1678

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
  • 16th century
  • 17th century
  • 18th century
Decades:
Years:
  • 1675
  • 1676
  • 1677
  • 1678
  • 1679
  • 1680
  • 1681
1678 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1678
MDCLXXVIII
Ab urbe condita2431
Armenian calendar1127
ԹՎ ՌՃԻԷ
Assyrian calendar6428
Balinese saka calendar1599–1600
Bengali calendar1085
Berber calendar2628
English Regnal year29 Cha. 2 – 30 Cha. 2
Buddhist calendar2222
Burmese calendar1040
Byzantine calendar7186–7187
Chinese calendar丁巳年 (Fire Snake)
4374 or 4314
    — to —
戊午年 (Earth Horse)
4375 or 4315
Coptic calendar1394–1395
Discordian calendar2844
Ethiopian calendar1670–1671
Hebrew calendar5438–5439
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1734–1735
 - Shaka Samvat1599–1600
 - Kali Yuga4778–4779
Holocene calendar11678
Igbo calendar678–679
Iranian calendar1056–1057
Islamic calendar1088–1089
Japanese calendarEnpō 6
(延宝6年)
Javanese calendar1600–1601
Julian calendarGregorian minus 10 days
Korean calendar4011
Minguo calendar234 before ROC
民前234年
Nanakshahi calendar210
Thai solar calendar2220–2221
Tibetan calendar阴火蛇年
(female Fire-Snake)
1804 or 1423 or 651
    — to —
阳土马年
(male Earth-Horse)
1805 or 1424 or 652

1678 (MDCLXXVIII) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Tuesday of the Julian calendar, the 1678th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 678th year of the 2nd millennium, the 78th year of the 17th century, and the 9th year of the 1670s decade. As of the start of 1678, the Gregorian calendar was 10 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.

Events[]

January–March[]

  • January 10 – England and the Dutch Republic sign a mutual defense treaty in order to fight against France.
  • January 27 – The first fire engine company (in what will become the United States) goes into service.
  • February 18 – The first part of English nonconformist preacher John Bunyan's Christian allegory, The Pilgrim's Progress, is published in London.
  • March 6 – King Charles II of England opens his third Parliament.
  • March 21Thomas Shadwell's comedy, A True Widow, is given its first performance, debuting at The Duke's Theatre and staged by the Duke's Company.
  • March 23 – Rebel Chinese general Wu Sangui takes the imperial crown, names himself monarch of "The Great Zhou", based in the Hunan report, with Hengyang as his capital. He contracts dysentery over the summer and dies on October 2, ending the rebellion against the Kangxi Emperor. [1]
  • March 25 – The Spanish Netherlands city of Ypres falls after an eight-day siege by the French Army. It is later returned to the Netherlands and is now part of Belgium.
  • March 28 – The nova V529 Orionis is discovered by Poland astronomer Jan Heweliusz, referred to in history as Johannes Hevelius.

April–June[]

  • April 2Ignatius Gregory Peter VI Shahbaddin is enthroned as the Patriarch of the Syriac Catholic Church in Aleppo, after receiving recognition by Ottoman Sultan Mehmed IV and by Pope Innocent XI.
  • April 12 – The Treaty of Casco Bay is signed between officials of the Province of New York and the Penobscot tribe and the Wabanaki Confederacy, bringing and end to further fighting that had happened in the two years saince the end of King Philip's War in what is now the U.S. state of Maine. Under the terms of the treaty, English settlers pay rent to the Penobscots and are given back farm land that had been confiscated in the war, while the English settlers agree to respect the Penobscot land rights. [2]
  • May 11 – French admiral Jean d'Estrees runs his whole fleet aground in Curaçao.
  • June 10 – French buccaneer Michel de Grammont arrives at Spanish-held Venezuela with six pirate ships, 13 smaller craft, and 2,000 men in a daring raid on the South American territory, then leads half of his force inward toward Maracaibo, which he takes on June 14. During the rest of the month, he and his soldiers march inland as far as Trujillo. Grammont and his pirates finally depart on December 3. [3]
  • June 25Elena Lucrezia Cornaro Piscopia becomes the first woman to be awarded a university degree, a doctorate in philosophy from the University of Padua.

July–September[]

  • July 20Muhammad Azam Shah is appointed as the Mughal Governor of Bengal by his father, the Emperor Aurangzeb, and serves for a little more than a year before being recalled from Dhaka.
  • July 23 – The Battle of Ortenbach, one of the last major engagements of the Franco-Dutch War, takes place near Offenburg at the Rhine river in southwestern Germany, as French forces under the command of François de Créquy overwhelm a larger force of Holy Roman Empire troops commanded by the Duke of Lorraine, Karl V Leopold.
  • August 3Robert LaSalle builds the Le Griffon, the first ship to sail on the Great Lakes of North America.
  • August 10 – The Treaties of Nijmegen end the Franco-Dutch War. The County of Burgundy is ceded to the Kingdom of France.
  • August 1415 – The Battle of Saint-Denis is fought after the peace was signed between France and the Dutch Republic in the Treaties of Nijmegen on 10 August.
  • August 21 – On the island of Java in what is now Indonesia, the Kediri campaign begins as Mataram Sultanate and Dutch East India Company (VOC) forces under the command of VOC Captain François Tack begin marching from Jepara toward Kediri to suppress the Trunajaya rebellion that had driven out the Mataram Sultan. They are joined by two other columns of troops over the next two weeks.
  • September 5 – Sultan Amangkurat II of Mataram sets off from Jepara with the main force in the Kediri campaign, leading native troops, along with VOC forces under the command of Anthonio Hurdt, leader of the campaign.
  • September 6Titus Oates begins to present allegations of the Popish Plot, a supposed Roman Catholic conspiracy to assassinate king Charles II of England. Oates applies the term Tory to those who disbelieve his allegations.
  • September 17 – The Franco-Dutch War between France against the Dutch Republic and Dutch allies, comes to an end after more than six years as the Treaties of Nijmegen bring about a ceasefire.

October–December[]

  • October 17 – English magistrate Sir Edmund Berry Godfrey is found murdered in Primrose Hill, London. Titus Oates claims it as a proof of his allegations of a Roman Catholic conspiracy.
  • November 11 (November 1 O.S.) – England's House of Commons votes to begin impeachment proceedings against five Roman Catholic members of the House of Lords, Viscount Stafford, the Marquess of Powis, Baron Arundell, Baron Petre and Baron Belasyse accused by Protestant members as participating in a "Popish Plot". Viscount Stafford is convicted and executed, while the other four are imprisoned in the Tower of London for more than five years.
  • November 25 – The Kediri campaign is successfully concluded in Indonesia as Anthonio Hurdt and Sultan Amangkurat II capture Kediri and force the rebel Prince Trunajaya to flee.
  • November 26 – William Staley, an English banker and a Roman Catholic, becomes the first person to be executed in connection with the Popish Plot arrests.
  • December 3 – The Test Act provides that members of both the House of Lords and House of Commons of England must swear an anti-Catholic oath, before taking office.

Date unknown[]


Births[]

Antonio Vivaldi
Amaro Pargo
  • March 4Antonio Vivaldi, Italian composer (d. 1741)
  • March 7Filippo Juvara, Italian architect (d. 1736)
  • April 14Abraham Darby I, one of the English fathers of the Industrial Revolution (d. 1717)
  • May 3Amaro Pargo, Spanish corsair (d. 1747)
  • May 16Andreas Silbermann, German organ builder (d. 1734)
  • July 26Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor (d. 1711)
  • September 16Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke, English statesman and philosopher (d. 1751)
  • September 29Adrien-Maurice, 3rd duc de Noailles, French soldier (d. 1766)
  • October 10John Campbell, 2nd Duke of Argyll, Scottish soldier (d. 1743)
  • October 16Anna Waser, Swiss painter (d. 1714)
  • November 26Jean Jacques d'Ortous de Mairan, French geophysicist (d. 1771)
  • December 8Horatio Walpole, 1st Baron Walpole of Wolterton, English diplomat (d. 1757)
  • December 13Yongzheng Emperor of China (d. 1735)
  • December 14Daniel Neal, English historian (d. 1743)
  • December 30William Croft, English composer (d. 1727)
  • date unknown
    • George Farquhar, Irish dramatist (d. 1707)
    • Maria Faxell, Swedish vicar's wife and war heroine (d. 1738)
    • Joachim Ludwig Schultheiss von Unfriedt, German architect (d. 1753)
    • Pierre Fauchard, French physician and author, considered The father of modern dentistry (d. 1761)
    • John Senex, British geographer (d. 1740)[4]

Deaths[]

Samuel Dirksz van Hoogstraten
Andries de Graeff

References[]

  1. ^ "Romantics, Stoics and Martyrs", by Frederic Wakeman, Journal of Asian Studies (August 1984) pp. 631-665)‎, in Telling Chinese History: A Selection of Essays (University of California Press, 2009) p. 123
  2. ^ "Casco, Treaty of", by Jaime Ramon Olivares, in The Encyclopedia of North American Indian Wars, 1607–1890: A Political, Social, and Military History, ed. by Spencer Tucker (ABC-CLIO, 2011) p. 134
  3. ^ David Marley, Wars of the Americas: A Chronology of Armed Conflict in the Western Hemisphere (ABC-CLIO, 2008) p. 289
  4. ^ "The Historical Theater in the Year 400 AD, in Which Both Romans and Barbarians Resided Side by Side in the Eastern Part of the Roman Empire". World Digital Library. 1725. Retrieved 2013-07-27.
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