • February 1James I of England grants Ben Jonson an annual pension of 100 marks, making him de facto poet laureate.[34]
  • February 19 – First recorded eruption of Mayon Volcano, the Philippines' most active volcano.[35]
  • February 24 – A commission of Roman Catholic theologians, the "Qualifiers," reports that the idea that the Sun is stationary is "foolish and absurd in philosophy, and formally heretical since it explicitly contradicts in many places the sense of Holy Scripture...".
  • February 28 – In the aftermath of the 16131614 anti-Jewish pogrom called the Fettmilch Uprising in Frankfurt, Germany, mob leader Vincenz Fettmilch is beheaded, but the Jews, who had been expelled from the city on August 23, 1614, following the plundering of the Judengasse, can only return as a result of direct intervention by Holy Roman Emperor Matthias. After long negotiations, the Jews are left without any compensation for their plundered belongings.
  • MarchAction of 1616, La Goulette, Tunisia: A Spanish squadron under Francisco de Ribera defeats a Tunisian fleet.
  • March 5Nicolaus Copernicus' De revolutionibus orbium coelestium (1543) is placed on the Index of Forbidden Books, by the Congregation of the Index of the Roman Catholic Church "until corrected".
  • March 11
    • Galileo Galilei meets Pope Paul V in person, to discuss his position as a defender of Copernicus' heliocentrism.
    • English Roman Catholic priest, Thomas Atkinson, is hanged, drawn, and quartered at York, at age 70 (he will be beatified by Pope John Paul II on November 22, 1987).
  • March 19
    • Sir Walter Ralegh, English explorer of the New World, is released from prison in the Tower of London, where he has been imprisoned for treason, in order to conduct a second (ill-fated) expedition, in search of El Dorado in South America.[36]
    • The Scornful Lady, a comedy stage play written by Francis Beaumont and John Fletcher, is published.
  • March 26August 30 – English explorer William Baffin, as pilot to Robert Bylot on the Discovery, makes a detailed exploration of Baffin Bay, whilst searching for the Northwest Passage.[37] The expedition also discovers Smith Sound, Lancaster Sound and Devon Island, and reaches latitude 77° 45' North, a record which holds for 236 years.
  • March 31 - Emperor Jahangir of India (reign 1605-1627) conferred the title of Nur Jahan on his wife <Tuzuk i Jahangiri, The Memoirs of Jahangir>
  • April 25 – Sir John Coke, in the Court of King's Bench (England), holds the King's actions in a case of In commendam to be illegal.
  • May 25 – King James I of England's former favourite, the Earl of Somerset, and his wife Frances, are convicted of the murder of Thomas Overbury in 1613. They are spared death, and are sentenced to imprisonment in the Tower of London (until 1622).[38] Although the King has ordered the investigation of the poet's murder and allowed his former court favorite to be arrested and tried, his court, now under the influence of George Villiers, gains the reputation of being corrupt and vile. The sale of peerages (beginning in July)[39] and the royal visit of James's brother-in-law, Christian IV of Denmark, a notorious drunkard, add further scandal.
  • May 3 – The Treaty of Loudun is signed, ending a series of rebellions in France.[40]
  • June 12Pocahontas (now Rebecca) arrives in England, with her husband, John Rolfe,[41] their one-year-old son, Thomas Rolfe, her half-sister Matachanna (alias Cleopatra) and brother-in-law Tomocomo, the shaman also known as Uttamatomakkin (having set out in May). Ten Powhatan Indians are brought by Sir Thomas Dale, the colonial governor, at the request of the Virginia Company, as a fund-raising device. Dale, having been recalled under criticism, writes A True Relation of the State of Virginia, Left by Sir Thomas Dale, Knight, in May last, 1616, in a successful effort to redeem his leadership. Neither Pocahontas or Dale see Virginia again.

July–December[]

  • July 6 – First recorded eruption of Manam Volcano (erupting frequently since), forming a 10-km-wide island in the Bismarck Sea, 13 km (8.1 mi) off coast of Papua New Guinea, in the southwestern part of the Pacific Ring of Fire.[35]
  • July 20 – The death of Hugh O'Neill, 2nd Earl of Tyrone, in exile in Rome, ends the Flight of the Earls from Ireland.[42]
  • August 8 – The Tokugawa shogunate (Bakufu) in Japan forbids foreigners other than Chinese from traveling freely, or trading outside of the ports of Nagasaki and Hirado.[43]
  • SeptemberSakazaki Naomori of Iwami Tsuwano han fails to kidnap Princess Sen, and commits suicide.
  • September 15 – The first non-aristocratic, free public school in Europe is opened in Frascati, Italy.
  • October
    • John Donne is appointed as Reader in Divinity, at his old inn of court in London, Lincoln's Inn.
    • King James's School at Knaresborough in Yorkshire is founded by Dr. Robert Chaloner, and the charter is signed by King James I of England.[44]
  • October/NovemberBen Jonson's satirical five-act comedy, The Devil is an Ass, is produced at the Blackfriars Theatre in London by the King's Men, poking fun at contemporary credence in witchcraft and Middlesex juries.[45]
  • October 25Dirk Hartog makes the second recorded landfall by a European on Australian soil, at Dirk Hartog Island, off the Western Australian coast. The pewter Hartog Plate, left to mark the landfall of the Dutch ship Eendracht, is now in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.
  • November
    • Peter Paul Rubens begins work on classical tapestries, when a contract is signed in Antwerp with cloth dyers Jan Raes and Frans Sweerts in Brussels, and the Genoese merchant Franco Cattaneo.
    • René Descartes, at age 20, graduates in civil and canon law at the University of Poitiers, where he becomes disillusioned with books, preferring to seek truths from "le grand livre du monde." His thesis defense may have been written in December.
    • With small profits to show, the Virginia Company decides to distribute land in Virginia to shareholders according to the number of shares owned. Each stockholder can set up a "particular" plantation and pay associated expenses, receiving 100 acres (0.40 km2) of land for each share and 50 acres (200,000 m2) for each person transported (the "headrights" system).
    • Author Robert Burton is made vicar of St. Thomas in the west suburbs of London.[46][47]
  • November 4Prince Charles (15-year-old surviving son of James I of England and Anne of Denmark) is invested as Prince of Wales at Whitehall in London, the last such investiture until 1911.
  • November 5 – Bishop Lancelot Andrewes preaches the annual Gunpowder Treason sermon before King James I of England at Whitehall (both were intended victims).
  • November 625Ben Jonson's works are published in a collected folio edition (the first of any English playwright).[39][48]
  • November 6 – Captain William Murray is granted a royal patent, giving him the sole privilege of importing tobacco to Scotland for a period of 21 years. Continuing from the reign of Elizabeth I of England, the creation of grants and patents reaches a new highwater mark from 1614 to 1621, during the reign of James I of England.
  • November 13 – Italian artist Guido Reni's famous Pietà, commissioned by the Senate of Bologna, is placed on the greater altar of the church of Santa Maria della Pietà.
  • November 14 – In England, Sir Edward Coke is dismissed as Chief Justice of the King's Bench by royal prerogative.
  • November 16Marco Antonio de Dominis, Roman Catholic Archbishop of the See of Spalato and Primate of Dalmatia, having run afoul of Pope Paul V over secular matters relating to Venice, submits to King James I of England and later becomes Dean of Windsor.
  • November 30Cardinal Richelieu, Armand-Jean du Plessis, is named French Secretary of State by young king Louis XIII. Richelieu will change France into a unified centralised state, able to resist both England and the Habsburg Empire.
  • December – In the Middle East, traveller Pietro Della Valle marries Jowaya, daughter of a Nestorian Christian father and an Armenian mother, in Baghdad. The couple then sets off (1617) to find the Shah in Isfahan.
  • December 10 – An ordinance establishes parish schools in Scotland. The same act of the Privy Council commends the abolition of Gaelic.
  • December 18 – A widely reported earthquake occurs in Leipzig, Germany (also dated December 22).[49]
  • December 22 – An Indian youth (called one of "the first fruits of India") is baptized with the name "Peter" in London at the St. Dionis Backchurch, in a ceremony attended by the Lord Mayor, the Privy Council, city aldermen, and officials of the Honourable East India Company. Peter thus becomes the first convert to the Anglican Church in India. He returns to India as a missionary, schooled in English and Latin.[50]
  • December 25
    • "Father Christmas" is a main character of Christmas, His Masque, written by Ben Jonson and presented at the court of King James I of England. Father Christmas is considered a papist symbol by Puritans, and later banished from England until the English Restoration. The traditional, comical costume for this jolly figure, as well as regional names, indicate that he is descended from the presenter of the medieval Feast of Fools.
    • Captain Nathaniel Courthope reaches the nutmeg-rich island of Run in the Moluccas, to defend it against the Dutch East India Company. A contract with the inhabitants, accepting James I of England as their sovereign, makes it part of the English colonial empire.[51][52]

Date unknown[]

  • Abbas I's Kakhetian and Kartlian campaigns occur as progressive combats. Abbas I of Persia captures Tbilisi following a conflict with the Georgian soldiers and the general populace. After the capture of Tbilisi, Abbas I confronts an Ottoman army. The battle takes place near Lake Gökçe, and results in a Safavid victory.
  • Nurhaci declares himself khan (emperor) of China, and founds the Later Jin Dynasty.
  • Manchurian leader Qing Tai Zu crowns himself king.
  • The Tepehuán Revolt in Nueva Vizcaya tests the limits of Spanish and Jesuit colonialism, in western and northwestern Durango and southern Chihuahua, Mexico.
  • Oorsprong en voortgang der Nederlandtscher beroerten (Origin and progress of the disturbances in the Netherlands), by Johannes Gysius, is published.[53]
  • The Collegium Musicum is founded in Prague.
  • Physician Aleixo de Abreu is granted a pension of 16,000 reis, for services to the crown in Angola and Brazil, by Philip III of Spain, who also appoints him physician of his chamber.
  • Ngawang Namgyal arrives in Bhutan, having escaped Tibet.
  • The Swiss Guard is appointed part of the household guard of King Louis XIII of France.
  • Week-long festivities in honor of the Prince of Urbano, of the Barberini family, occur in Florence, Italy.[54]
  • Richard Steel and John Crowther complete their journey from Ajmeer in the Mughal Empire to Ispahan in Persia.
  • Captain John Smith publishes his book A description of New England in London. Smith relates one voyage to the coast of Massachusetts and Maine, in 1614, and an attempted voyage in 1615, when he was captured by French pirates and detained for several months before escaping.
  • The New England Indian smallpox or leptospirosis epidemic of 1616–19 begins to depopulate the region, killing an estimated 90% of the coastal native peoples.[55][56]
  • A slave ship carries smallpox from the Kingdom of Kongo to Salvador, Brazil.[57]
  • In England, louse-borne epidemic typhus ravages the poor and crowded.
  • A fatal disease of cattle, probably rinderpest, spreads through the Italian provinces of Padua, Udine, Treviso and Vicenza, introduced most likely from Dalmatia or Hungary. Great numbers of cattle die in Italy, as they had in previous years (1559, 1562, 1566, 1590, 1598) in other European regions when harvest failure also drives people to the brink of starvation (for example, 159597 in Germany). The consumption of beef and veal is prohibited, and Pope Paul V issues an edict prohibiting the slaughter of draught oxen that are suitable for plowing. Calves are also not slaughtered for some time afterwards, so that Italy's cattle herds can be replenished.[58]
  • At the behest of Sir Ferdinando Gorges, Dr. Richard Vines, a physician, passes the winter of 1616–17 at Biddeford, Maine, at the mouth of the Saco River, that he calls Winter Harbor. This is the site of the earliest permanent settlement in Maine, of which there is a conclusive record. Maine will become an important refuge for religious dissenters persecuted by the Puritans.[59]
  • In Spanish Florida, the Cofa Mission at the mouth of the Suwannee River disappears.
  • The first African slaves are brought to Bermuda, an English colony, by Captain George Bargrave to dive for pearls, because of their reputed skill in this activity. Harvesting pearls off the coast proves unsuccessful, and the slaves are put to work planting and harvesting the initial large crops of tobacco and sugarcane.[60] At the same time, some English refuse to purchase Brazilian sugar because it is produced by slave labour.[61]
  • Italian natural philosopher Giulio Cesare Vanini publishes a radically heterodox book in France, after his English interlude De admirandis naturae reginae deaeque mortalium arcanis, for which he is condemned and forced to flee Paris. For his opinion that the world is eternal and governed by immanent laws, as expressed in this book, he is executed in 1619.
  • Francesco Albani paints the ceiling frescoes of Apollo and the Seasons, at the Palazzo Verospi in Via del Corso, for Cardinal Fabrizio Verospi.
  • Elizabethan polymath and alchemist Robert Fludd publishes Apologia Compendiaria, Fraternitatem de Rosea Cruce suspicionis … maculis aspersam, veritatis quasi Fluctibus abluens at Leiden, countering the arguments of Andreas Libavius. Fludd later becomes a cult figure, being linked with Rosicrucians and the Family of Love, without any historical evidence.
  • Johannes Valentinus Andreae claims to be the author of Chymische Hochzeit Christiani Rosencreutz Anno 1459 published in Strasbourg.
  • Witch trials:
    • John Cotta writes his influential book The Triall of Witch-craft.
    • Elizabeth Rutter is hanged as a witch in Middlesex, England, Agnes Berrye in Enfield, and nine women in Leicester on the testimony of a raving 13-year-old named John Smith, under the Witchcraft Act 1604.[62] In Orkney, Elspeth Reoch is tried. In France Leger (first name unknown) is condemned for witchcraft on May 6, Sylvanie de la Plaine is burned at Pays de Labourde as a witch, and in Orléans eighteen witches are killed.
    • A second witch-hunt breaks out in Biscay, Spain. An Edict of Silence is issued by the Inquisition, but the king overturns the Edict, and 300 accused witches are burned alive.
  • Latest probable date of Thomas Middleton composition of The Witch, a tragicomedy that may have entered into the present-day text of Shakespeare's Macbeth.[63]
  • "Drink to me only with thine eyes" comes from Ben Jonson's love poem, To Celia. Jonson's poetic lamentation On my first Sonne is also from this year.
  • Francis de Sales' literary masterpiece Treatise on the Love of God is published, while he is Bishop of Geneva.
  • Orlando Gibbons' anthem See, the Word is Incarnate is written.
  • Italian naturalist Fabio Colonna states that "tongue stones" (glossopetrae) are shark teeth, in his treatise De glossopetris dissertatio.
  • An important English dictionary is published by Dr. John Bullokar with the title An English Expositor: teaching the interpretation of the hardest words used in our language, with sundry explications, descriptions and discourses.
  • English mathematician Henry Briggs goes to Edinburgh, to show John Napier his efficient method of finding logarithms, by the continued extraction of square roots.
  • Moralist writer John Deacon publishes a quarto entitled Tobacco Tortured in the Filthy Fumes of Tobacco Refined (supporting the views of James I of England). Deacon writes the same year that syphilis is a "Turkished", "Spanished", or "Frenchized" disease that the English contract by "trafficking with the contagious courruptions."
  • Fortunio Liceti publishes De Monstruorum Natura in Italy, which marks the beginning of studies into malformations of the embryo.
  • Dutch traders smuggle the coffee plant out of Mocha, a port in Yemen on the Red Sea, and cultivate it at the Amsterdam Botanical Gardens. The Dutch later introduce it to Java.
  • Muhammad Baqir Majlisi, known as Allameh Majlesi, is born in the city of Isfahan.
  • Fort San Diego, in Acapulco Bay, Mexico, is completed by the Spanish as a defence against their erstwhile vassals, the Dutch.[64]
  • Anti-Christian persecutions break out in Nanking, China, and Nagasaki, Japan. The Jesuit-lead Christian community in Japan at this time is over 3,000,000 strong.
  • Master seafarer Henry Mainwaring, Oxford graduate and lawyer turned successful Newfoundland pirate, returns to England, is pardoned after rescuing a Newfoundland trading fleet near Gibraltar, and begins to write a revealing treatise on piracy.
  • The first Thai embassy to Japan arrives.
  • William Harvey gives his views on the circulation of blood, as Lumleian Lecturer at the Royal College of Physicians. It is not until 1628 that he gives his views in print.
  • The Dutch establish their colony of Essequibo, in the region of the Essequibo River, in northern South America (present-day Guyana), for sugar and tobacco production. The colony is protected by Fort Kyk-Over-Al, now in ruins. The Dutch also map the Delaware River in North America.
  • The Ottoman Empire attempts landings at the shoreline between Cádiz and Lisbon.
  • Croatian mathematician Faustus Verantius publishes his book Machinae novae, a book of mechanical and technological inventions, some of which are applicable to the solutions of hydrological problems, and others concern the construction of clepsydras, sundials, mills, presses bridges and boats for widely different uses.
  • John Speed publishes an edition of his Atlas of Britain, with descriptive text in Latin.
  • Pierre Vernier is employed, with his father, in making fine-scale maps of France (Franche-Comté area).
  • Danish natural philosopher Ole Worm collects materials that will later be incorporated into his museum in Copenhagen. His museum is the nucleus of the University of Copenhagen Zoological Museum.
  • Isaac Beeckman, Dutch intellectual and future friend of René Descartes, leaves his candle factory in Zierikzee, to return to Middelburg to study medicine.[65]
  • In Sardinia, the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery of the University of Sassari is founded.
  • Gian Lorenzo Bernini sculpts Bacchanal: A Faun Teased by Children, at the age of 18 years. This work is now in New York, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  • The States of Holland set up a commission to advise them on the problem of Jewish residency and worship. One of the members of the commission is Hugo Grotius, a highly regarded jurist and one of the most important political thinkers of his day.
  • Marie Venier (called Laporte) is the first female actress to appear on the stage in Paris.[66]
  • Jesuit astronomer Christoph Scheiner becomes the advisor to Archduke Maximilian, brother of Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor in Vienna. A lifelong enemy of Galileo, following a dispute over the nature of sunspots, Scheiner is credited with reopening the 1616 accusations against Galileo in 1633.
  • Tommaso Campanella's book In Defence of Galileo is written.
  • Istanbul's Sultan Ahmed Mosque (also known as the Blue Mosque) is completed during the rule of Ahmed I.
  • In Tunis, the mosque of Youssef Deyis is built. Today it has an octagonal minaret crowned with a miniature green-tiled pyramid for a roof.
  • Inigo Jones designs the Queen's House at Greenwich, near London.[37]
  • Ambrose Barlow, recently graduated from the College of Saint Gregory, Douai, France, and the Royal College of Saint Alban in Valladolid, Spain, enters the Order of Saint Benedict. In 1641 he will be martyred in England.
  • John Vaughan, 1st Earl of Carbery is appointed to the post of comptroller, in the newly formed household of Prince Charles in England; Vaughan later claims that serving the Prince has cost him £20,000.

1617

January–June[]

  • February 27 – The Treaty of Stolbovo ends the Ingrian War between Sweden and Russia. Sweden gains Ingria and Kexholm.[67]
  • April 14 – Second Battle of Playa Honda: The Spanish navy defeats a Dutch fleet in the Philippines.[68]
  • April 19 – The town of Uusikaupunki (Swedish: Nystad, lit. "New Town") was founded by King Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden.[69]
  • April 24 – Encouraged by Charles d'Albert, seventeen-year-old Louis XIII, king of France, forces his mother Marie de Medici, who has held de facto power, into retirement and has her favourite, Concino Concini, assassinated.[70]
  • June 5Ferdinand II, Archduke of Inner Austria, is elected King of Bohemia. Ferdinand's forceful Catholic counter-reformation causes great unrest, amongst the Protestants and moderates in Bohemia.

July–December[]

  • September 1 – The weighing ceremony of Jahangir is described by the first English ambassador to the Mughal court, Sir Thomas Roe.[71]
  • September 23 – The Peace of Busza is signed, between the Ottoman Empire and the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth.
  • October 9 – The Treaty of Pavia is signed between Spain and Savoy, under which Savoy returns Monferrato to Mantua.[72]
  • November 17 – A naval battle between the Sicilians and Venetians ends inconclusively.
  • November 22Mustafa I succeeds Ahmed I, as Sultan of the Ottoman Empire.

Date unknown[]

  • At least seven women are sentenced to death by burning for witchcraft, at the Finspång witch trial in Sweden.
  • Giambattista Andreini's play The Penitent Magdalene is published in Mantua.

1618

January–June[]

  • February 26Osman II deposes his uncle Mustafa I as Ottoman sultan (until 1622).
  • March 8Johannes Kepler discovers the third law of planetary motion (after some initial calculations, he soon rejects the idea, but on May 15 confirms the discovery).[73]
  • April 21 – Spanish-born Jesuit missionary Pedro Páez becomes (probably) the first European to see and describe the source of the Blue Nile in Ethiopia.[74]
  • May 23 – The Second Defenestration of Prague – Protestant noblemen hold a mock trial, and throw two direct representatives of Ferdinand II of Germany (Imperial Governors) and their scribe out of a window into a pile of manure, exacerbating a low-key rebellion into the Bohemian Revolt (1618–1621), precipitating the Thirty Years' War into armed conflict, and further polarizing Europe on religious grounds.
  • June 14 – Joris Veseler prints the first Dutch newspaper Courante uyt Italien, Duytslandt, &c. in Amsterdam (approximate date).
  • July 20Pluto reaches, according to sophisticated mathematical calculations, its second most recent aphelion. The next one occurs in 1866, and the following one will occur in 2113.

July–December[]

  • August 29Johan van Oldenbarnevelt and Hugo Grotius are imprisoned by Maurice, Prince of Orange.
  • September 4 – Rodi avalanche: A rock- or snowslide buries the Alpine town of Piuro, claiming 2,427 victims.[75][76]
  • September 18 – Beginning of the 13th Baktun, in the Mesoamerican Long Count calendar (12.0.0.0.0).
  • September 19November 21Thirty Years' War: The Siege of Pilsen takes place.
  • September 28 – The Battle of Orynin takes place.
  • October 9 – Residents of Mogilev revolt against Uniate bishop Josaphat Kuntsevych.
  • October 29English adventurer, writer and courtier Sir Walter Raleigh is beheaded at the Palace of Westminster, for allegedly conspiring treasonably against James I of England in 1603, following pressure from the Spanish government, over his attack on their settlement on the Orinoco, on his last (1617–18) voyage.
  • November 13 – The Synod of Dort has its first meeting.
  • December 11Russia and Poland sign the Truce of Deulino.

Date unknown[]

  • The margraves of Brandenburg are granted Polish approval to inherit the Duchy of Prussia, creating the state of Brandenburg-Prussia.
  • The 3,000 seat Teatro Farnese, the first permanent proscenium theatre, is built into the Great Hall of the Palazzo della Pilotta in Parma, Italy.
  • The Ming Chinese embassy of the Wanli Emperor presents tea to the Russian tsar.

1619

January–June[]

  • January 12James I of England's Banqueting House, Whitehall in London is destroyed by fire.[77] Inigo Jones is commissioned to design a replacement.
  • March 20Matthias, Holy Roman Emperor dies, leaving the Holy Roman Empire without an official leader, to deal with the Bohemian Revolt.
  • AprilBattle of Sarhu: Manchu leader Nurhaci is victorious over the Ming forces.[78]
  • May 8 – The Synod of Dort has its final meeting.
  • May 13Dutch statesman Johan van Oldenbarnevelt is executed in The Hague, after having been convicted of treason.
  • May 30Jan Pieterszoon Coen, Governor General of the Dutch East Indies, conquers Jayakarta, and renames it Batavia.
  • June 10Thirty Years' WarBattle of Sablat: Protestant forces are defeated.[79]
  • June 21Dulwich College founded by Edward Alleyn, in Dulwich, London.[80]

July–December[]

  • July 30 – In Jamestown, Virginia, the first English-speaking representative assembly in the Americas, the Virginia General Assembly (later named House of Burgesses), convenes for the first time.[81]
  • August – The first African slaves are brought to an English colony onboard an English privateer ship, arriving at Point Comfort, in the colony of Virginia.[82][83]
  • August 5Thirty Years' War: Battle of VěstoniceBohemian forces defeat the Austrians.
  • August 10 – The Treaty of Angoulême ends the civil war between Louis XIII of France and his mother, Marie de' Medici.
  • August 26Frederick V of the Palatinate is elected King of Bohemia by the states of the Bohemian Confederacy.
  • August 28Ferdinand II, Archduke of Austria and King of Bohemia, is elected Holy Roman Emperor unanimously by the prince-electors.
  • October 8Thirty Years' War – The Treaty of Munich is signed by Ferdinand II and Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria.[84]
  • November 16William Parker School, Hastings, England, is founded by the will of Reverend William Parker.
  • November 23Thirty Years' War: Battle of Humenné – Polish Lisowczycy troops assist the Holy Roman Emperor by defeating a Transylvanian force, forcing Gabor Bethlen to raise his siege of Vienna.
  • December 4 – Thirty-eight colonists from England disembark in Berkeley Hundred, Virginia from the Margaret of Bristol and give thanks to God (considered by some to be the first Thanksgiving in the Americas).

Date unknown[]

  • Jahangir grants a British mission important commercial concessions at Surat, on the west coast of India.
  • Salé Rovers declare the port of Salé on the Barbary Coast to be the Republic of Salé, independent of the Sultan of Morocco, with the Dutch-born corsair Jan Janszoon as president.
  • The Danish–Dutch whaling settlement of Smeerenburg is founded in Svalbard.
  • An expedition in Sri Lanka, led by Filipe de Oliveira, deposes and executes the last Jaffna king (Cankili II), putting an end to the Jaffna Kingdom.
  • A Spanish expedition sails around Tierra del Fuego, mapping the coast and discovering the Diego Ramírez Islands.

Births[]

1610

Pope Alexander VIII
Hendrik Martenszoon Sorgh
Gabriel Lalemant
Jacob Kettler
Adriaen van Ostade
  • January 9George Wilde, Irish bishop (d. 1665)
  • January 10Louis Maimbourg, French Jesuit historian (d. 1686)
  • January 12Reinhold Curicke, jurist and historian from Danzig (d. 1667)
  • January 13Archduchess Maria Anna of Austria, Electress of Bavaria (d. 1665)
  • January 21Elizabeth Fones, American settler (d. 1673)
  • January 26Henry Hildyard, English Member of Parliament (d. 1674)
  • February 2
    • Francisco Ignacio Alcina, Jesuit missionary and historian (d. 1674)
    • Pierre Bourdelot, French physician (d. 1685)
    • Edmund Weaver, English politician (d. 1672)
  • February 11Salomon Idler, German inventor (d. 1669)
  • February 13Jean de Labadie, French pietist (d. 1674)
  • February 14Solomon Swale, English politician (d. 1678)
  • March 3Pierre Dupuis, French painter (d. 1682)
  • March 4 (bapt.) – William Dobson, English portraitist and painter (d. 1646)
  • March 14
    • Frederick Cornwallis, 1st Baron Cornwallis, English politician (d. 1662)
    • Simon Louis, Count of Lippe-Detmolt (1627–1636) (d. 1636)
  • April 22Pope Alexander VIII (d. 1691)[85]
  • May 12Arent Berntsen, Norwegian statistician (d. 1680)
  • May 17Joseph Poncet, French missionary (d. 1675)
  • May 18Stefano della Bella, Italian printmaker (d. 1664)
  • June 1Hendrik Martenszoon Sorgh, Dutch painter (d. 1670)
  • June 17Birgitte Thott, Danish scholar, writer and translator (b. 1662)
  • June 24Thomas Hales, Connecticut settler (d. 1679)
  • July 2Francis Browne, 3rd Viscount Montagu in the Peerage of England (d. 1682)
  • July 6Hugh Forth, English politician (d. 1676)
  • July 8 (bapt.)Richard Deane, English military commander and regicide (d. 1653)
  • July 11William Widdrington, 1st Baron Widdrington, English landowner, politician (d. 1651)
  • July 14Ferdinando II de' Medici, Grand Duke of Tuscany (d. 1670)
  • July 18Antonio de Solís y Ribadeneyra, Spanish dramatist and historian (d. 1686)
  • July 28 (bapt.)Henry Glapthorne, English dramatist (d. c.1643)
  • July 30Lorens von der Linde, Swedish field marshal (d. 1670)
  • August 2Edward Master, English politician (d. 1691)
  • August 4Cornelis Evertsen the Elder, Dutch admiral (d. 1666)
  • August 23Susanna Margarete of Anhalt-Dessau, Princess of Anhalt-Dessau (d. 1663)
  • September 4Giovanni Andrea Sirani, Italian painter (d. 1670)
  • September 6
  • September 10Sir Edward Seymour, 3rd Baronet, Member of Parliament (d. 1688)
  • September 24Huang Zongxi, Chinese political theorist, philosopher, naturalist, writer and soldier (d. 1695)
  • September 28Henry Hastings, 1st Baron Loughborough, English Royalist army commander in the English Civil War (d. 1666)
  • September 29Gabriel Druillettes, French missionary (d. 1681)
  • October 3Gabriel Lalemant, Jesuit missionary in New France, beginning in 1646 (d. 1649)
  • October 6Charles de Sainte-Maure, duc de Montausier, French soldier, the governor of the Louis (d. 1690)
  • October 19James Butler, 1st Duke of Ormonde, Anglo-Irish statesman and soldier (d. 1688)
  • October 28Jacob Kettler, German noble (d. 1682)
  • November 8Pietro Vidoni, Italian Catholic cardinal (d. 1681)
  • November 20Henry Heyman, English politician (d. 1658)
  • November 22Duchess Marie Elisabeth of Saxony (d. 1684)
  • November 28Augustine Warner, Virginia planter, politician (d. 1674)
  • December 9Baldassare Ferri, Italian castrato singer (d. 1680)
  • December 10Adriaen van Ostade, Dutch painter (d. 1685)
  • December 15David Teniers the Younger, Flemish artist born in Antwerp (d. 1690)
  • December 18Charles du Fresne, sieur du Cange, French philologist and historian (d. 1688)
  • December 25
    • David Christiani, German mathematician and philosopher (d. 1688)
    • Charles Howard, 3rd Earl of Nottingham, son of Charles Howard (d. 1681)
  • December 28Basil of Ostrog, Serbian Orthodox bishop venerated as Saint Vasilije (d. 1671)
  • Dirck Rembrantsz van Nierop, Dutch astronomer and cartographer (d. 1682)
  • Maria Cunitz, Silesian astronomer (d. 1664)
  • Li Yu, Chinese writer (d. 1680)
  • François Eudes de Mézeray, French historian (d. 1683)
  • Karin Thomasdotter, Finnish official (d. 1697)
  • Emmanuel Tzanes, Greek painter (d. 1690)
  • Marie Meurdrac, French chemist and alchemist (d. 1680)
  • Leonora Duarte, Flemish composer and musician (d. 1678)
  • George Carteret, Jersey-born English Royalist statesman (d. 1680)
  • Jeremias de Dekker, Dutch poet (d. 1666)
  • Abraham Duquesne, French naval officer (d. 1688)
  • Jin Shengtan, Chinese editor (d. 1661)

1611

John Pell
William Cartwright (dramatist)
  • January 3James Harrington, English political theorist of classical republicanism (d. 1677)
  • January 5Tsarevich Ivan Dmitriyevich, pretender to the Russian throne (d. 1614)
  • January 28Johannes Hevelius, Polish astronomer (d. 1687)[86]
  • February 2Ulrik of Denmark, Danish prince-bishop (d. 1633)
  • February 3Christian Ulrik Gyldenløve, Danish diplomat and military officer (d. 1640)
  • February 5 (bapt.)Philip Sherman, English-born founder of Rhode Island (d. 1687)
  • February 6Chongzhen Emperor of China (d. 1644)
  • February 19Andries de Graeff, Dutch politician (d. 1678)
  • February 24 (bapt.)William Dobson (d. 1646)
  • February 28William Brereton, 2nd Baron Brereton, English politician (d. 1664)
  • March 1John Pell, English mathematician (d. 1685)
  • March 9Pierre-Joseph-Marie Chaumonot, French missionary (d. 1693)
  • March 15Jan Fyt, Flemish Baroque painter (d. 1661)
  • March 17Robert Douglas, Count of Skenninge, Swedish field marshal (d. 1662)
  • March 25Evliya Çelebi, Ottoman Turk, travelled around the Ottoman Empire for 40 years (d. 1682)
  • March 28
    • Magdalena Elisabeth of Hanau, German noblewoman (d. 1687)
    • Henry Sherburne, American colonist (d. 1680)
  • April 11Karl Eusebius, Prince of Liechtenstein (d. 1684)
  • April 17Simone Pignoni, Italian painter (d. 1698)
  • May 4Carlo Rainaldi, Italian architect (d. 1691)
  • May 16Pope Innocent XI (d. 1689)[87]
  • May 19Joachim Irgens von Westervick, Dano–Norwegian nobleman (d. 1675)
  • June 15Salomon Sweers, Dutch businessman (d. 1674)
  • June 22Pablo Bruna, blind Spanish composer and organist (d. 1679)
  • June 24Johan Oxenstierna, Swedish count and statesman (d. 1657)
  • June 28Robert Rich, 3rd Earl of Warwick (d. 1659)
  • July 15Jai Singh I, Maharaja of Jaipur (d. 1667)
  • July 16Cecilia Renata of Austria, Queen of Poland (d. 1644)
  • July 21Jan van Balen, Flemish painter (d. 1654)
  • July 23Henry Hungerford, English politician (d. 1673)
  • July 24Giancarlo de' Medici, Italian Catholic cardinal (d. 1663)
  • August 4Jan van den Hoecke, Dutch painter (d. 1651)
  • August 9Henry II, Count of Nassau-Siegen (d. 1652)
  • September 1William Cartwright, English dramatist (d. 1643)
  • September 3Toussaint Rose, French writer (d. 1701)
  • September 4George III of Brieg, Duke of Brzeg (1633–1664) (d. 1664)
  • September 8Johann Friedrich Gronovius, German classical scholar (d. 1671)
  • September 11Henri de la Tour d'Auvergne, Vicomte de Turenne (d. 1675)[88]
  • September 17Johann Olearius, German hymnwriter (d. 1684)
  • October 1Mathias Balen, Dutch writer (d. 1691)
  • October 11
    • Samuel Enys, English politician (d. 1697)
    • Hugues de Lionne, French statesman (d. 1671)
  • October 22Jacques Esprit, French writer (d. 1677)
  • October 26
    • Ove Bjelke, Norwegian civil servant (d. 1674)
    • Antonio Coello, Spanish dramatist and poet (d. 1652)
  • November 1
  • November 12Joachim Gersdorff, Danish politician (d. 1661)
  • November 18Andreas Tscherning, German poet (d. 1659)
  • December 23Abraham Wright, English theological writer and deacon (d. 1690)
  • DecemberLeonora Baroni, Italian singer (d. 1670)
  • Karl Eusebius, Prince of Liechtenstein (d. 1684)
  • Diego Quispe Tito, Peruvian painter (d. 1681)

1612

Thomas Killigrew
Pier Francesco Mola
Joannes Meyssens
Frans Post
  • January 17Thomas Fairfax, English Civil War general (d. 1671)[89]
  • January 21Henry Casimir I of Nassau-Dietz, Stadtholder of Groningen, Friesland and Drenthe (d. 1640)
  • January 22Daniel Zwicker, German physician (d. 1678)
  • January 23George FitzGerald, 16th Earl of Kildare, Irish earl (d. 1660)
  • February 1William West, English politician (d. 1670)
  • February 2Thomas Wentworth, 5th Baron Wentworth, English baron and politician (d. 1665)
  • February 4Arthur Spry, English politician (d. 1685)
  • February 5Crown Prince Sohyeon, Korean crown prince (d. 1645)
  • February 6Antoine Arnauld, French theologian (d. 1694)
  • February 7Thomas Killigrew, English dramatist and theatre manager (d. 1683)[90]
  • February 9Pier Francesco Mola, Italian painter of the High Baroque (d. 1666)
  • February 15Paul de Chomedey, Sieur de Maisonneuve, French military officer, founder of Montreal in New France (d. 1676)
  • February 20Richard Olmsted, Connecticut settler (d. 1687)
  • February 21Lorenzo Imperiali, Italian cardinal (d. 1673)
  • February 22 (bapt.)George Digby, 2nd Earl of Bristol, English statesman (d. 1677)
  • March 20Anne Bradstreet, née Dudley, English-born American Puritan poet (d. 1672)
  • April 6James Stewart, 1st Duke of Richmond (d. 1655)
  • April 10Francesco Lorenzo Brancati di Lauria, Italian Catholic cardinal (d. 1693)
  • April 12Simone Cantarini, Italian painter and engraver (d. 1648)
  • April 28Odoardo Farnese, Duke of Parma and Piacenza from 1622 to 1646 (d. 1646)
  • May 6François-Joseph Bressani, Italian missionary (d. 1672)
  • May 10Francesco Palliola, Italian Servant of God (d. 1648)
  • May 12Laurence Womock, English Bishop of St David's (d. 1687)
  • May 17
    • Matthew Babington, English politician (d. 1669)
    • Joannes Meyssens, Flemish painter (d. 1670)
  • May 26Raja Wodeyar II, King of Mysore (d. 1638)
  • May 31Margherita de' Medici, Italian noble (d. 1679)
  • June 1Frans Post, Dutch painter (d. 1680)
  • June 23André Tacquet, Brabantian mathematician, Jesuit priest (d. 1660)
  • June 25John Albert Vasa, Polish bishop (d. 1634)
  • June 29Sir William Bowyer, 1st Baronet, English politician (d. 1679)
  • July 23Christian Lupus, Flemish historian (d. 1681)
  • July 27Murad IV, Ottoman Sultan (d. 1640)
  • August 2Saskia van Uylenburgh, wife of painter Rembrandt van Rijn (d. 1642)
  • August 10Charles de Grimaldi-Régusse, French aristocrat (d. 1687)
  • August 12Allart Pieter van Jongestall, Dutch jurist, politician, and diplomat (d. 1676)
  • August 17Jeremi Wiśniowiecki, Polish nobleman (d. 1651)
  • August 23Francis Lascelles, English politician (d. 1667)
  • August 28Marcus Zuerius van Boxhorn, Dutch scholar (d. 1653)
  • September 1Nicolas Chorier, French historian, lawyer and writer (d. 1692)
  • September 24William Gawdy, English politician (d. 1669)
  • October 6
  • October 14
    • Pierre Bailloquet, French missionary (d. 1692)
    • Thomas Fitch, Connecticut settler (d. 1704)
  • October 18John Eliot, English politician (d. 1685)
  • October 19Nicolas Chaperon, French painter (d. 1656)
  • October 20Richard Boyle, 1st Earl of Burlington, Anglo-Irish nobleman, Lord High Treasurer of Ireland, Cavalier (d. 1698)
  • October 23Henry Lingen, English politician (d. 1662)
  • October 25James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose, Scottish soldier (d. 1650)
  • October 26Henry Wilmot, 1st Earl of Rochester (d. 1658)
  • October 27Margravine Magdalene Sibylle of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, Electress of Saxony by marriage (1656–1680) (d. 1687)
  • October 30Paul Würtz, Swedish general (d. 1676)
  • November 7Pierre Mignard, French painter (d. 1695)
  • November 11
    • Jean Garnier, French historian (d. 1681)
    • August Philipp, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg-Beck, Danish-German prince and member of the House of Oldenburg (d. 1675)
    • Richard Sherlock, English priest (d. 1689)
  • November 17Dorgon, Chinese Manchu prince (d. 1650)
  • November 28Sir Thomas Whitmore, 1st Baronet, English politician and Baronet (d. 1653)
  • December 2David Ryckaert III, Flemish painter (d. 1661)

1613

Mattia Preti
Empress Dowager Xiaozhuang
Claude Perrault
  • January 14Pier Martire Armani, Italian painter (d. 1699)
  • January 15Giovanni Pietro Bellori, Italian art historian (d. 1696)
  • January 21George Gillespie, Scottish theologian (d. 1648)
  • February 2
    • Noël Chabanel, French Jesuit missionary at Sainte-Marie among the Hurons (d. 1649)
    • William Thomas, Welsh Anglican bishop (d. 1689)
  • February 7Johannes Musaeus, German theologian (d. 1681)
  • February 24Mattia Preti, Italian painter (d. 1699)
  • February 28John Pearson, English theologian and scholar (d. 1686)
  • March 6
    • Stjepan Gradić, Croatian philosopher and scientist (d. 1683)
    • Anna Moroni, Italian educator (d. 1675)
  • March 11Francesco Caetani, 8th Duke of Sermoneta, Governor of the Duchy of Milan (d. 1683)
  • March 12André Le Nôtre, French landscape and garden designer (d. 1700)[91]
  • March 19John Swinfen, English politician (d. 1694)
  • March 24Antonia of Württemberg, princess, literary figure, patron and Christian Kabbalist (d. 1679)
  • March 28Empress Dowager Xiaozhuang, concubine of Qing dynasty ruler Hong Taiji (d. 1688)
  • March 29Louis-Isaac Lemaistre de Sacy, French Bible translator (d. 1684)
  • July 15Gu Yanwu, Chinese philologist and geographer (d. 1682)
  • July 16Alderano Cybo, Catholic cardinal (d. 1700)
  • August 7William Frederick, Prince of Nassau-Dietz, Dutch stadtholder (d. 1664)
  • August 15Gilles Ménage, French scholar (d. 1692)
  • August 18Sir Thomas Peyton, 2nd Baronet, English politician (d. 1684)
  • August 20Duchess Elisabeth Sophie of Mecklenburg, German poet composer and (by marriage) Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg (d. 1676)
  • August 24Bartholomew Holzhauser, German priest, founder of a religious community, visionary, writer of prophecies (d. 1658)
  • August 29John Jolliffe, English politician and businessman (d. 1680)
  • September 8Henri Albert de La Grange d'Arquien, Catholic cardinal (d. 1707)
  • September 15François de La Rochefoucauld, French writer (d. 1680)[92]
  • September 19Sir John Norwich, 1st Baronet, English Member of Parliament (d. 1661)
  • September 25Claude Perrault, French architect (d. 1688)
  • October 3Marion Delorme, French courtesan known for her relationships with the important men of her time (d. 1650)
  • October 12Jacques d'Arthois, Flemish painter (d. 1686)
  • October 13
    • Luisa de Guzmán, Duchess of Braganza, queen consort of Portugal (d. 1666)
    • Adriaan Heereboord, Dutch philosopher (d. 1661)
  • October 19Charles of Sezze, Italian Franciscan friar and saint (d. 1670)
  • October 28Edmund Bowyer, English politician (d. 1681)
  • November 5Isaac de Benserade, French poet (d. 1691)[93]
  • November 12Sir Ralph Verney, 1st Baronet, of Middle Claydon, English Baronet (d. 1696)
  • November 16Frederick, Prince of Anhalt-Harzgerode (1635–1670) (d. 1670)
  • November 20Tyman Oosdorp, Dutch Golden Age brewer and magistrate of Haarlem (d. 1668)
  • November 24John Knight, Member of the Parliament of England (d. 1683)
  • November 25Philip VII, Count of Waldeck-Wildungen (1638–1645) (d. 1645)
  • December 4 (bapt.)Samuel Butler, English satirist (d. 1680)
  • December 10Izaak van Oosten, Flemish painter (d. 1661)
  • December 11Amar Singh Rathore, Rajput nobleman affiliated with the royal house of Marwar (d. 1644)
  • December 23Carl Gustaf Wrangel, Field Marshal of Sweden (d. 1676)
  • December 28Bullen Reymes, English courtier, diplomat and politician (d. 1672)
  • Henry Vane, English politician (d. 1662)
  • Khushal Khan Khattak, Afghan poet (d. 1690)
  • Richard Crashaw, English poet (d. 1649)

1614

Christopher Merret
Jahanara Begum
Martino Martini
  • January 1
    • Henry Frederick, Hereditary Prince of the Palatinate (d. 1629)
    • Luis Guillermo de Moncada, 7th Duke of Montalto, Spanish Catholic cardinal (d. 1672)
  • January 5Archduke Leopold Wilhelm of Austria, Governor of the Spanish Netherlands (d. 1662)
  • January 10Kanō Yasunobu, Japanese painter of the Kanō school of painting, during the Edo period (d. 1685)
  • January 20Samuel Gott, English politician (d. 1671)
  • February 2Robert Ellison, English politician (d. 1678)
  • February 8Thomas Wendy, English politician (d. 1673)
  • February 14John Wilkins, English bishop, academic and natural philosopher (d. 1672)
  • February 16Christopher Merret, English physician and scientist (d. 1695)
  • March 3Sir Peter Leycester, 1st Baronet, British historian (d. 1678)
  • March 8Hendrik van der Borcht II, German painter (d. 1676)
  • March 15Franciscus Sylvius, Dutch physician and scientist (d. 1672)
  • March 25
    • Thomas Chicheley, English politician who fell from favour, during the reign of James II (d. 1699)
    • Juan Carreño de Miranda, Spanish artist (d. 1685)
  • April 1Martin Schoock, Dutch academic (d. 1669)
  • April 2Jahanara Begum, Mughal princess (d. 1681)
  • April 10William Thompson, English Member of Parliament (d. 1681)
  • April 11Helena Fourment, Dutch model, second wife of Peter Paul Rubens (d. 1673)
  • April 18Nicolas Robert, French painter (d. 1685)
  • April 25
    • Hieronymus van Beverningh, Dutch diplomat and politician (d. 1690)
    • Marc'Antonio Pasqualini, Italian opera singer and composer (d. 1691)
  • May 10Zacharias Wagenaer, secretary, painter, then merchant and administrator (Dutch East-India Company) (d. 1668)
  • May 12Giovanni Bernardo Carboni, Italian painter (d. 1683)
  • May 28Gustav Evertsson Horn, Finnish-Swedish politician, Field Marshal (d. 1666)
  • June 15Emilie of Oldenburg-Delmenhorst, Regent of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt (1646–1662) (d. 1670)
  • June 24John Belasyse, 1st Baron Belasyse of England (d. 1689)
  • July 10Arthur Annesley, 1st Earl of Anglesey, English royalist statesman (d. 1686)
  • July 23Bonaventura Peeters the Elder, Flemish marine painter (d. 1652)
  • August 3Juan de Arellano, Spanish artist (d. 1676)
  • August 13Augustus, Duke of Saxe-Weissenfels, administrator of the archbishopric of Magdeburg (d. 1680)
  • September 7Gustaf Otto Stenbock, Swedish soldier and politician (d. 1685)
  • September 11Philipp Buchner, German composer (d. 1669)
  • September 12Robert Packer, English politician (d. 1682)
  • September 20Martino Martini, Italian missionary, cartographer and historian (d. 1661)
  • September 25Giles Hungerford, English politician (d. 1685)
  • September 27Daniel Hallé, French painter (d. 1675)
  • September 28Juan Hidalgo de Polanco, Spanish composer (d. 1685)
  • October 3Sigmund von Erlach, Swiss politician (d. 1699)
  • October 6Francesco de' Medici, Tuscan prince (d. 1634)
  • October 12Henry More, English philosopher (d. 1687)
  • October 13Thomas Jones, English politician and judge (d. 1692)
  • October 20 (bapt.)Franciscus Mercurius van Helmont, Flemish alchemist (d. 1698)
  • November 2Philip Dietrich, Count of Waldeck-Eisenberg (1640–1645) (d. 1645)
  • November 4Alexander Charles Vasa, 5th son of (d. 1634)
  • November 11John Bulkeley, English politician (d. 1662)
  • November 27Fernando de Meneses, 2nd Count of Ericeira, Portuguese noble (d. 1699)
  • November 30William Howard, 1st Viscount Stafford of England (d. 1680)
  • December 16Eberhard III, Duke of Württemberg (d. 1674)
  • December 21Francis Anderson, English politician (d. 1679)
  • December 27Béatrix de Cusance, Frenc-Comtois noble woman (d. 1663)
  • December 31Mechtilde of the Blessed Sacrament, French nun (d. 1698)
  • Franciscus Sylvius, German scientist (d. 1672)
  • Song Wan, Qing Dyansty poet and politician

1615

Govert Flinck
Pieter de Groot
Erdmann August of Brandenburg-Bayreuth
Richard Baxter
  • January 6Richard Waldron, colonial settler, acting President of the Province of New Hampshire (d. 1689)
  • January 10Sir John Robinson, 1st Baronet, of London, English politician (d. 1680)
  • January 13Henrik Bjelke, Norwegian military officer (d. 1683)
  • January 14John Biddle, English theologian (d. 1662)
  • January 20Karmabai, Indian Jat known as Bhakt Shiromani Karmabai (d. 1634)
  • January 25Govert Flinck, Dutch painter of the Dutch Golden Age (d. 1660)
  • January 27Nicolas Fouquet, French Superintendent of Finances (d. 1680)[94]
  • January 30Thomas Rolfe, only child of Pocahontas and her English husband (d. 1675)
  • February 18Maria Caterina Farnese, Duchess of Modena and Reggio (d. 1646)
  • February 27Isaac Thornton, English politician (d. 1669)
  • March 10Hans Ulrik Gyldenløve, illegitimate son of King Christian IV of Denmark and his mistress (d. 1645)
  • March 11Johann Weikhard of Auersperg, Austrian prime minister (d. 1677)
  • March 13Pope Innocent XII (d. 1700)[95]
  • March 17Gregorio Carafa, Grandmaster of the Order of Saint John (d. 1690)
  • March 20Dara Shikoh, Indian prince (d. 1659)
  • March 22Katherine Jones, Viscountess Ranelagh, English female scientist (d. 1691)
  • March 28Pieter de Groot, Dutch diplomat (d. 1678)
  • March 28Cosimo Ruggeri, Italian astrologer
  • April 7Charles Cotterell, English courtier (d. 1701)
  • April 9John Wright, British politician (d. 1683)
  • April 16Edward Rawson, American settler (d. 1693)
  • April 17Jacques Goulet, early pioneer in New France (now Québec) (d. 1688)
  • April 24Klas Hansson Bjelkenstjerna, Swedish naval officer and civil servant (d. 1662)
  • May 30Richard Neville, English soldier and MP (d. 1676)
  • June 3Giles Strangways, English politician (d. 1675)
  • June 15Samuel Sandys, English politician (d. 1685)
  • June 20 (or July 31) – Salvator Rosa, Italian painter (d. 1673)
  • July 1Samuel Hales, Connecticut settler and politician (d. 1693)
  • July 9Sir Thomas Sclater, 1st Baronet, English politician (d. 1684)
  • July 22Marguerite of Lorraine, princess of Lorraine, duchess of Orléans (d. 1672)
  • July 28Charles de Noyelle, French Jesuit Superior General (d. 1686)
  • August 13John Sherburne, American colonial (d. 1693)
  • August 15Marie de Lorraine, Duchess of Guise (d. 1688)
  • August 18John Sadler, British town clerk (d. 1674)
  • September 3Mary Bradbury, accused Salem, Massachusetts witch (d. 1700)
  • September 7John Birch, English politician (d. 1691)
  • September 12
    • Landgravine Sophie of Hesse-Kassel, Countess of Schaumburg-Lippe (d. 1670)
    • William Turner, British politician (d. 1693)
  • September 17Nicholas Pedley, English politician (d. 1685)
  • September 20Giambattista Spinola, Italo-Spanish Roman Catholic cardinal (d. 1704)
  • September 26Heinrich Bach, German organist and composer (d. 1692)
  • October 1Hugh Bethell, English Member of Parliament and High Sheriff (d. 1679)
  • October 8Erdmann August of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, Hereditary Margrave (d. 1651)
  • October 23Ove Juul, Governor-General of Norway (d. 1686)
  • October 27Christian I, Duke of Saxe-Merseburg, member of the House of Wettin (d. 1691)
  • November 5Ibrahim, Ottoman Sultan (d. 1648)
  • November 12Richard Baxter, English Puritan church leader (d. 1691)[96]
  • November 19Richard Norton of Southwick Park, English politician (d. 1691)
  • November 20Francis Dane, American colonial priest (d. 1697)
  • November 24Philip William, Elector Palatine (d. 1690)
  • December 6Frederick Schomberg, 1st Duke of Schomberg (d. 1690)
  • December 7Nicodemus Tessin the Elder, Swedish architect (d. 1681)
  • December 9Anne Carr, Countess of Bedford, English noble (d. 1684)
  • December 19Frederick, Duke of Württemberg-Neuenstadt, German duke (d. 1682)
  • December 21Benedict Arnold, Rhode Island colonial governor (d. 1678)
  • December 29Charles Scarborough, English physician, mathematician (d. 1694)
  • Date unknown:
    • Osoet Pegua, Thai businesswoman (d. 1658)
    • John Lacy, English actor and playwright (d. 1681)

1616

Ferdinand Bol
John Leverett
Nicholas Culpeper
John Wallis
  • January 1Nabeshima Naozumi, Japanese daimyō (d. 1669)
  • January 5Alexander von Bournonville, Flemish noble and general (d. 1690)
  • January 13Antoinette Bourignon, French-Flemish mystic and adventurer (d. 1680)
  • January 16François de Vendôme, Duke of Beaufort, French soldier (d. 1669)
  • January 20Jerzy Sebastian Lubomirski, Polish noble (szlachcic) (d. 1667)
  • January 27 or January 28Christen Aagaard, Danish poet (d. 1664)
  • February 1Sophie Elisabeth of Brandenburg, Duchess consort of Saxe-Altenburg (d. 1650)
  • February 2Sébastien Bourdon, French painter and engraver (d. 1671)
  • February 14Marc Restout, French painter (d. 1684)
  • February 25Isaack Luttichuys, Dutch Golden Age painter (d. 1673)
  • February 27István Esterházy, member of the wealthy Hungarian Esterházy family (d. 1641)
  • February 28
    • Kaspar Förster, German singer and composer (d. 1673)
    • Frederick of Hesse-Darmstadt, German Catholic cardinal (d. 1682)
  • March 1Maurizio Cazzati, Italian composer (d. 1678)
  • March 9Robert Giguère, early pioneer in New France (d. 1709)
  • March 13Joseph Beaumont, British academic and poet (d. 1699)
  • March 16Thomas Jervoise, English politician (d. 1693)
  • March 29Johann Erasmus Kindermann, German composer and organist (d. 1655)
  • April 1Christian Günther II, Count of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen-Arnstadt (1642–1666) (d. 1666)
  • April 2Herbert Morley, English politician (d. 1667)
  • April 5Frederick, Count Palatine of Zweibrücken (d. 1661)
  • April 7Thomas Hopkins, early Providence, Rhode Island settler (d. 1684)
  • April 19Louis IV of Legnica, Duke of Oława and Brzeg (1633–1654) (d. 1663)
  • April 24Gustav, Count of Vasaborg, illegitimate son of King Gustavus Adolphus and his mistress Margareta Slots (d. 1653)
  • April 27Jeremias Felbinger, German Socinian writer (d. 1690)
  • May 1Frederick III, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1625–1634) (d. 1634)
  • May 16Archibald Primrose, Lord Carrington, Scottish judge (d. 1679)
  • May 19Johann Jakob Froberger, German composer and keyboardist (d. 1667)
  • May 23Sir Edward Bagot, 2nd Baronet, English politician (d. 1673)
  • May 24John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale (d. 1682)
  • May 25Carlo Dolci, Italian painter (d. 1686)
  • May 27Christina Magdalena of the Palatinate-Zweibrücken, Swedish Princess by birth; margravine of Baden-Durlach by marriage (d. 1662)
  • June – John Thurloe, English spymaster for Oliver Cromwell (d. 1668)
  • June 3George Courthope, English politician (d. 1685)
  • June 23Shah Shuja, second son of Shah Jahan and Mumtaz Mahal (d. 1661)
  • June 24
    • Ferdinand Bol, Dutch Dutch painter, etcher and draftsman (d. 1680)
    • Philipp, Prince of Hohenzollern-Hechingen (1661–1671) (d. 1671)
  • June 25James Livingstone, 1st Viscount Kilsyth of Scotland (d. 1661)
  • June 28Lucas Franchoys the Younger, Flemish painter (d. 1681)
  • July 7 (bapt.) – John Leverett, Governor of Massachusetts Bay Colony (d. 1679)
  • July 10Antonio del Castillo y Saavedra, Spanish artist (d. 1668)
  • July 21Anna de' Medici, Archduchess of Austria (d. 1676)
  • August – William Russell, 1st Duke of Bedford, British peer and soldier (d. 1700)
  • August 6John Higginson, English minister (d. 1708)
  • August 12Johann Paul Freiherr von Hocher, Austrian chancellor (d. 1683)
  • August 18John Hervey, English courtier and politician (d. 1680)
  • August 30Giovan Battista Nani, Italian historian and diplomat (d. 1678)
  • September 9Nicolás de Villacis, Spanish painter (d. 1694)
  • September 25Alexander Morus, Franco-Scottish Calvinist preacher (d. 1670)
  • October 4Philippe Balthazar de Gand, French noble (d. 1680)
  • October 11Andreas Gryphius, German lyric poet and dramatist (d. 1664)
  • October 15Hoshina Masakage, Japanese daimyō of the Edo period (d. 1700)
  • October 18Nicholas Culpeper, English botanist (d. 1654)
  • October 20Thomas Bartholin, Danish physician, mathematician, and theologian (d. 1680)
  • October 21Camillo Astalli, Italian cardinal (d. 1663)
  • November 13 �� Nicholas Dennys, English politician (d. 1692)
  • November 23John Wallis, English mathematician (d. 1703)
  • December 12Martin Lluelyn, Welsh poet (d. 1682)
  • December 13Edward Chamberlayne, English writer (d. 1703)
  • December 14William Hamilton, 2nd Duke of Hamilton, Scottish nobleman (d. 1651)
  • December 17Roger L'Estrange, English pamphleteer and author (d. 1704)
  • December 25Christian Hoffmann von Hoffmannswaldau, German poet (d. 1679)
  • Charles Albanel, French missionary (d. 1696)
  • Henry Bard, 1st Viscount Bellomont, English Royalist (d. 1656)
  • Jan Kazimierz Chodkiewicz, Polish nobleman (szlachcic) (d. 1660)
  • Thomas Harrison, English Puritan soldier and Fifth Monarchist (d. 1660)
  • William Holder, English music theorist (d. 1698)
  • Kamalakara, Indian astronomer/mathematician (d. 1700)
  • Johann Klaj, German poet (d. 1656)
  • Kuzma Minin, merchant from Nizhny Novgorod
  • Sokuhi Nyoitsu, Buddhist monk (d. 1671)
  • John Owen, English Nonconformist theologian (d. 1683)
  • Edward Sexby, English Puritan soldier/Leveller (d. 1658)
  • Obadiah Walker, Master of University College, Oxford (d. 1699)
  • Caesar van Everdingen, Dutch older brother of Allart van Everdingen (d. 1678)
  • Matthias Weckmann, German musician/composer (d. 1674)
  • Trijntje Keever, presumed to have been the tallest woman ever (d. 1633)
  • A Greenland shark, still alive

1617

Lucas Faydherbe
Elias Ashmole
Richard Lovelace
  • January 6Christoffer Gabel, Danish statesman (d. 1673)
  • January 19Lucas Faydherbe, Belgian sculptor and architect (d. 1697)
  • January 22Lodewijck Neefs, Flemish painter (d. 1649)
  • January 23Ralph Josselin, English clergyman (d. 1683)
  • January 30
    • Isaac de Porthau, Gascon black musketeer of the Maison du Roi (d. 1712)
    • William Sancroft, 79th Archbishop of Canterbury (d. 1693)
  • February 5Jan Thomas van Ieperen, Flemish engraver, painter (d. 1673)
  • February 22Robert Culliford, English politician (d. 1698)
  • March 8Tito Livio Burattini, Italian inventor, Egyptologist, instrument-maker (d. 1681)
  • March 17
    • David Ancillon, French Huguenot pastor and author (d. 1692)
    • Johann Georg Macasius, German physician (d. 1653)
  • April 4Sir George Wharton, 1st Baronet, English baronet (d. 1681)
  • April 20Sir John Goodricke, 1st Baronet, English landowner and politician (d. 1670)
  • May 3Roger Pepys, English lawyer and politician (d. 1688)
  • May 9Frederick, Landgrave of Hesse-Eschwege (d. 1655)
  • May 23Elias Ashmole, English antiquarian (d. 1692)[97]
  • June 2Maeda Toshitsugu, Japanese daimyō of the early Edo period (d. 1674)
  • June 13Sir Vincent Corbet, 1st Baronet, English politician (d. 1656)
  • June 18George Evelyn, English politician (d. 1699)
  • June 20Franciscus Bonae Spei, French Catholic scholastic theologian, philosopher (d. 1677)
  • July 31Nicolás Antonio, Spanish bibliographer born in Seville (d. 1684)
  • August 10Richard Ingoldsby, English politician (d. 1685)
  • August 13Johannes Andreas Quenstedt, German theologian (d. 1688)
  • August 25Frances Hyde, Countess of Clarendon, English noble (d. 1667)
  • September 3Roshanara Begum, Mughal princess (d. 1671)
  • September 13Margravine Louise Charlotte of Brandenburg, Duchess of Courland by marriage (1645–1676) (d. 1676)
  • September 25Sir Francis Drake, 2nd Baronet, English Member of Parliament (d. 1662)
  • September 29Lothar Friedrich von Metternich-Burscheid, Prince-Bishop of Speyer (1652–1675) (d. 1675)
  • October 5Dorothy Spencer, Countess of Sunderland, English countess (d. 1684)
  • October 10William Cavendish, 3rd Earl of Devonshire, English nobleman (d. 1684)
  • October 12Sir Francis Gerard, 2nd Baronet, English Member of Parliament (d. 1680)
  • October 17Dionisio Lazzari, Italian sculptor and architect (d. 1689)
  • October 28
    • Cornelius Hazart, Dutch Jesuit priest, polemical author (d. 1690)
    • Antoine Garaby de La Luzerne, French poet (d. 1679)
  • November 4Johannes Hoornbeek, Dutch theologian (d. 1666)
  • November 6Leopoldo de' Medici, Italian Catholic cardinal (d. 1675)
  • November 16Frederick VI, Margrave of Baden-Durlach (1659–1677) (d. 1677)
  • November 19Eustache Le Sueur, French painter (d. 1655)
  • December – Gerard ter Borch, Dutch painter (d. 1681)
  • December 4Federico Visconti, Cardinal Archbishop of Milan (d. 1693)
  • December 9Richard Lovelace, English poet (d. 1657)[98]
  • December 22Charles I Louis, Elector Palatine (d. 1680)
  • December 23Magdalene Sibylle of Saxony, Crown Princess of Denmark (d. 1668)
  • December 25Jean de Coligny-Saligny, French noble and army commander (d. 1686)
  • Paolo Casati, Italian Jesuit mathematician (d. 1707)
  • Lozang Gyatso, 5th Dalai Lama (d. 1682)

1618

Jan Six
Sir Peter Lely
Aurangzeb
  • January 1 (bapt.)Bartolomé Esteban Murillo, Spanish painter (d. 1682)
  • January 2Jean Hamon, French doctor and writer (d. 1687)
  • January 3Jean Crasset, French Jesuit theologian (d. 1692)
  • January 8Madeleine Béjart, French actress and theatre director (d. 1672)[99]
  • January 14Jan Six, important cultural figure in the Dutch Golden Age (d. 1700)
  • January 25Nicolaes Visscher I, Dutch engraver, cartographer and publisher (d. 1679)
  • January 28James Ley, 3rd Earl of Marlborough, English nobleman, sailor, and mathematician (d. 1665)
  • January 29Jean Paul Médaille, French Jesuit missionary (d. 1689)
  • February 12Olaus Verelius, scholar of Old Norse and Scandinavian studies (d. 1682)[100]
  • February 17Matthias Abele, Austrian jurist, mine official (d. 1677)
  • February 19Johannes Phocylides Holwarda, Dutch astronomer (d. 1651)
  • March 4George Louis, Prince of Nassau-Dillenburg, German noble (d. 1656)
  • March 19Thomas Hinckley, last colonial governor of Plymouth Colony (d. 1706)
  • April 2Francesco Maria Grimaldi, Italian mathematician and physicist (d. 1663)[101]
  • April 4Ferrante III Gonzaga, Duke of Guastalla, Italian noble (d. 1678)
  • April 9Christian, Duke of Brieg, Duke of Legnica (1663–1672) and Brieg (1664–1672) (d. 1672)
  • April 13Roger de Rabutin, Comte de Bussy, French writer (d. 1693)
  • April 14Thomas Moore, English politician (d. 1695)[102]
  • April 29Vittoria Farnese d'Este, Duchess of Modena and Reggio (d. 1649)
  • May 22Henrik Horn, Swedish military leader and noble (d. 1693)
  • June 1Johann Franck, German poet and hymnist (d. 1677)
  • June 15
  • June 24Philip Packer, British barrister and architect (d. 1686)
  • June 28Jean Le Pautre, French designer and engraver (d. 1682)
  • July 6Alexander Lindsay, 1st Earl of Balcarres, Scottish politician and noble (d. 1659)[103]
  • July 17
  • July 21Hayashi Gahō, Japanese philosopher (d. 1688)
  • July 22Johan Nieuhof, Dutch traveler who wrote about his journeys to Brazil (d. 1672)
  • September 6Walter Hoyt, Connecticut settler (d. 1698)
  • September 9Joan Cererols, Catalan musician and Benedictine monk (d. 1680)
  • September 11Francesco Grue, Italian artist (d. 1673)
  • September 14Peter Lely, Dutch painter (d. 1680)[104]
  • September 27Jacob Alting, Dutch linguist (d. 1679)
  • September 29Michiel Sweerts, Flemish painter (d. 1664)
  • October 8Claude Lamoral, 3rd Prince of Ligne, Spanish general and prince (d. 1679)
  • October 7Rosina Schnorr, German businessperson (d. 1679)
  • October 31Mariana de Jesús de Paredes, Catholic saint, the first person to be canonized from Ecuador (d. 1645)
  • NovemberSimon Arnauld, Marquis de Pomponne, French diplomat and minister of Louis XIV (d. 1699)
  • November 1Sir John Wittewrong, 1st Baronet, English parliamentarian (d. 1693)
  • November 3Aurangzeb, Mughal emperor of India (d. 1707)
  • November 8Louise de La Fayette, French courtier, friend of King Louis XIII (d. 1665)[citation needed]
  • November 12Gottfried Welsch, German physician (d. 1690)
  • November 16Johann Ludwig Schönleben, Carniolan priest (d. 1681)
  • November 26Johan Frederik von Marschalck, German-born landowner, Chancellor of Norway (d. 1679)
  • December 2
  • December 3Sir William Ayloffe, 3rd Baronet, officer in the Royalist army during the English Civil War (d. 1662)
  • December 18Karl Kaspar von der Leyen, German Catholic archbishop (d. 1676)
  • December 26Elisabeth of the Palatinate, German princess, philosopher, and Calvinist (d. 1680)
  • December 28Catharina Hooft, noblewoman of the Dutch Golden Age (d. 1691)[105]
  • Athittayawong, Ayutthayan monarch (d. 1629)
  • Henry Bennet, 1st Earl of Arlington, English politician (member of the Cabal) d. 1685)

1619

Charles Le Brun
Peter Mews
Anna Sophia I, Abbess of Quedlinburg
Jan van Riebeeck
Carel van Savoyen
Rijcklof van Goens
  • January 10Philip Sidney, 3rd Earl of Leicester, English politician (d. 1698)
  • January 14
    • Thomas Archer, English politician (d. 1685)
    • Alexander von Spaen, German general (d. 1692)
  • January 17Johanna Elisabeth of Nassau-Hadamar, by marriage Princess of Anhalt-Harzgerode (d. 1647)
  • January 21
  • January 24Yamazaki Ansai, Japanese philosopher (d. 1682)
  • January 30Michelangelo Ricci, Roman Catholic cardinal, mathematician (d. 1682)
  • February 1Robert Phelips, English politician (d. 1707)
  • February 2Walter Charleton, English natural philosopher (d. 1707)
  • February 9Queen Inseon, Korean royal consort (d. 1674)
  • February 15Tsugaru Nobuyoshi, Japanese daimyō (d. 1655)
  • February 24
    • Robert Aske, merchant in the City of London (d. 1689)
    • Charles Le Brun, French painter and art theorist (d. 1690)[106]
  • February 26Francesco Morosini, Doge of Venice from 1688 to 1694 (d. 1694)
  • February 28Giuseppe Felice Tosi, Italian composer (d. 1693)
  • March 2Marcantonio Giustinian, 107th Doge of Venice (d. 1688)
  • March 5Joseph Ames, English naval commander (d. 1695)
  • March 6Cyrano de Bergerac, French soldier and poet (d. 1655)
  • March 13Tobias Lohner, Austrian Jesuit theologian (d. 1697)[107]
  • March 15Jean Le Vacher, French Lazarist missionary and French consul (d. 1683)
  • March 20Georg Albrecht, Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth-Kulmbach (d. 1666)
  • March 25Peter Mews, English Royalist theologian and bishop (d. 1706)
  • March 28Maurice, Duke of Saxe-Zeitz (1657–1681) (d. 1681)
  • April 2
    • Onofrio Gabrieli, Italian painter (d. 1706)
    • Anna Sophia I, Abbess of Quedlinburg, Dutch abbess (d. 1680)
  • April 11Abraham van der Hulst, Dutch admiral (d. 1666)
  • April 21Jan van Riebeeck, Dutch founder of Cape Town (d. 1677)
  • April 30Johannes Spilberg, Dutch painter (d. 1690)
  • May
    • James Dalrymple, 1st Viscount of Stair, Scottish lawyer and statesman (d. 1695)
    • André Félibien, French court historian (d. 1695)
    • Andrew Ramsay, Lord Abbotshall, Scottish judge and politician (d. 1688)
  • May 20Abiezer Coppe, English "Ranter" and pamphleteer (d. 1672)
  • May 24 (bapt.)Philips Wouwerman, Dutch painter (d. 1668)
  • May 26 – King Pye Min of Burma (d. 1672)
  • June 13Jan Victors, Dutch painter (d. 1676)
  • June 14 (bapt.) – Sir Jeffrey Hudson, English court dwarf (d. 1682)
  • June 24Rijcklof van Goens, Dutch colonial governor (d. 1682)
  • July 3Hyojong of Joseon, 17th king of the Joseon Dynasty of Korea (1649-1659) (d. 1659)
  • July 13Birgitta Durell, Swedish industrialist (d. 1683)
  • July 27Sir Henry Felton, 2nd Baronet, English Member of Parliament (d. 1690)
  • August 5Thomas Hall, English politician (d. 1667)
  • August 6Barbara Strozzi, Italian singer and composer (d. 1677)
  • August 7Anna Catherine Constance Vasa, Polish princess, daughter of King Sigismund III Vasa (d. 1651)
  • August 15
    • Francesco Maria Farnese, Italian Catholic cardinal (d. 1647)
    • Hubertus Quellinus, Flemish artist (d. 1687)
  • August 21Sir John Borlase, 1st Baronet, English politician (d. 1672)
  • August 28
  • August 29Jean-Baptiste Colbert, French minister of finance (d. 1683)
  • September 20Sophie Elisabeth Pentz, daughter of Christian IV of Denmark (d. 1657)
  • September 21Sir John Wray, 3rd Baronet, English politician (d. 1664)
  • October 8Philipp von Zesen, German poet (d. 1689)
  • October 10
    • Josias Calmady, English Member of Parliament (d. 1683)
    • Princess Elisabeth Sophie of Saxe-Altenburg, German princess (d. 1680)
  • October 14Sir John Bright, 1st Baronet, English politician (d. 1688)
  • October 16Johann Friedrich König, German Lutheran theologian (d. 1664)
  • October 18Jean Armand de Maillé-Brézé, French admiral (d. 1646)
  • October 27Frederick Louis, Count Palatine of Zweibrücken (d. 1681)
  • November 5Philip de Koninck, Dutch painter (d. 1688)
  • November 7Gédéon Tallemant des Réaux, French writer known for his Historiettes (d. 1692)
  • November 14Thomas Howard, 3rd Earl of Berkshire, English politician, earl (d. 1706)
  • November 25Henry Mildmay, English politician (d. 1692)
  • December 10Thomas Dyke, English politician (d. 1669)
  • December 13Andrij Savka, Lemko bandit (d. 1661)
  • December 17Prince Rupert of the Rhine, Bohemian-born Royalist commander in the English Civil War (d. 1682)
  • December 28Antoine Furetière, French writer (d. 1688)
  • December 31
    • John Fitzjames, English politician (d. 1670)
    • Sylvester Maurus, Italian Jesuit theologian (d. 1687)
  • Donald Cargill, Scottish Covenanter (d. 1681)
  • Gu Mei, politically influential Chinese courtesan, poet and painter (d. 1664)
  • Samuel Collins, English doctor and author (d. 1670)
  • Francisco Fernández de la Cueva, 8th Duke of Alburquerque, Spanish military officer and viceroy (d. 1676)
  • Willem Kalf, Dutch painter (d. 1693)
  • Kumazawa Banzan, Japanese philosopher (d. 1691)
  • Shalom Shabazi, Jewish Yemeni rabbi and poet (d. c. 1720)
  • Wang Fuzhi, Chinese philosopher (d. 1692)

Deaths[]

1610

Princess Anna Maria of Sweden
Servant of God Matteo Ricci
King Henry IV of France
Thomas Tesdale
Adam Elsheimer
  • January 1
  • January 9Herman van der Mast, Dutch Renaissance painter from the Northern Netherlands (b. c. 1550)
  • January 10Mateo de Oviedo, Archbishop of Dublin (b. 1547)
  • February 4Hannibal Vyvyan, English politician (b. 1545)
  • February 5Strange Jørgenssøn, Norwegian businessman (b. 1539)
  • February 22Polykarp Leyser the Elder, German theologian (b. 1552)
  • February 27Philippe Canaye, French diplomat (b. 1551)
  • March 6Benedict Pereira, Spanish theologian (b. 1535)
  • March 7Maria, Abbess of Quedlinburg, German abbess (b. 1571)
  • March 19
    • Valeriano Muti, Italian Catholic prelate (year of birth unknown)
    • Hasegawa Tōhaku, Japanese painter (b. 1539)
  • March 20Princess Anna Maria of Sweden, Swedish royal (b. 1545)
  • March 24Henry Cocke, English politician (b. 1538)
  • March 28Wolfgang, Count of Hohenlohe-Weikersheim, German count (b. 1546)
  • March 30Thomas Gorges, English knight (b. 1536)
  • April 7Hirata Masumune, Japanese samurai (b. 1566)
  • April 15Robert Parsons, English Jesuit priest (b. 1546)
  • April 24Anna of Holstein-Gottorp, German noblewoman (b. 1575)
  • May 11
    • Ikoma Kazumasa, Japanese samurai (b. 1555)
    • Matteo Ricci, Italian Jesuit priest and servant of God (b. 1552)
  • May 14 – King Henry IV of France, (assassinated) (b. 1553)
  • May 17Gervase Babington, English churchman (b. 1549)
  • May 19Thomas Sanchez, Spanish theologian (b. 1550)
  • May 27François Ravaillac, French assassin of Henry IV of France (executed) (b. 1578)
  • June 13Thomas Tesdale, English maltster (b. 1547)
Caravaggio
  • July – Richard Knolles, English historian (b. 1545)
  • July 14Francis Solanus, Spanish friar and missionary in South America (b. 1549)
  • July 17Amandus Polanus, German writer (b. 1561)
  • July 18Michelangelo Merisi da Caravaggio, Italian painter active in Rome (b. 1571)
  • July 22Charles I, Duke of Mecklenburg (b. 1540)
  • July 27Jacob Floris van Langren, Dutch cartographer and globe-maker (b. 1525)
  • August 20Stanisław Stadnicki, Polish nobleman (b. 1551)
  • August 25Mabel Browne, Countess of Kildare, Irish noble (b. 1536)
  • September 13Tomás de Borja y Castro, Spanish Catholic archbishop (b. 1551)
  • September 19Frederick IV, Elector Palatine (b. 1574)
  • September 22Jan Moretus, Belgian printer (b. 1543)
  • October 14Amago Yoshihisa, Japanese samurai and warlord (b. 1540)
  • November 2Richard Bancroft, Archbishop of Canterbury (b. 1544)
  • November 24Duchess Sophie of Prussia, duchess consort of Courland (1609–1610) (b. 1582)
  • December 3Honda Tadakatsu, Japanese soldier (b. 1548)
  • December 10John Roberts, Welsh Benedictine monk and priest (b. 1577)
  • December 11
    • Adam Elsheimer, German artist working in Rome who died at only thirty-two (b. 1578)
    • False Dmitry II, pretender to the Russian throne
  • December 21Catherine Vasa, Swedish princess (b. 1539)
  • December 31Ludolph van Ceulen, German mathematician (b. 1540)

1611

Juan de Ribera
Christian II, Elector of Saxony
Charles IX of Sweden
  • January 6Juan de Ribera, Spanish Catholic archbishop (b. 1532)
  • January 16Niiro Tadamoto, Japanese samurai (b. 1526)
  • February 7Ruprecht von Eggenberg, Austrian general (b. 1546)
  • February 12Henry Lee of Ditchley, English noble (b. 1533)
  • February 26Antonio Possevino, Italian Jesuit protagonist of Counter Reformation, papal diplomat (b. 1533)
  • March 2Ernest II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg, (b. 1564)
  • March 3William Douglas, 10th Earl of Angus, son of William Douglas (b. 1552)
  • March 5Shimazu Yoshihisa, Japanese warlord and samurai (b. 1533)
  • March 13Louis III, Count of Löwenstein (1541–1611) (b. 1530)
  • March 17Princess Sophia of Sweden (b. 1547)
  • March 20Johann Georg Gödelmann, German demonologist (b. 1559)
  • April 23Martin Ruland the Younger, German alchemist (b. 1569)
  • May 19
    • Frederick IX, Margrave of Brandenburg, Grand Master of the Order of Saint John (b. 1588)
    • Zhu Zaiyu (b. 1536)
  • June 8Jean Bertaut, French poet (b. 1552)
  • June 23Christian II, Elector of Saxony (b. 1583)
  • October 3
    • Margaret of Austria, Queen of Spain (b. 1584)
    • Charles of Lorraine, Duke of Mayenne, French military leader (b. 1554)
  • October 11Thomas Blague, English priest and writer (b. 1545)
  • October 30 – King Charles IX of Sweden (b. 1550)[109]
  • November 6Peter Vok, Czech noble (b. 1539)
  • November 17Nicolas Henri, Duke of Orléans, French duke (b. 1607)
  • November 22Thomas Berkeley, English politician (b. 1575)
  • Camillo Mariani, Italian sculptor (b. 1565)
  • Tiryaki Hasan Pasha, Turkish beylerbey
  • Henry Hudson, English explorer[110]

1612

Leonard Holliday
Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah
Vincenzo Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua
Anne Catherine of Brandenburg
John Salusbury
  • January 4Hendrik Laurenszoon Spiegel, Dutch writer (b. 1549)
  • January 9Leonard Holliday, Lord Mayor of London, 1605-1606 (b. 1550)
  • January 11Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah, fifth sultan of the Qutb Shahi Dynasty of Golkonda; founded the city of Hyderabad (b. 1565)
  • January 12Charles III de Croÿ, Belgian noble (b. 1560)
  • January 13Jane Dormer, English lady-in-waiting to Mary I (b. 1538)
  • January 20Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor, Austrian Habsburg ruler (b. 1552)[111]
  • February 6Christopher Clavius, German mathematician and astronomer (b. 1538)
  • February 9Vincenzo Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua (b. 1562)
  • February 12Jodocus Hondius, Flemish cartographer (b. 1563)
  • February 17Ernest of Bavaria, German Catholic bishop (b. 1554)
  • February 18Roberto di Ridolfi, Italian conspirator against Elizabeth I of England (b. 1531)[112]
  • February 21Christian Barnekow, Danish noble, explorer and diplomat (b. 1556)
  • March 16Margaret Fiennes, 11th Baroness Dacre (b. 1541)
  • March 18Bartholomew Legate, English anti-Trinitarian martyr (b. c. 1575)
  • March 19Sophia Olelkovich Radziwill, Polish-Lithuanian noble (b. 1585)
  • April 5Diana Scultori, Italian engraver
  • April 8Anne Catherine of Brandenburg (b. 1575)
  • April 11
    • Emanuel van Meteren, Flemish historian (b. 1535)[113]
    • Edward Wightman, English Baptist preacher (burned at the stake) (b. 1580)
  • April 19Anne d'Escars de Givry, French Catholic cardinal (b. 1546)
  • April 21David van Goorle, theologian and theoretical scientist (b. 1591)
  • MayFalse Dmitry III, pretender to the Russian throne (secretly executed)[114]
  • May 19Gregorio Petrocchini, Italian Cardinal Bishop, Conclave member, Cardinal protector of the Augustines (b. 1535)
  • May 24Robert Cecil, 1st Earl of Salisbury, English statesman and spymaster (b. 1563)
  • May 31Willem Isaacsz Swanenburg, Dutch engraver (b. 1580)
  • June 5Arima Harunobu, Japanese daimyō (b. 1567)
  • June 8Hans Leo Hassler, German composer (b. 1562)
  • June 21Edward Seymour, Lord Beauchamp (b. 1561)
  • June 26Roger Manners, 5th Earl of Rutland, eldest surviving son of John Manners (b. 1576)
  • July 16Leonardo Donato, Doge of Venice (b. 1536)
  • July 24
    • Ottavio Mirto Frangipani, Italian bishop and papal diplomat (b. 1544)
    • John Salusbury, Welsh politician (b. 1567)[115]
  • July 29Jacques Bongars, French scholar and diplomat (b. 1554)[116]
  • August 3John Bond, English politician and classicist (b. 1550)
  • August 4Hugh Broughton, English scholar (b. 1549)
  • August 9Philipp Ludwig II, Count of Hanau-Münzenberg (1580–1612) (b. 1576)
  • August 12Giovanni Gabrieli, Italian composer (b. c. 1554)
  • August 15Michael Hicks, English politician (b. 1543)
  • August 18Giacomo Boncompagni, Italian feudal lord of the 16th century (b. 1548)
  • August 20Naitō Nobunari, Japanese samurai and daimyō of Omi Province (b. 1545)
  • September 9Nakagawa Hidenari, Japanese warlord (b. 1570)
  • September 12 – Tsar Vasili IV of Russia (b. 1552)
  • September 13Karin Månsdotter, Queen of Sweden (b. 1550)
  • September 24Johannes Lippius, German theologian, philosopher, composer, and music theorist (b. 1585)[117]
  • September 27Piotr Skarga, Polish Jesuit and polemicist (b. 1536)[118]
  • September 28Ernst Soner, German physician (b. 1572)
  • October 7
    • Menso Alting, Dutch preacher and reformer (b. 1541)
    • Giovanni Battista Guarini, Italian poet (b. 1538)[119]
  • October 10Bernardino Poccetti, Italian painter (b. 1548)
  • October 23János Petki, Hungarian politician (b. 1572)
  • October 28Edward Darcy, English politician (b. 1544)
  • November 1Charles, Count of Soissons, French prince du sang and military commander in the struggles over religion and the throne (b. 1566)
  • November 2Maurice, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg, 1581–1612 (b. 1551)
  • November 6
    • Nicholas Fitzherbert, English martyr (b. 1550)
    • Henry Frederick, Prince of Wales, elder son of King James I & VI and Anne of Denmark (b. 1594)[120]
  • November 9Paul Jenisch, German pastor (b. 1551)
  • November 16William Stafford, English spy (b. 1554)
  • November 20John Harington, English courtier, writer and inventor of a flush toilet (b. 1561)[121]
  • November 23
  • November 26Thomas Walmsley, English judge (b. 1537)
  • December 4Jacob Taets van Amerongen, Teutonic Knights commander (b. 1542)
  • December 12Nicholas Mosley, Lord Mayor of London (b. 1527)
  • December 22Francesco IV Gonzaga, Duke of Mantua (b. 1586)[122]
  • Federico Barocci, Italian painter (b. c. 1535)
  • Isabel Barreto, Spanish admiral (b. 1567)

1613

Ikeda Terumasa
  • January 2Salima Sultan Begum, Empress of the Mughal Empire (b. 1539)
  • January 12George Blackwell, English Catholic archpriest (b. 1545)
  • January 18Antoon Claeissens, Flemish Baroque painter (b. 1536)
  • January 27Anna of Saxony, German noblewoman (b. 1567)
  • January 28Thomas Bodley, English diplomat and library founder (b. 1545)[123]
  • February 14Juan García López-Rico, Spanish Catholic priest from the Trinitarian Order, founded the Order of Discalced Carmelites (b. 1561)
  • February 16Johannes Letzner, German Protestant priest and historian (b. 1531)
  • February 27Pietro Facchetti, Italian painter (b. 1539)
  • March 2Rudolph Snellius, Dutch linguist and mathematician (b. 1546)
  • March 13Giovanni Battista Caccini, Italian artist (b. 1556)
  • March 16
    • Sigrid Sture, Swedish Governor (b. 1538)
    • Ikeda Terumasa, Japanese daimyō (b. 1565)
  • March 23Jerónimo de Ayanz y Beaumont, Spanish inventor (b. 1553)
  • March 27Sigismund Báthory, Prince of Transylvania (b. 1572)
  • April 27Robert Abercromby, Scottish Jesuit missionary (b. 1532)
  • June 3Allahverdi Khan, Georgian-born Iranian general (b. 1590)
  • June 8Cigoli, Italian painter (b. 1559)
  • June 15Magdalena Moons, Dutch heroine (b. 1541)
  • July 2Bartholomaeus Pitiscus, German astronomer and mathematician (b. 1561)
  • July 19Nicolaus van Aelst, Flemish engraver (b. 1526)
  • July 20Sebastian Lubomirski, Polish-Lithuanian nobleman (szlachcic) (b. c. 1546)
  • July 30Henry Julius, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg (b. 1564)
  • August 1
    • Francesco Grimaldi, Italian architect (b. 1543)
    • Thomas Twyne, English actor (b. 1543)
  • August 7Thomas Fleming, English judge (b. 1544)
  • August 14David Lindsay, Scottish bishop (b. 1531)
  • August 18Giovanni Artusi, Italian composer (b. c. 1540)
  • August 22Dominicus Baudius, Dutch historian and poet (b. 1561)
  • August 25William Waldegrave, English Member of Parliament (b. 1540)
  • September 8
  • September 14Thomas Overbury, English poet and essayist (murdered) (b. 1581)
  • October 9Henry Constable, English poet (b. 1562)
  • October 11John Petre, 1st Baron Petre, English politician (b. 1549)
  • October 22Mathurin Régnier, French satirist (b. 1573)
  • October 26Johann Bauhin, Swiss botanist (b. 1541)
  • October 27Gabriel Báthory, Prince of Transylvania (b. 1589)
  • November 4Cristóbal Rodríguez Juárez, Spanish Catholic archbishop (b. 1547)
  • November 16Trajano Boccalini, Italian satirist (b. 1556)
  • November 21Rose Lok, English Marian exile (b. 1526)
  • November 23Charles Philippe de Croÿ, Marquis d’Havré, Belgian noble and politician (b. 1549)
  • November 26Henry Berkeley, 7th Baron Berkeley, English politician (b. 1534)
  • December 6Anton Praetorius, German pastor (b. 1560)
  • December 7Simon VI, Count of Lippe, imperial count and ruler of the County of Lippe (Germany) since 1563 (b. 1554)
  • date unknown

1614

Maeda Toshinaga
Johannes Magirus the elder
Man Singh I
Camillus de Lellis
  • January 2Serafino Porrecta, Italian theologian (b. 1536)
  • January 21Morosina Morosini-Grimani, Venetian patrician and dogaressa (b. 1545)
  • February 5Jakob Ebert, German theologian (b. 1549)
  • February 13Thomas Cambell, Lord Mayor of London (b. 1536)
  • February 23Murakoshi Naoyoshi, Japanese samurai (b. 1562)
  • February 27John Harington, 2nd Baron Harington of Exton, England (b. 1592)
  • February 28Jean Richardot the Younger, Belgian politician (b. 1570)
  • March 5Thomas Pounde, English Jesuit lay brother (b. 1538)
  • March 14Henrich Smet, Flemish physician (b. 1535)
  • March 22Filippo Salviati, Italian astronomer (b. 1582)
  • April 2Henri I de Montmorency, Marshal of France (b. 1534)
  • April 7El Greco, or Domênikos Theotokópoulos (Greek: Δομήνικος Θεοτοκόπουλος), Cretian painter, sculptor and architect (b. 1541)[125]
  • April 28John Egerton, English politician (b. 1551)
  • May 3Sasbout Vosmeer, Dutch Apostolic Vicar (b. 1548)
  • June 13Sengoku Hidehisa, Japanese daimyō (b. 1552)
  • June 15Henry Howard, 1st Earl of Northampton, important English aristocrat and courtier (b. 1540)
  • June 17William Bathe, Irish Jesuit priest (b. 1564)
  • June 27Maeda Toshinaga, Japanese daimyō (b. 1562)
  • July 1
    • Maximiliano de Austria, Roman Catholic prelate who served as Archbishop of Santiago de Compostela (1603–1614) (b. 1555)
    • Isaac Casaubon, French-born classical scholar (b. 1559)
  • July 4Johannes Magirus the elder, German Lutheran theologian (b. 1537)
  • July 6
    • Sir Anthony Cope, 1st Baronet, English politician (b. 1548)
    • Man Singh I, Rajput Raja of Amer, India (b. 1550)
  • July 14Camillus de Lellis, Italian saint (b. 1550)
  • July 15Pierre de Bourdeille, seigneur de Brantôme, French historian and biographer
  • July 16Tsarevich Ivan Dmitriyevich, pretender to the Russian throne, son of False Dmitry II (b. 1611)
  • July 19Akizuki Tanenaga, Japanese samurai (b. 1567)
  • July 28Felix Plater, Swiss physician (b. 1536)
  • July 30Walter Cope, English noble (b. 1553)
  • August 3François de Bourbon, Prince of Conti, third son of Louis I de Bourbon (b. 1558)
  • August 11Lavinia Fontana, Italian painter (b. 1552)[126]
  • August 21Elizabeth Báthory, Hungarian serial killer (b. 1560)[127]
  • August 22Philipp Ludwig, Count Palatine of Neuburg, Duke of Palatinate-Neuburg from 1569 until 1614 (b. 1547)
  • SeptemberGiovanni de Macque, Dutch composer (b. c. 1550)
  • September 21Jerome Gratian, Spanish Carmelite and writer (b. 1545)
  • October 2Carlo Sellitto, Italian painter (b. 1581)
  • October 9Bonaventura Vulcanius, Flemish Renaissance humanist (b. 1538)
  • October 15Peder Claussøn Friis, Norwegian clergyman and author (b. 1545)
  • October 26Sibylla of Anhalt, Duchess consort of Württemberg (1593–1608) (b. 1564)
  • November 15Catherine, Duchess of Braganza, Portuguese infanta (princess), claimant to the throne following the death of King Henry (b. 1540)
  • November 29Mogami Yoshiaki, Japanese daimyō of the Yamagata domain (b. 1546)
  • December 27Maximiliaan de Vriendt, Dutch new Latin poet and a civic office-holder in the city of Ghent (b. 1559)

1615

John Ogilvie
Cherubino Alberti
Gervase Helwys
Gerard Reynst
  • January 15Virginia de' Medici, Italian princess (b. 1568)
  • January 16Roger Fenton, English clergyman (b. 1565)
  • January 31Claudio Acquaviva, Italian Jesuit priest, elected (in 1581) the 5th Superior General of the Society of Jesus (b. 1543)
  • February 4Giambattista della Porta, Italian scholar, polymath, playwright (b. 1535)
  • February 3 or February 5Dom Justo Takayama, Japanese warlord (b. 1552)
  • March 4Hans von Aachen, German painter (b. 1552)
  • March 6Pieter Both, first Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies (b. 1568)
  • March 10John Ogilvie, Scottish Catholic Jesuit martyr (b. 1579)
  • March 19Henry Pierrepont, English politician (b. 1546)
  • March 27Margaret of Valois, Queen of France (b. 1553)
  • April 1Miklós Istvánffy, Hungarian politician (b. 1538)
  • April 12William Lower, British astronomer (b. 1570)
  • May 4Adriaan van Roomen, Flemish mathematician (b. 1561)
  • May 5Juan Fernandez Pacheco, 5th Duke of Escalona, Spanish noble and diplomat (b. 1563)
  • May 9John Perrin, English translator (b. 1558)
  • May 15
    • Henry Bromley, English politician (b. 1560)
    • William Wilson, English priest (b. 1545)
  • May 20Dirck van Os, Dutch merchant (b. 1556)
  • June 2
    • Kuwana Yoshinari, Japanese samurai (b. 1551)
    • Kimura Shigenari, Japanese samurai (b. 1593)
  • June 3
    • Hattori Masanari, Japanese samurai (b. 1565)
    • Sanada Yukimura, Japanese samurai (b. 1567)
  • June 4Ujiie Yukihiro, Japanese samurai and feudal lord, from the Sengoku period to the beginning of Edo period (b. 1546)
  • June 23
    • Roland Lytton, English politician (b. 1561)
    • Mashita Nagamori, minor Japanese daimyō (b. 1545)
  • October 9Hasan Kafi Pruščak, Bosnian scholar and judge (b. 1544)
  • October 16
  • October 18Cherubino Alberti, Italian engraver and painter (b. 1553)
  • October 31Marcantonio Memmo, Doge of Venice (b. 1536)
  • November 6Sir Richard Musgrave, 1st Baronet, English politician (b. 1585)
  • November 14John Leveson, English politician (b. 1555)
  • November 15Anne Turner, English murderer (b. 1576)
  • November 20Gervase Helwys, English murderer (b. 1561)
  • November 24Sethus Calvisius, German calendar reformer (b. 1556)
  • November 28William Howard, 3rd Baron Howard of Effingham, English politician and Baron (b. 1577)
  • November 29George Albert II, Margrave of Brandenburg (b. 1591)
  • November – Edward Wright, English mathematician and cartographer (b. 1561)
  • December 7Gerard Reynst, Dutch merchant (b. c. 1558)
  • December 26August of Saxony, German prince (b. 1589)

1616

Charles de Ligne
William Shakespeare
Miguel de Cervantes
Tokugawa Ieyasu
Jacob Le Maire
  • January 5Simeon Bekbulatovich, khan of the Qasim Tatars, Grand Duke of Muscovy and Tver
  • January 6Philip Henslowe, English theatre manager (b. 1550)
  • January 18Charles de Ligne, 2nd Prince of Arenberg, Dutch noble (b. 1550)
  • February 12Anna of Nassau-Dillenburg, Countess consort of Nassau-Weilburg (b. 1541)
  • February 13Anders Sørensen Vedel, Danish priest and historian (b. 1542)
  • February 15George Carey, English politician (b. 1541)
  • February 18Archduke Maximilian Ernest of Austria, Austrian archduke (b. 1583)
  • February 28
  • March 3Matthias de l'Obel, physician of James I of England (b. 1538)
  • March 6Francis Beaumont, dramatist in the English Renaissance theatre (b. 1584)[128]
  • March 8
    • Maria Anna of Bavaria, daughter of William V, Duke of Bavaria and Renata von Lothringen (b. 1574)
    • Giulio Cesare Casseri, Italian anatomist (b. 1552)
  • March 19Johannes Fabricius, Frisian/German astronomer (b. 1587)
  • March 21Giacomo Castelvetro, Italian writer (b. 1546)
  • March 27George Wylde I, English lawyer and politician (b. 1550)
  • March 31John Adolf, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp (b. 1575)
  • April 19Juan de Silva, Spanish military commander and governor of the Philippines
  • April 22Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish author (b. 1547)
  • April 23
    • (O.S., Tuesday) – William Shakespeare, English playwright and poet (b. 1564)[129]
    • (Inca date unknown) Inca Garcilaso de la Vega, Peruvian author (b. 1539)
  • April 27Francesco Barbaro, Italian diplomat (b. 1546)
  • May 4Magdalene of Brandenburg, Landgravine consort of Hesse-Darmstadt (1598–1616) (b. 1582)
  • May 8Gilbert Talbot, 7th Earl of Shrewsbury, English politician and earl (b. 1552)
  • May 24Margaret Clifford, Countess of Cumberland, British noble (b. 1560)
  • May 30Thomas Parry, English politician (b. 1541)
  • June 1Tokugawa Ieyasu, Japanese shōgun (b. 1543)
  • June 4Adam Hieronim Sieniawski, Polish–Lithuanian noble (b. c. 1576)
  • June 9Cornelis Schuyt, Dutch organist and composer (b. 1557)
  • June 18Thomas Bilson, English bishop (b. 1547)
  • June 19Henry Robinson, English bishop (b. 1553)
  • July 2Bernardino Realino, Italian Jesuit (b. 1530)
  • July 7
    • Charles Philippe de Rodoan, third bishop of Middelburg and the fourth bishop of Bruges (b. 1552)
    • Anna of Württemberg, German princess (b. 1561)
  • July 20
  • July 25Andreas Libavius, German physician and chemist (b. 1555)
  • July 29Tang Xianzu, Chinese playwright and poet (b. 1550)
  • July 31Roger Wilbraham, Solicitor-General for Ireland (b. 1553)
  • August 3Hans Meinhard von Schönberg, German military commander (b. 1582)
  • August 7
    • Scipione Gentili, Italian law professor and legal writer (b. 1563)
    • Vincenzo Scamozzi, Italian architect (b. 1548)
  • August 8
  • August 31Henry Poole, English politician (b. 1541)
  • September 24
    • Henry Baynton, English Member of Parliament (b. 1571)
    • John Scott, English politician (b. 1570)
  • September 29Henry Clinton, 2nd Earl of Lincoln, English politician (b. 1539)
  • October 10Countess Maria of Nassau (b. 1556)
  • October 11Aleksander Józef Lisowski, Polish noble (szlachcic) (b. 1580)
  • October 17John Pitts, Catholic scholar and writer (b. 1560)
  • October 21Sakazaki Naomori, Japanese daimyō
  • October 23Leonhard Hutter, German theologian (b. 1563)
  • October 27Johannes Praetorius, German astronomer and mathematician (b. 1537)
  • November 3Agnes Hedwig of Anhalt, Abbess of Gernrode, Electress of Saxony, Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein-Sønderborg-Plön (b. 1573)
  • November 8Robert Dormer, 1st Baron Dormer, English politician (b. 1551)
  • November 14William Harris, English knight (b. 1556)
  • November 20Matsumae Yoshihiro, Japanese daimyo of Ezochi (Hokkaidō) (b. 1548)
  • December 6Ahmad Ibn al-Qadi, Moroccan writer, judge and mathematician (b. 1552)
  • November 23Richard Hakluyt, English author, editor and translator (b. 1553)
  • December 7Guillaume Fouquet de la Varenne, French chef (b. 1560)
  • December 22Jacob Le Maire, Dutch mariner (b. 1585)
  • December 24György Thurzó, Palatine of Hungary (b. 1567)
  • December 31Jan Szczęsny Herburt, Polish political writer (b. 1567)
  • Hendrick Christiaensen, Dutch explorer
  • Krzysztof Klabon, Polish Renaissance composer (b. 1550)
  • Alexander Whitaker, Virginia Colony religious leader (b. 1585)

1617

John Napier
Dorothea Maria of Anhalt
Emperor Go-Yozei
Saint Francisco Suarez
Charlotte de Sauve
Alphonsus Rodriguez
  • January 1Hendrik Goltzius, Dutch painter (b. 1558)
  • January 6Dorothea of Denmark, Duchess of Brunswick-Lüneburg from 1561 to 1592 as the consort of Duke William (b. 1546)
  • January 16Wolf Dietrich Raitenau, Prince-Archbishop of Salzburg (b. 1559)
  • January 17Faust Vrančić, Croatian inventor (b. 1551)
  • January 28Karl II, Duke of Münsterberg-Oels, Duke of Oels and Duke of Bernstadt (b. 1545)
  • February 3Prospero Alpini, Italian physician and botanist from the Republic of Venice (b. 1553)
  • February 8Edward Talbot, 8th Earl of Shrewsbury, English politician and earl (b. 1561)
  • February 11Giovanni Antonio Magini, Italian mathematician, cartographer and astronomer (b. 1555)
  • February 16Kaspar Ulenberg, German theologian (b. 1549)
  • March 1Edward Hoby, English politician (b. 1560)
  • March 20François d'Aguilon, Belgian Jesuit mathematician (b. 1567)
  • March 21Pocahontas, Algonquian (Native American) princess (b. c. 1595)[130]
  • March 27George II, Duke of Pomerania, non-reigning Duke of Pomerania (b. 1582)
  • April 1Ralph Eure, 3rd Baron Eure, English politician (b. 1558)
  • April 4John Napier, Scottish mathematician (b. 1550)[131]
  • April 5Alonso Lobo, Spanish composer (b. 1555)
  • May 3Aleixo de Menezes, Portuguese Catholic archbishop (b. 1559)
  • May 7
    • David Fabricius, Frisian astronomer (b. 1564)
    • Jacques Auguste de Thou, French historian (b. 1553)
  • May 11Jean Chapeauville, Belgian theologian and historian (b. 1551)
  • May 16Nicolas de Montmorency (b. 1556)
  • May 29Roger Owen, English politician (b. 1573)
  • June 20Raja Wodeyar I, King of Mysore (b. 1552)
  • June 27Jerome Xavier, Spanish Jesuit missionary (b. 1549)
  • July 8Leonora Dori, French noble (b. 1571)
  • July 9John Herbert, Welsh politician (b. 1550)
  • July 13Adam Wenceslaus, Duke of Cieszyn, Duke of Teschen (b. 1574)
  • July 18Dorothea Maria of Anhalt (b. 1570)
  • August 7Otto, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel, Hereditary Prince of Hesse-Kassel, Administrator of Hersfeld Abbey (b. 1594)
  • August 8Frederick IV of Fürstenberg, German noble (b. 1563)
  • August 13Johann Jakob Grynaeus, Swiss Protestant clergyman (b. 1540)
  • August 24Rose of Lima, Peruvian saint (b. 1586)
  • August 28William Willoughby, 3rd Baron Willoughby of Parham, English baron (b. 1584)
  • September 9Julius Echter von Mespelbrunn, German bishop (b. 1545)
  • September 25
  • September 27Johan Ernst van Nassau-Siegen, Dutch general (b. 1582)
  • September 30Charlotte de Sauve, French courtesan (b. 1551)
  • October 10Bernardino Baldi, Italian mathematician and writer (b. 1553)
  • October 11François Vranck, Dutch statesman and justice (b. 1555)
  • October 14Isaac Arnauld, French noble (b. 1566)
  • October 19David Hoeschel, German librarian (b. 1556)
  • October 22Matthias Hafenreffer, German Lutheran theologian (b. 1561)
  • October 27Ralph Winwood, English politician (b. c. 1563)
  • October 31Alphonsus Rodriguez, Spanish Jesuit lay brother, saint (b. 1532)
  • November 10Barnabe Rich, English soldier and writer (b. c. 1540)
  • November 12Nicolas de Neufville, seigneur de Villeroy, secretary of state under four kings of France (b. 1543)
  • November 17 – Princess Dorothea, Abbess of Quedlinburg (b. 1591)
  • November 22Ahmed I, Ottoman Emperor (b. 1590)
  • Tarquinia Molza, Italian singer (b. 1542)

1618

Philip II, Duke of Pomerania
Marie of the Incarnation (Carmelite)
Albert Frederick, Duke of Prussia
Jakob Rem
  • January 6Margherita Gonzaga, Duchess of Ferrara (b. 1564)
  • January 19Jacobus Zaffius, Dutch Catholic provost (b. 1535)
  • January 24Henry Brooke, 11th Baron Cobham, English peer and traitor (b. 1564)
  • January 29John Dackombe, Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (b. 1570)
  • February 3Philip II, Duke of Pomerania-Stettin (b. 1573)
  • February 10Feliks Kryski, Grand Chancellor of Poland (b. 1562)
  • February 14Paolo Emilio Sfondrati, Italian Catholic cardinal (b. 1560)
  • February 20Philip William, Prince of Orange, eldest son of William the Silent, by his first wife Anna van Egmont (b. 1554)
  • February 25Elizabeth Spencer, Baroness Hunsdon, English baroness (b. 1552)
  • February 27Anne Lyon, Countess of Kinghorne, Scottish countess (b. 1579)
  • March 5
  • March 14Nadira Banu Begum, Mughal princess (d. 1659)
  • March 16Giovanni Bembo, Doge of Venice (b. 1543)[132]
  • March 23James Hamilton, 1st Earl of Abercorn, Scottish politician (b. c. 1575)
  • March 26Frederick Magnus, Count of Erbach-Fürstenau (1606–1618) (b. 1575)
  • March 31Pedro Cornejo de Pedrosa, Spanish theologian (b. 1536)
  • April – Chief Powhatan (proper name Wahunsenacawh), Algonquin (indigenous American) leader, father of Pocahontas (b. c. 1547)
  • April 5Robert Barker, English politician (b. 1563)
  • April 14Giovanni Battista Zuccato, Italian Catholic prelate, Bishop of Nusco (1607–1614) (b. 1543)
  • April 18Marie of the Incarnation, Carmelite (b. 1566)
  • May 9Nicolò Donato, Doge of Venice (b. 1539)
  • May 24John George I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau (1603–1618) (b. 1567)
  • May 31Sabina Catharina of East Frisia, Countess of Rietberg (1586–1618) (b. 1582)
  • June 7Thomas West, 3rd Baron De La Warr, English Governor of Virginia (b. 1577)
  • June 21Kasper Hassler, German musician (b. 1562)
  • July 20James Montague, British bishop (b. 1568)
  • July 24Nicolò Rusca, Italian priest who served in Como (b. 1563)
  • July 26Martinus Smiglecius, Polish philosopher (b. 1564)
  • August 7Princess Maria Elizabeth of Sweden, Swedish princess (b. 1596)
  • August 23Gerbrand Adriaenszoon Bredero, Dutch writer (b. 1585)
  • August 28Albert Frederick, Duke of Prussia (b. 1553)
  • September 3Frederik van den Bergh, Dutch soldier in the Eighty Years' War (b. 1559)
  • September 28Joshua Sylvester, English poet (b. 1563)
  • October 12Jakob Rem, Austrian Jesuit (b. 1546)
  • October 24Elisabeth of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel, German noblewoman (b. 1567)
  • October 29 – Sir Walter Raleigh, English soldier, politician, courtier, explorer, Virginia settler, historian, poet and spy (executed) (b. 1552 of 1554)[133]
  • October 30
    • Charles, Margrave of Burgau, German nobleman (b. 1560)
    • Prospero Farinacci, Italian jurist (b. 1554)
  • November 2Maximilian III, Archduke of Austria (b. 1558)
  • November 14Anna Maria of Brandenburg, Duchess Consort of Pomerania (b. 1567)
  • December 6Jacques Davy Duperron, French cardinal (b. 1556)
  • December 7Bernardo de Sandoval y Rojas, Spanish Catholic cardinal, Grand Inquisitor (b. 1546)
  • December 9Valentine Knightley, English politician (b. 1555)
  • December 10Giulio Caccini, Italian composer (b. 1551)[134]
  • December 14Anna of Tyrol, Holy Roman Empress (b. 1585)
  • December 17Roger Puleston, Welsh politician (b. 1565)[135]
  • Ebba Bielke, Swedish baroness and conspirator (b. 1570)
  • Christina Rauscher, German official and critic of witchcraft persecutions (b. 1570)

1619

Lucilio Vanini
Taj Bibi Bilqis Makani
Lawrence of Brindisi
Marko Krizin
Sur Singh
Ludovico Carracci
  • January 7Nicholas Hilliard, English miniature painter (b. c. 1547)
  • January 11Diane de France, Duchess of Angoulême (b. 1538)
  • January 15Thomas Clinton, 3rd Earl of Lincoln, English politician (b. 1568)
  • January 20Éléonore de Bourbon, Dutch princess (b. 1587)
  • February 3Henry Brooke, 11th Baron Cobham, English conspirator (b. 1564)
  • February 9Lucilio Vanini, Italian philosopher (b. 1585)
  • February 12Pierre de Larivey, Italian-born French dramatist (b. 1549)
  • February 16William Couper, Scottish bishop of Galloway (b. 1568)
  • March 2
    • William Cooke, English politician (b. 1572)
    • Anne of Denmark, Queen of James I of England (b. 1574)[136]
  • March 5Demeter Naprágyi, Hungarian Catholic archbishop (b. 1564)
  • March 13Richard Burbage, English actor (b. c. 1567)[137]
  • March 15
    • Michael Balfour, 1st Lord Balfour of Burleigh, Scottish nobleman
    • Orsolya Dersffy, Hungarian noble (b. 1583)
  • March 18Chō Tsuratatsu, Japanese samurai (b. 1546)
  • March 20
    • Ippolito Galantini, founder of the Congregation of Christian Doctrine of Florence (b. 1565)
    • Matthias, Holy Roman Emperor, Austrian Habsburg ruler (b. 1557)
  • April 5Alexander Home, 1st Earl of Home, Scottish nobleman (b. 1566)
  • April 10Thomas Jones, Anglican Archbishop of Dublin (b. c. 1550)
  • April 16Denis Calvaert, Flemish painter (b. 1540)
  • April 18Taj Bibi Bilqis Makani, Mughal empress (b. 1573)
  • April/May – William Larkin, English court portrait painter (b. early 1580s)
  • MayJohn Overall, English bishop (b. 1559)
  • May 13Johan van Oldenbarnevelt, Dutch statesman (b. 1547)
  • May 21Hieronymus Fabricius, Italian anatomist (b. 1537)
  • May 23Stephen Soame, Lord Mayor of London (b. 1540)
  • June 18Martin Fréminet, French painter (b. 1567)
  • July 2Francis II, Duke of Saxe-Lauenburg (1586–1619) (b. 1547)
  • July 22Lawrence of Brindisi, Italian saint (b. 1559)
  • July 24Nabeshima Naoshige, Japanese samurai (b. 1537)
  • August 3Dorothy Percy, Countess of Northumberland, younger daughter of Walter Devereux (b. c. 1564)
  • August 19
    • Thomas Dale, English colonial governor
    • Jørgen Lunge, Danish politician (b. 1577)
  • August 29Ferdinando Taverna, Italian Catholic cardinal (b. 1558)
  • August 30Shimazu Yoshihiro, Japanese samurai and warlord (b. 1535)
  • SeptemberHans Lippershey, Dutch lensmaker (b. 1570)
  • September 3John Gordon, Scottish bishop (b. 1544)
  • September 7
    • Marko Krizin, Croatian Catholic priest (martyred) (b. 1585)
    • Stephen Pongracz, Hungarian saint (b. 1584)
    • Sur Singh, ruler of Marwar (b. 1571)
  • October
    • Robert Peake the Elder, English court portrait painter (b. c. 1551)
    • Nicholas Yonge, English singer and publisher (b. c. 1560)
  • October 9Joseph Pardo, Italian rabbi and merchant (b. c. 1561)
  • October 14Samuel Daniel, English poet (b. 1562)
  • October 18Petrus Gudelinus, Belgian jurist (b. 1550)
  • October 19Fujiwara Seika, Japanese philosopher (b. 1561)
  • November 13Ludovico Carracci, Italian painter (b. 1555)
  • December 23John Sigismund, Elector of Brandenburg from the House of Hohenzollern (b. 1572)
  • December 29
    • Antoine Arnauld, French lawyer (b. 1560)
    • Prince Jeongwon, Korean prince (b. 1580)
  • Bagrat VII of Kartli (b. 1569)
  • François d'Amboise, French jurist and writer (b. 1550)
  • Thomas Stephens, English Jesuit missionary in Portuguese India (b. c. 1549)
  • Caterina Vitale, Maltese pharmacist (b. 1566)

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  2. ^ Heinrich von Brandt (1999). In the Legions of Napoleon: The Memoirs of a Polish Officer in Spain and Russia, 1808-1813. Greenhill Books. p. 216. ISBN 978-1-85367-380-1.
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  8. ^ Thony, C. (2011-01-08). "Spotting the spots". The Renaissance Mathematicus. Archived from the original on July 21, 2011. Retrieved 2011-08-09.
  9. ^ Charles Hole (1910). A Manual of English Church History. Longmans, Green, and Company. p. 278.
  10. ^ Domingo Abella (1978). From Indio to Filipino: And Some Historical Works. M. Romualdez-Abella. p. 196.
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  23. ^ Squanto
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