1710s

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The 1710s decade ran from January 1, 1710, to December 31, 1719.

Events

1710

January–March[]

  • January 1 – In Germany, Cölln is merged with Alt-Berlin by Frederick I of Prussia to form Berlin.
  • January 4Robert Balfour, 5th Lord Balfour of Burleigh, two days before he is due to be executed for murder, escapes from the Edinburgh Tolbooth by exchanging clothes with his sister.
  • February 17Mauritius, a Dutch colony since 1638, is abandoned by the Dutch.
  • February 28 (Swedish calendar) – Battle of Helsingborg: Fourteen thousand Danish invaders, under Jørgen Rantzau, are decisively defeated by an equally large Swedish army, under Magnus Stenbock.
  • March 1 – The Sacheverell riots start in London with an attack on an elegant Presbyterian meeting-house in Lincoln's Inn Fields, followed by riots through the West End of London.
  • March 6 – The ancient Roman Pillar of the Boatmen is found during the construction of a crypt under the nave of Notre-Dame de Paris.

April–June[]

  • April 5Pylyp Orlyk, a Cossack of Ukraine, is elected as the Hetman of the Zaporizhian Host and immediately issues the Pacts and Constitutions of Rights and Freedoms of the Zaporizhian Host.
  • April 10 – The world's first copyright legislation, Britain's Statute of Anne, becomes effective.[1]
  • April 19Anne, Queen of Great Britain, meets the Four Mohawk Kings.[2]
  • May 6 – The South Sea Company begins.[3]
  • JuneProtestant Swiss and German Palatines, under the leadership of Christoph von Graffenried, travel to Bath County in the Province of Carolina. The settlers displace the native town of Chattoka and found New Bern, named for von Graffenried's hometown of Bern, Switzerland.
  • June 8 – The Tuscarora nation sends a petition to the Province of Pennsylvania, protesting the seizure of their lands and enslavement of their people, by citizens of the Province of Carolina.
  • June 16Köprülüzade Numan Pasha becomes the grand vizier of the Ottoman Empire.
  • June 24 – In the Isle of Man, Manx coins become legal tender.

July–September[]

  • July 27 – The Battle of Almenar takes place in the Iberian theatre of the War of the Spanish Succession.
  • August 2 – British Royal Navy 90-gun ship HMS Vanguard is relaunched from Chatham; Vanguard sank in Chatham Dockyard in the Great Storm of 1703, but was raised in 1704 for rebuilding.
  • August 20War of the Spanish SuccessionBattle of Saragossa: The Spanish-Bourbon army, commanded by the Marquis de Bay, is soundly defeated by the forces of the Habsburg Monarchy, under Guido Starhemberg and their allies.[4]
  • August 24 – Total eclipse of the sun is visible at 36°30′S 105°06′W / 36.5°S 105.1°W / -36.5; -105.1.
  • September 7 – In Jonathan Swift's satirical Gulliver's Travels, fictional Gulliver sets off on his fourth and final journey, a voyage to the Land of the Houyhnhnms.
  • September 26Great Northern WarCapitulation of Livonia: the Swedish garrison in Riga surrenders, ending Swedish rule in modern Latvia.

October–December[]

  • October – The start of the Mascate War (aka the War of the Peddlers) between two rival mercantile groups the Zillioto family and the Astrid family in colonial Brazil.
  • October 4Great Northern War – the Battle of Køge Bay between Denmark and Norway has an indecisive outcome.
  • October 5October 13 British forces under Francis Nicholson conduct the successful Siege of Port Royal against a French Acadian garrison and the Wabanaki Confederacy at the Acadian capital, Port Royal, marking the start of British control of what became Nova Scotia.
  • October 10Great Northern WarCapitulation of Estonia: the Swedish garrison in Reval (Tallinn) surrenders, ending Swedish rule in Estonia.
  • October 11 – The Battle of Rahon is fought between Sikhs and Mughal Empire.
  • October 13Queen Anne's WarSiege of Port Royal: The French surrender, giving the British permanent possession of Nova Scotia.
  • November 30 – The first visit to the Pacific islands of Palau is made by a Jesuit expedition led by Francisco Padilla; unfortunately, the ship is driven to Mindanao by a storm, leaving two priests stranded.
  • December 8War of the Spanish SuccessionBattle of Brihuega: An outnumbered British force under James Stanhope is forced to surrender.
  • December 10War of the Spanish SuccessionBattle of Villaviciosa: The indecisive battle between retreating Austrian-Dutch forces and a Franco-Spanish army is fought out.
  • December 10 – The Battle of Lohgarh takes place between Sikh forces and the Mughal army.

Date unknown[]

  • In Sweden, the Royal Society of Sciences in Uppsala is founded as the Collegium curiosorum.
  • Explorer Juan Arias Diaz becomes the first non-Incan visitor to Choquequirao, an Inca site in Peru.
  • John Smithwick begins brewing Smithwick's ale at Kilkenny, Ireland (St. Francis Abbey Brewery).[5]
  • Alexis Littré, in his treatise Diverses observations anatomiques,[6] is the first physician to suggest the possibility of performing a lumbar colostomy for an obstruction of the colon.
  • Beijing becomes the largest city of the world, taking the lead from Istanbul.[7]
  • Jacob Christoph Le Blon, working in Amsterdam, invents a three-color printing process with red, blue, and yellow plates, a precursor of the modern CMYK printing process.

1711

January–March[]

  • JanuaryCary's Rebellion: The Lords Proprietor appoint Edward Hyde to replace Thomas Cary, as the governor of the North Carolina portion of the Province of Carolina. Hyde's policies are deemed hostile to Quaker interests, leading former governor Cary and his Quaker allies to take up arms against the province.
  • January 24 – The first performance of Francesco Gasparini's most famous opera Tamerlano takes place at the Teatro San Cassiano in Venice.
  • February – French settlers at Fort Louis de la Mobile celebrate Mardi Gras in Mobile (Alabama), by parading a large papier-mache ox head on a cart (the first Mardi Gras parade in America).
  • February 3 – A total lunar eclipse occurs, at 12:31 UT.
  • February 24
    • Thomas Cary, after declaring himself Governor of North Carolina, sails an armed brigantine up the Chowan River, to attack Governor Hyde's forces fortified at Colonel Thomas Pollock's plantation. The attack fails, and Cary's forces retreat.
    • Rinaldo by George Frideric Handel, the first Italian opera written for the London stage, premieres at the Queen's Theatre, Haymarket..[8]
  • March 1The Spectator is founded by Joseph Addison and Richard Steele in London.[9]

April–June[]

  • April 3Clipperton Island is rediscovered by Frenchmen Martin de Chassiron and Michel Du Bocage, who draw up the first map and claim the island for France. The island had been discovered by Alvaro Saavedra Cedrón in 1528.
  • April 5 (Easter Sunday) – The central tower of Elgin Cathedral in northeast Scotland collapses.[10]
  • April 13 – The Treaty of the Lutsk, a secret agreement between the Tsardom of Russia and the Ottoman Protectorate of Moldavia is signed in Lutsk, Poland-Lithuania (modern-day Ukraine).
  • April 17Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor dies, opening the way for the succession of his brother Charles VI. This complicates the ongoing War of the Spanish Succession as Charles is one of the two candidates for the Spanish throne, backed by the Grand Alliance.
  • April 29 – A rabid wolf fatally injures two shepherds in Roncà, North Italy; it also attacks livestock.
  • May – Alexander Pope publishes the poem An Essay on Criticism in London.
  • May 25 – In Denmark, Helsingør is put under military blockade to prevent an outbreak of plague from spreading to Copenhagen; this year about one third of Helsingør's population is killed by the disease.[11]
  • June 18King Louis XIV becomes the longest-reigning monarch in the world, surpassing the almost 68-year-old record set by Kʼinich Janaabʼ Pakal in 683. As of 2020, Louis XIV still holds this record.

July–September[]

  • July 2Cary's Rebellion: Lieutenant Governor Alexander Spotswood of Virginia dispatches a company of Royal Marines to assist Governor Hyde. After hearing of this, Cary's troops abandon all of their fortifications along the Pamlico River. Cary and many of his supporters are soon caught and sent to England as prisoners, ending Cary's Rebellion.[12]
  • July 11 – The town of São Paulo, Brazil, is elevated to city status.
  • July 21 – The Treaty of the Pruth is signed between the Ottoman Empire and Russia, ending the Pruth River Campaign.[13]
  • July 29 – Total lunar eclipse at 17:50 UT.
  • August 1 – The Dutch East India Company trading ship Zuytdorp leaves the Netherlands on an ill-fated voyage to Indonesia bearing a load of freshly minted silver coins. The wreck site remains unknown until the mid-20th century, on a remote part of the Western Australian coast between Kalbarri and Shark Bay.
  • August 7Capture of the galleon San Joaquin: Spanish galleon San Joaquin in a treasure fleet sailing from Cartagena de Indias (modern-day Colombia) to Spain surrenders after an engagement with five British ships.
  • August 9John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough with an army of 30,000 besieges Bouchain in the War of the Spanish Succession. The siege lasts 34 days and results in the last major victory for Churchill.
  • August 11 – The first horse race is held at the newly founded Ascot Racecourse, which becomes one of the leading racecourses in England.
  • August 13 – Tamachi Raisinhji becomes Jam Sahib (ruling prince) of Nawanagar State in Gujarat, India.
  • August 14 – The inauguration of the newly built Cathedral of the Assumption takes place in Gozo, Malta.
  • August 22 – The Quebec Expedition, a British attempt to attack Quebec as part of Queen Anne's War, fails when 8 of its ships are wrecked in the Saint Lawrence River and 890 people, mostly soldiers, drown.
  • September 8 – The South Sea Company receives a Royal Charter in Britain.[14]
  • September 10 (also dated September 12) – John Lawson, Christoph von Graffenried, two African American slaves and two Native Americans leave on an exploration expedition from New Bern, North Carolina, and travel north by canoe up the Neuse River.
  • September 14 (approximate date) – Tuscarora natives capture John Lawson, Christoph von Graffenried and their expeditionary party, and bring them to Catechna.
  • September 16 (approximate date) – Tuscarora natives kill Lawson. von Graffenried and one African American slave are known to have been set free.
  • September 18 – Bishop Bogusław Gosiewski sells the town of Maladzyechna in the Minsk Region of Belarus to the mighty Ogiński family.
  • September 22 – The Tuscarora War begins when Tuscarora natives under the command of Chief Hancock raid settlements along the south bank of the Pamlico River, within the Province of Carolina (modern-day North Carolina), killing around 130 people.

October–December[]

  • October 7HMS Feversham is wrecked on Scaterie Island, Nova Scotia with the loss of 102 lives.
  • October 11 – 245 people are killed in a crush on the  [fr] in Lyon, France, caused when a large crowd returning from a festival on the other side of the Rhône become trapped against an obstruction in the middle of the bridge caused by a collision between a carriage and a cart.
  • October 14
    • Yostos kills Tewoflos, becoming Emperor of Ethiopia.
    • Woodes Rogers returns to England after a successful round-the-world privateering cruise against Spain, carrying loot worth £150,000.
  • October 16Académie Royale des Beaux-Arts is established in Brussels.
  • November 5 – The southwest spire of Southwell Minster in Nottinghamshire, England is struck by lightning, resulting in a fire that spreads to the nave and tower, destroying roofs, bells, clock and organ.
  • November 7 – The Dutch East India Company ship Liefde runs aground and sinks off Out Skerries, Shetland, with the loss of all but one of her 300 crew.
  • December 5Great Northern War: the Battle of Wismar results in a Danish victory over Swedish forces.
  • December 7 – In the Parliament of Great Britain the Earl of Nottingham successfully proposes a "No Peace Without Spain" amendment.
  • December 8 – The Immaculate Conception Cathedral, Comayagua in Honduras, one of the oldest cathedrals in Central America, is inaugurated.
  • December 12 – A constitution is approved for the Academy of Sciences of the Institute of Bologna, which had been founded in 1690.
  • December 13Wall Street in New York City becomes the city's first official slave market for the sale and rental of enslaved Africans and Indians.
  • December 15 – The Old Pummerin, a massive bell cast from 208 captured cannons, is consecrated by Bishop Franz Ferdinand Freiherr von Rummel in preparation for its installation in St. Stephen's Cathedral, Vienna (the Stephansdom).
  • December 25 – The rebuilding of St Paul's Cathedral in London to a design by Sir Christopher Wren is declared complete by Parliament; Old St Paul's had been destroyed by the 1666 Great Fire of London.

Date unknown[]

  • John Shore invents the tuning fork.
  • Luigi Ferdinando Marsili shows that coral is an animal rather than a plant as previously thought.

1712

January–March[]

  • January 8 – Total eclipse of the sun visible from 60°36′S 49°12′E / 60.6°S 49.2°E / -60.6; 49.2
  • January 12 – The premiere of the opera Idoménée by André Campra takes place at the Théâtre du Palais-Royal in Paris.
  • January 16 – A military engineering school is established in Moscow which is to become the A.F. Mozhaysky Military-Space Academy.
  • January 26 – The Old Pummerin, a 18,161 kg bell newly installed in the Stephansdom, St. Stephen's Cathedral, in Vienna, is rung for the first time to mark the entry of Charles VI to Vienna from Frankfurt after his coronation as Emperor. It takes a quarter-hour for 16 men pulling on the bell rope to swing the heavy bell back-and-forth enough for the clapper to strike; the resulting forces endanger the tower so the architect orders that in future the bell be rung only by pulling its clapper.
  • February 10Huilliche uprising of 1712: Huilliche people in Chile's Chiloé Archipelago rise up against Spanish encomenderos as vengeance for perceived injustices.
  • "February 30" – Sweden temporarily adjusts the Swedish Calendar back to the Julian calendar.
  • Early March – Start of the Cassard expedition, a sea voyage by French Navy captain Jacques Cassard during which he ransacks Santiago in the Cape Verde Islands and pillages Montserrat, Antigua, Surinam, Berbice, Essequibo, St. Eustatius and Curaçao, returning to France with loot worth over nine million francs.
  • March 3Scottish Episcopalians Act 1711 comes into effect, leading to incorporation of the Scottish Episcopal Church.
  • March 12 (February 30 Swedish Style, March 1 on the Julian calendar) – Sweden temporarily adopts the rare February 30, as a day to adjust the Swedish Calendar back to the Julian calendar.
  • March 15HMS Dragon, a 38-gun fourth rate frigate of the Royal Navy, is wrecked on Les Casquets, rocks to the west of Alderney.[15]
  • March 30Anne, Queen of Great Britain administers the Royal touch (a ritual with the intent to cure illness) for the last time; 300 scrofulous people are touched, the last of whom is Samuel Johnson.

April –June[]

  • April 67New York City's Slave Insurrection results in nine whites being killed, and 21 slaves and other blacks being convicted and executed.
  • April 11Great Northern War: the Battle of Fladstrand takes place at sea near Fladstrand, Jylland, between Swedish and Danish forces.
  • May 15Curuguaty in Paraguay is founded by Juan Gregorio de Bazán y Pedraza on the banks of the Curuguaty River.
  • May 19Peter the Great moves the capital of Russia from Moscow to Saint Petersburg.[16]
  • May 22Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor is crowned King of Hungary.
  • June 5Reus in Catalonia, Spain is given the title of imperial city by Elisabeth Christine, wife of Archduke Charles.
  • June 10Kurtkulağı Caravanserai in Adana Province, Turkey, is restored and 50 soldiers are appointed to guard it.
  • June 11Chatham, Barnstable County, Massachusetts is incorporated as a town.
  • June 17 – The newly built St Ann's Church, Manchester is consecrated by the Bishop of Chester.

July–September[]

  • July 8 – The Royal Navy 50-gun ship HMS Advice is launched at Deptford Dockyard.
  • July 20Jesus College, Oxford, inherits the extensive library of its Principal Jonathan Edwards on his death.
  • July 24
    • The French defeat a combined Dutch-Austrian force in the Battle of Denain.
    • The Reformed cantons of Switzerland defeat the Catholic cantons in the Battle of Villmergen.
  • July 31Great Northern War: a battle takes place in the Baltic Sea southeast of Rügen between Denmark and Sweden with inconclusive outcome.
  • August 1 – The Stamp Act of 1712 is passed in the United Kingdom, imposing a tax on publishers, particularly of newspapers.
  • August 11 – The Peace of Aarau is signed by Catholics and Protestants, ending the Toggenburg War and establishing Protestant dominance in Switzerland, while preserving the rights of Catholics.
  • August 17Great Northern War: a battle takes place in the Baltic Sea south of Rügen, resulting in a victory for Denmark over Sweden.
  • August 23 – The Royal Navy 60-gun ship HMS Rippon is launched at Deptford Dockyard.
  • September – Composer George Frideric Handel re-locates to London with the permission of his patron, the future King George I of Great Britain.[17]
  • September 8 – A severe hurricane buffets Bermuda for eight hours, destroying most of the churches.

October–December[]

  • October 3 – In Scotland a warrant is issued for the arrest of outlaw Rob Roy MacGregor by Sir James Stewart (Lord Advocate).[18]
  • October 31 – King Philip V of Spain establishes the Biblioteca Nacional de España as the Palace Public Library (Biblioteca Pública de Palacio) in Madrid.
  • November 4 – The Bandbox Plot aims to kill British Lord Treasurer Robert Harley, Earl of Oxford but is foiled by Jonathan Swift (author of “Gulliver’s Travels”).
  • November 22 – The first performance of George Frideric Handel's opera Il pastor fido takes place at the Queen's Theatre in the Haymarket, London.
  • December 7 – The charter of Buchach Monastery in Ukraine, founded by Stefan Aleksander Potocki and his wife Joanna née Sieniawska, is signed in Lublin.
  • December 9 – Sweden defeats Denmark and Saxony in the Battle of Gadebusch.
  • December 20Great Northern War: the Battle of Gadebusch is Sweden's final great victory in the war, preventing the loss of the city of Stralsund to Danish and Saxon forces.
  • December 27 – The premiere of the opera Callirhoé by André Cardinal Destouches takes place at the Théâtre du Palais-Royal in Paris.
  • December 28 – Total eclipse of the sun visible from 21°30′S 159°00′E / 21.5°S 159.0°E / -21.5; 159.0

Date unknown[]

  • The first known working Newcomen steam engine is built by Thomas Newcomen with John Calley, to pump water out of mines in the Black Country of England, the first device to make practical use of the power of steam to produce mechanical work.[19]
  • After many years of settlement, the Town on Queen Anne's Creek is established as a courthouse for Chowan County, North Carolina. The town is renamed Edenton in 1720, and incorporated in 1722.
  • The VOC Zuytdorp is wrecked off the coast of Western Australia.
  • John Arbuthnot creates the character of John Bull to represent Britain.
  • A translation of the 1662 Book of Common Prayer into Irish, made by John Richardson (1664–1747), is published.[20]

1713

January–March[]

  • January 17Tuscarora War: Colonel James Moore leads the Carolina militia out of Albemarle County, North Carolina, in a second offensive against the Tuscarora. Heavy snows force the troops to take refuge in Fort Reading, on the Pamlico River.
  • February 1Skirmish at Bender, Moldova: Charles XII of Sweden is defeated by the Ottoman Empire.
  • February 4 – Tuscarora War: The Carolina militia under Colonel James Moore leaves Fort Reading, to continue the campaign against the Tuscarora.
  • February 25Frederick William I of Prussia begins his reign.
  • March 1 – Tuscarora War: Colonel James Moore's Carolina militia lays siege to the Tuscaroran stronghold of Fort Neoheroka, located a few miles up Contentnea Creek from Fort Hancock.
  • March 20 – Tuscarora War: Colonel James Moore's Carolina militia launches a major offensive against Fort Neoheroka.
  • March 23 – Tuscarora War: Fort Neoheroka falls to the Carolina militia, effectively ending the Tuscarora nation's military strength. Two Tuscaroran allies, the Machapunga and Coree tribes, continue offensive actions against North Carolina.
  • March 27First Treaty of Utrecht between Great Britain and Spain: Philip V is accepted by Britain and Austria as king of Spain; Spain cedes Gibraltar and Menorca to Britain.[8][21]

April–June[]

  • April 11 – The Second Treaty of Utrecht between Great Britain and France ends the War of the Spanish Succession.[22] France cedes Newfoundland, Acadia, Hudson Bay and St Kitts to Great Britain.[8]
  • April 14 – First performance, in London, of Joseph Addison's libertarian play Cato, a Tragedy, which will be influential on both sides of the Atlantic.[23]
  • April 19 – With no living male heirs, Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, issues the Pragmatic Sanction of 1713, to ensure one of his daughters will inherit the Habsburg lands.
  • May 2 – In the Great Northern War, a fleet of the Russian Navy, transporting 12,000 soldiers, sails from Kronstadt to attack the Swedish Army at Helsinki.
  • May 6 – The Parliament of Ireland is dissolved by Queen Anne and new elections are set.
  • May 13 – King Philip V of Spain issues an auto accordado that changes the order of succession for the Spanish throne allowing a female descendant within the House of Bourbon to rule. The change will allow his great-great-granddaughter to ascend the throne in 1833 as Queen Isabella II.
  • May 17Ottone in villa, the first opera by composer Antonio Vivaldi, is given its initial performance, debuting at the Teatro delle Grazie in Vicenza
  • May 21Great Northern War: The Russian fleet lands a force of 10,000 men at Pernå on the southern coast of Finland.
  • June 1 (approx.) – Tuscarora War: Colonel James Moore leads the Carolina militia into the Pamlico Peninsula to defeat the Machapunga and Coree tribes.
  • June 23 – French residents of Acadia are given one year to declare allegiance to Great Britain, or leave Nova Scotia.

July–September[]

  • July 13 – The Treaty of Portsmouth brings an end to Queen Anne's War.
  • August 8 – The Parliament of Great Britain, third since the Act of Union, is dissolved
  • August 22 – Voting begins in the 1713 British general election in various constituencies and continues to November 12
  • September 1 – Tuscarora War: The Carolina militia, led by Colonel James Moore, returns to South Carolina, after mixed success in the campaign against the Machapunga and Coree tribes.

1714

January–March[]

  • January 21 – After being tricked into deserting a battle against India's Mughal Empire by the rebel Sayyid brothers, Prince Azz-ud-din Mirza is blinded permanently on orders of the Emperor Farrukhsiyar as punishment.
  • February 7 – The Siege of Tönning (a fortress of the Swedish Empire and now located in Germany in the state of Schleswig-Holstein) ends after almost a year, as Danish forces force the surrender of the remaining 1,600 defenders. The fortress is then leveled by the Danes.
  • February 28 – (February 17 old style) Russia's Tsar Peter the Great issues a decree requiring compulsory education in mathematics for children of government officials and nobility, applying to children between the ages of 10 and 15 years old. [24]
  • March 2 – (February 19 old style) The Battle of Storkyro is fought between troops of the Swedish Empire and the Russian Empire, near what is now the village of Napue in Finland. The outnumbered Swedish forces, under the command of General Carl Gustaf Armfeldt, suffer 1,600 troops killed in action while the Russians led by General Mikhail Golitsyn lose 400 men.
  • March 7 – The Treaty of Rastatt is signed between Austria and France, concluding the War of the Spanish Succession between them. Austria receives the Spanish territories in Italy (the Kingdom of Naples, Duchy of Milan and Kingdom of Sardinia), as well as the Southern Netherlands; and from France, Freiburg and Landau. The Austrian Habsburg Empire reaches its largest territorial extent yet, with Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor succeeding Philip V of Spain, as ruler in the ceded territories.

April–June[]

  • April 11 – France signs five separate treaties— with Great Britain, the Netherlands, Portugal, Prussia and Savoy— to end hostilities in the War of the Spanish Succession following the negotiations of the Peace of Utrecht.
  • April 12 – Italian Jesuit missionary Niccolò Gianpriamo is dispatched from Portugal on an evangelical trip to Asia starting with the Portuguese Indian colony of Goa, where he arrives after five months.
  • May 19Anne, Queen of Great Britain, refuses to allow members of the House of Hanover to settle in Britain during her lifetime.[25]
  • June 3 – The city of Kassel in Germany inaugurates the summer tradition of the "water stairs" or "great cascades" (Grossen Kaskaden) emptying from the base of the Hercules monument down to the Wilhelmshöhe castle.
  • June 20 – In France, Henri-Charles du Cambout de Coislin, the Roman Catholic Bishop of Metz, condemns the papal bull Unigenitus, issued by Pope Clement XI against the 1671 commentary by Pasquier Quesnel of the four Gospels and inflaming the Jansenist controversy.
  • June 26 – Spain and the Netherlands sign a peace treaty to end hostilities between those two nations in the War of the Spanish Succession.

July–September[]

  • July 8Longitude prize: The Parliament of Great Britain votes "to offer a reward for such person or persons as shall discover the Longitude" (£10,000 for any method capable of determining a ship's longitude within 1 degree; £15,000, within 40 minutes, and £20,000 within ½ a degree).[26]
  • July 27 – The Imperial Russian Navy gains its first important victory against the Swedish Navy in the Battle of Gangut.
  • August 1Georg Ludwig von Braunschweig-Lüneburg, Elector of Hanover, becomes King George I of Great Britain and Ireland, on the death of Queen Anne. Anne's death brings an end to the reign of the House of Stuart, in that her half-brother James Francis Edward Stuart, the eldest son of James II of England, has been ineligible for the British throne based on the Act of Settlement 1701 had barred members of the Roman Catholic church from becoming monarchs. George of Hanover, as great-grandson of James I of England and a second cousin to Anne, is deemed the eldest living Protestant descendant of James I.
  • September 11War of the Spanish Succession: Barcelona is taken after a year's siege, and Catalonia surrenders to Spanish and French Bourbon armies.
  • September 18George I, the new King of Great Britain and Ireland, arrives in Britain for the first time in his life, after having departed Hannover and sailing from the Netherlands.[27]
  • September 29The Great Hatred: the Cossacks of the Russian Empire kill about 800 people overnight on the Finnish island of Hailuoto.[28]

October–December[]

  • October 20 – The coronation of George I of the United Kingdom takes place in Westminster Abbey, a little less than three months after George became the new British monarch. [27]
  • October 24 – Four Dutch investors, led by brothers Nicolaas and Hendrik van Hoorn, purchase the South American colony of Berbice from French mercenary Jacques Cassard, who had captured the colony from the Van Peere family.[29] A century later, in 1815, the land is ceded to Great Britain and later merged with neighboring colonies to form what is now Guyana.
  • November 30 – King Philip V of Spain issues a decree reorganizing the Spanish government to create four ministries, with the Secretary of State being the chief minister, predecessor to the office of Prime Minister of Spain. José de Grimaldo becomes the first person to have the chief ministry.
  • December 9Ottoman–Venetian War (1714–1718): The Ottoman Empire declares war on the Republic of Venice.

Date unknown[]

  • Archbishop Tenison's School, the world's earliest surviving mixed gender school, is established by Thomas Tenison, Archbishop of Canterbury, in Croydon, south of London, England.
  • Louis Juchereau de St. Denis establishes Fort St. Jean Baptiste, at the site of present day Natchitoches, Louisiana (the first permanent European settlement in the Louisiana Territory, after Biloxi (1699) and Mobile, Alabama (1702) were separated).
  • Worcester College, University of Oxford is founded (formerly Gloucester College, closed during the Dissolution of the Monasteries).
  • Stockholm County is founded.
  • The river Kander (Switzerland) is redirected into Lake Thun.

1715

For dates within Great Britain and the British Empire, as well as in the Russian Empire, the "old style" Julian calendar was used in 1715, and can be converted to the "new style" Gregorian calendar (adopted in the British Empire in 1752 and in Russia in 1923) by adding 11 days.

January–March[]

  • January 13 – A fire in London, described by some as the worst since the 1666 blaze almost 50 years earlier, starts on Thames Street when fireworks prematurely explode "in the house of Mr. Walker, an oil man"; more than 100 houses are consumed in the blaze, which continues over to Tower Street before it is controlled.[30]
  • January 22Voting begins for the British House of Commons and continues for the next 46 days in different constituencies on different days.
  • February 11Tuscarora War: The Tuscarora and their allies sign a peace treaty with the Province of North Carolina, and agree to move to a reservation near Lake Mattamuskeet, effectively ending the Tuscarora War. Large numbers of Tuscarora subsequently move to New York.
  • March 9Voting for the British House of Commons concludes, with the liberal Whig Party winning 341 of the 558 seats, and reducing the conservative Tory Party share to 217 seats. Spencer Compton, the Earl of Wilmington, becomes the Speaker of the House of Commons.
  • March 14James Stuart, the "Old Pretender" attempting to restore the House of Stuart to control of Great Britain as King James III of England and James VIII of Scotland, meets with Pope Clement XI for the assistance of the Roman Catholic Church in the Jacobite rising.
  • March 27Henry St John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke, flees from Great Britain to France. His part in secret negotiations with France, leading to the Treaty of Utrecht, has cast suspicion on him in the eyes of the Whig government of Britain. He becomes secretary of state to the Pretender, James Edward Stuart.[31]

April–June[]

  • April 1 – The Battle of Gurdas Nangal begins during the Mughal-Sikh Wars in India, as the Mughal Army begins an eight-month siege of a fortress near Gurdaspur (in what is now the Punjab state), where Sikh General Banda Singh Bahadur and 1,250 of his men have fled. The siege ends on December 7 when the 750 survivors, including Banda Singh, are captured. By June of 1716, most of the Sikh prisoners have been tortured, killed and executed, with Banda Singh dying on June 9.
  • April 15 – In the British colonial Province of South Carolina, the Yamasee Confederation launches an attack on English settlements in disputed territory on Good Friday, launching the two-year long Yamasee War. The day before, agents Thomas Nairne, William Bray and Samuel Warner had participated in peace negotiations with the Yamasee at Pocotaligo. [32] Bray and Warner are killed that day, while Nairne is tortured to death and dies on April 17.
  • April 24 – The Battle of Fehmarn takes place in the Baltic Sea as part of the Great Northern War. Ten warships of Denmark, under the command of Christian Gabel, overwhelm a force of Swedish Navy ships led by Carl Wachtmeister. By the time the battle ends the next day, five Swedish ships and 1,626 crewmen have been captured, and another 353 killed. The Danish navy suffers 65 deaths. Lars Ericson Wolke, Sjöslag och rysshärjningar (Naval Battles and Russian Ravages) (Norstedts, 2011) p. 142.
  • May 3 – A total solar eclipse is seen across southern England, Sweden and Finland (the last total eclipse visible in London for almost 900 years). English astronomer Edmond Halley (who is using the old style Julian calendar date of April 22) records the first observation noted of the phenomenon of "Baily's beads", in which higher elevations on the moon can be observed obscuring portions of the light moments before and after totality.
  • May 28Rioting begins in England on the birthday of King George I as supporters of the Old Pretender, James of the House of Stuart, begin mass protesting against the rule of the House of Hanover, near London in the towns of Smithfield and Highgate, and the Cheapside financial district in London.
  • June 9King Philip, ruler of the Kingdom of Castile and the Kingdom of Aragon unifies the two governments into a single state, centralizing rule of a unified Kingdom of Spain.
  • June 22 – Tsar Peter I of Russia witnesses the attempt of 45 Dutch and English ships to enter the small harbor at Saint Petersburg and decides that additional harbors are necessary for Russia to be able import Western goods.
  • June 29 – Britain's Treason Act 1714 takes effect, providing for forfeiture to the British Crown of property owned by any person convicted of treason in the Kingdom. The Act remains in effect until June 24, 1718.

July–September[]

  • July 20Ottoman–Venetian War (1714–18): The fall of Nauplion, the capital of the Venetian "Kingdom of the Morea", seals the fate of the Peloponnese Peninsula, which is soon completely retaken by the Ottomans.
  • July 241715 Treasure Fleet: A Spanish treasure fleet of 12 ships, under General Don Juan Ubilla, leaves Havana, Cuba for Spain. Seven days later, 11 of them sink in a storm off the coast of Florida (some centuries later, treasure salvage is found from these wrecks).
  • August 31Old Dock, Liverpool, England, the world's first enclosed commercial wet dock (Thomas Steers, engineer), opens.[33][34]
  • September 1 – King Louis XIV of France dies after a reign of 72 years, leaving his throne to his 5 year old great-grandson Louis XV. Philippe d'Orléans, the nephew of Louis XIV, serves as Regent.
  • September 6 – The first major Jacobite rising in Scotland against the rule of King George I of Great Britain breaks out. The Earl of Mar raises the standard of James Edward Stuart, and marches on Edinburgh. James, the son of the deposed King James VII, arrives from France.
  • September 14 – Less than two weeks after King Louis XIV Daniel Voysin de la Noiraye, France's Secretary of State for War for since 1709, steps down at the request of the new regent, the Duke of Orleans

October–December[]

  • October 2 – During the rebellion in Great Britain by supporters of the Pretender to the Throne, James Stuart, the Jacobites raid the Scottish parish of Burntisland, capture an arsenal of weapons, and begin an occupation of the area on October 9 in the name of Stuart as King James VIII of Scotland.
  • October 11William Aislabie resigns as the British East India Company's administrator of Bombay and the company's territories and is replaced at year's end by Charles Boone.
  • October 12
    • William Mackintosh of Borlum, leader of the Jacobite rising against Great Britain, lands with 1,500 men in Scotland after crossing the Firth of Forth from France.
    • Baron Onslow resigns as Great Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer and is replaced by future Prime Minister Robert Walpole.
  • October 28 – The Treaty of Greifswald is signed between Russia and the Electorate of Hanover, with George I of Great Britain and Hanover agreeing to Russia's annexation of Swedish Ingria and Estonia, and Hanover claiming the Bremen-Verden Swedish duchies of Bremen and Verden.
  • November 13Jacobite rising in Scotland – Battle of Sheriffmuir: The forces of the Kingdom of Great Britain, led by John Campbell, 2nd Duke of Argyll, halt the Jacobite advance, although the action is inconclusive.[35]
  • November 14Battle of Preston: Government forces defeat the Jacobite incursion, at the conclusion of a five-day siege and action.
  • November 15 – The Third Barrier Treaty is signed by Britain, the Holy Roman Empire and the Dutch Republic.[36]
  • November 28 – The application of the Nueva Planta decrees, in Majorca and the other Balearic Islands (formerly under the Crown of Aragon), bring them under the laws of the Crown of Castile.
  • December 22James Edward Stuart rejoins Jacobite rebels in Scotland,[31] but fails to rouse his army.
  • December 24 – Swedish troops occupy Norway.

Date unknown[]

  • Karlsruhe Palace is built, resulting in the town of Karlsruhe growing up around it.
  • The ancient right to evaluate royal decrees publicly, before they are given the force of law by the Parliament of Paris, is restored.
  • Filippo Juvarra starts working on the previously postponed construction of the church of Santa Christina in Turin.
  • Filippo Juvarra starts rebuilding the church of San Filippo Neri, Turin, in which the roof had collapsed, during the siege of Turin, during the War of the Spanish Succession.
  • Coffee is first grown in the French colony of Saint-Domingue.[37]
  • Around this year, a breech loading firearm is made for Philip V of Spain.

1716

January–March[]

  • January 16 – The application of the Nueva Planta decrees to Catalonia make it subject to the laws of the Crown of Castile, and abolishes the Principality of Catalonia as a political entity, concluding the unification of Spain under Philip V.[38]
  • January 27 – The Tugaloo massacre changes the course of the Yamasee War, allying the Cherokee nation with the British province of South Carolina against the Creek Indian nation. [39]
  • January 28 – The town of Crieff, Scotland, is burned to the ground by Jacobites returning from the Battle of Sheriffmuir. [40] [41]
  • February 3 – The 1716 Algiers earthquake sequence began with an Mw  7.0 mainshock that caused severe damage and killed 20,000 in Algeria.[42]
  • February 10James Edward Stuart flees from Scotland to France with a handful of supporters, following the failure of the Jacobite rising of 1715.
  • February 24 – Jacobite leaders James Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Derwentwater and William Gordon, 6th Viscount of Kenmure are executed in London.[43]
  • March 8 – King Charles XII of Sweden leads an invasion of Norway, crossing the border at Basmo near the modern-day town of Marker
  • March 10Simon Fraser, a former Scottish rebel who had helped end the Siege of Inverness during the first Jacobite rising, is given a pardon by King George I of Great Britain. [44]
  • March 18 – Italian Jesuit missionary Ippolito Desideri arrives in Lhasa to become one of the first Europeans to attempt to bring Christianity to Buddhist Tibet. [45]
  • March 23Jeremias III becomes the new Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, leader of the Eastern Orthodox Christian Church.

April–June[]

  • April 13Austria, ruled by King Charles VI, renews its alliance with the Republic of Venice, leading the Ottoman Empire, ruled by Ahmed III, to declare war.
  • May 20John Law founds the Banque Générale Privée in Paris.[46]
  • May 26 – Two regular companies of field artillery, each 100 men strong, are raised at Woolwich, by Royal Warrant of King George I of Great Britain.
  • May 28John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough, suffers a paralytic stroke.
  • June 9 – In India, 600 imprisoned members of the failed Sikh Khalsa rebellion against the Mughal Empire are executed on orders of the Emperor Farrukhsiyar.[47] Banda Singh Bahadur, leader of the rebellion, is brutally tortured and mutilated before being killed.[48]
  • June 19 – The new Tokugawa Shogun of Japan, Tokugawa Yoshimune, assumes control of the monarchy's military after the illness and death of the six-year-old Ietsugu, last of the male descendants of Tokugawa Ieyasu.[49] Yoshimune's ascendancy begins Year 1 of the Kyōhō Era, which continues until Year 21 in 1736.
  • June 25 – With the Holy Roman Empire having been ceded the "Southern Netherlands" (now Belgium) from Spain, Prince Eugene of Savoy arrives in Brussels as the first Governor-General of the Austrian Netherlands. Eugene soon returns home and leaves administration of the area to a dictatorial Hercule-Louis Turinetti.[50]

July–September[]

  • July 5 – Prince Ernest Augustus is created Duke of York and Albany, in the peerage of Great Britain.
  • July 8 – The Battle of Dynekilen: The Swedish fleet is defeated by a Danish–Norwegian fleet.
  • July 8August 21Seventh Ottoman–Venetian War: The Ottoman Empire unsuccessfully lays siege to Corfu, the last bastion of the Republic of Venice in the Greek islands.[51]
  • August 3Natchez, one of the oldest towns on the Mississippi River, is founded by French civilians at the site of Fort Rosalie. [52]
  • August 4George Seton, 5th Earl of Winton, under sentence of death for his part in the Jacobite rising of 1715, escapes from the Tower of London and flees into exile on the continent.
  • August 5Battle of Petrovaradin: 83,300 Austrian troops of Prince Eugene of Savoy defeat 150,000 Ottoman Turks under Silahdar Damat Ali Pasha (who is killed).
  • August 24Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor, returns from Italy.
  • September 15"Maria", an African slave of the Dutch West India Company on the Caribbean island of Curaçao, murders the plantation overseer, Christiaan Muller, then leads a rebellion, killing Muller's family and much of the white staff on the company's plantation. The uprising is suppressed after 10 days, and Maria is later executed by burning at the stake on November 9. [53]
  • September 26Alexei Petrovich, Tsarevich of Russia, eldest son of the Tsar Peter the Great and heir to the throne, flees from Saint Petersburg with his mistress, Efrosinya Fedorova, along with her brother and three servants. After spending more than a year in Austria, he returns to Russia where he is arrested and dies in prison in 1718. [54] [55]

October–December[]

  • October 12 – During the war between the Habsburg Empire ruling Austria and the Ottoman Empire ruling Turkey, the six week siege of the fortified city of Temeşvar is surrendered by the Turks to the Austrians. Under a flag of truce, the Turks are permitted to depart but have to leave behind their artillery as they give up their claim to Hungary. Austro-Hungarian rule lasts until World War One, and in 1919, the city of Timișoara becomes part of the Kingdom of Romania.
  • November 1 – Two new laws go into effect in the Highlands of Scotland to prevent a threat to Britain's ruling House of Hanover by the Jacobites who supported the restoration of the House of Stuart. The Disarming Act requires government authorization to carry swords and firearms, and the amendments to the Treason Act 1714 permit trials for treason to take place in any court in England, regardless of where the crime was committed.
  • December 4 – Fifty people are killed, and 150 houses burned, when a fire breaks out in Wapping, London. The blaze comes two days after a fire at the Spring Gardens at St. James's, London, which destroyed the French Chapel there and which was put out by several rescuers, including the future King George II.[56]
  • December 12Charles Townshend, 2nd Viscount Townshend, is demoted from his office as Secretary of State for the Northern Department in the British government, and replaced by James Stanhope, 1st Earl Stanhope.

Date unknown[]

  • English pirate Edward Teach (Blackbeard) is given command of a sloop in the Bahamas.[57]
  • Tsar Peter the Great of Russia studies with the physician Herman Boerhaave, at Leiden University.
  • The Kangxi Dictionary is published, laying the foundation of most references to Han characters studied today.

1717

January–March[]

  • January 1 – Count Carl Gyllenborg, the Swedish ambassador to the Kingdom of Great Britain, is arrested in London, over a plot to assist the Pretender to the British throne, James Francis Edward Stuart.[58]
  • January 4 (December 24, 1716 Old Style) – Great Britain, France and the Dutch Republic sign the Triple Alliance,[58] in an attempt to maintain the Treaty of Utrecht (1713), Britain having signed a preliminary alliance with France on November 28 (November 17, 1716).
  • February 1 – The Silent Sejm, in the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, marks the beginning of the Russian Empire's increasing influence and control over the Commonwealth.
  • February 6 – Following the treaty between France and Britain, the Pretender James Stuart leaves France, and seeks refuge with Pope Clement XI.[59][58]
  • February 26March 6 – What is now the northeastern United States is paralyzed by a series of blizzards that bury the region.
  • March 2 – Dancer John Weaver performs in the first ballet in Britain, shown at the Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, The Loves of Mars and Venus.
  • March 31Benjamin Hoadly, Bishop of Bangor, brings the Bangorian Controversy within the Church of England into the open by delivering a sermon to, and supposedly at the request of, King George I of Great Britain, on The Nature of the Kingdom of Christ with the text "My kingdom is not of this world" (John 18:36), concluding there is no Biblical justification for church government.[60]

April–June[]

  • April 26 – The Whydah Gally, flagship of "Black Sam" Bellamy, is wrecked in a storm off Wellfleet, Massachusetts. The Whydah sinks with a reputed 4+12 tons of treasure on board, and all but two of her crew are lost, including Bellamy.
  • May 27Spain unites its South American colonies, as the Viceroyalty of New Granada.
  • June 24 – The Premier Grand Lodge of England, the Modern and first Free-Masonic Grand Lodge (which merges with the Ancient Grand Lodge of England in 1813 to form the United Grand Lodge of England), is founded in London.

July–September[]

  • July 17Water Music by George Frederick Handel is first performed, on a Thames barge in London,
  • August 17 – The month-long Siege of Belgrade ends, with Prince Eugene of Savoy's Austrian troops capturing the city from the Ottoman Empire.
  • August 22 – Spanish troops arrive on the island of Sardinia, now a province of Italy but at the time a part of the Holy Roman Empire beginning the conquest of the island, completed by October 30.
  • September 5 – King George I of Great Britain issues the "Proclamation for Suppressing of Pirates in the West Indies", an offer of amnesty to pirates, declaring that any pirates who surrender themselves to the government of Britain or one of its overseas territories, on or before September 5, 1718, "shall have Our Gracious Pardon of and for his or their Piracy or Piracies" committed before January 5, 1718. The amnesty is later extended to July 1, 1719.[61]
  • September 21 – The first known Druid revival ceremony is held by John Toland at Primrose Hill, in London, at the Autumnal Equinox, to found the Mother Grove, what will later become the Ancient Order of Druids.
  • September 29Guatemala earthquake: A 7.4 magnitude earthquake strikes Antigua Guatemala, destroying much of the city, and making authorities consider moving the capital of Guatemala to a different location.

October–December[]

  • October 9 – King Philip V of Spain orders the closure of all universities in Catalonia, including the historic Estudi General de Lleida.[62]
  • October 16Antonio Vivaldi's opera Tieteberga is performed for the first time, premiering at the Teatro San Moisè in Venice
  • October 18 – Trial begins in Boston for six pirates who had survived the April 26 wreck of Samuel Bellamy's ships Whydah and the Mary Anne. Five of them (John Brown, Hendrick Quintor, Thomas Baker, Peter Cornelius Hoof and John Shuan) are convicted on October 22 of piracy and robbery and hanged on November 15.[63]
  • October 30 – The Spanish conquest of Sardinia, at the time part of the Holy Roman Empire is finished two months after Spanish forces had landed on the island on August 22, as the last Sardinian outpost, Castelsardo, surrenders.[64]
  • November 28 – Pirates led by Edward Teach, more popularly referred to as "Blackbeard", and Benjamin Hornigold capture the French slave transport Concorde near island of Saint Vincent the West Indies.[65] Blackbeard renames the vessel Queen Anne's Revenge, adds to its armaments, and makes it his flagship.[66] Hornigold soon accepts a British amnesty for all pirates, and Blackbeard teams up with Stede Bonnet and begins plundering ships approaching North American ports.
  • December 9 (November 29, O.S.) – King George I of Great Britain banishes his son and daughter-in-law, George, Prince of Wales and Caroline of Ansbach, from the royal household after the Prince threatens the King's personal assistant, the Duke of Newcastle, the royal Lord Chamberlain. The altercation takes place at the baptismal ceremony for the Prince's newborn son, George William.
  • December 2425Christmas flood: A disastrous flood hits the North Sea coast, between the Netherlands and Denmark; thousands die or lose their houses.

Date unknown[]

  • 1717 Omani invasion of Bahrain.
  • François-Marie Arouet is sentenced to imprisonment in the Bastille for eleven months, because of a satirical verse against the Régent of France and his infamous daughter Marie Louise Élisabeth d'Orléans, who at the time was hiding an illegitimate pregnancy and soon to give birth;[67] Arouet will emerge with the pseudonym Voltaire, and the completed text of his first play, Œdipe.
  • The Tatar invasions in Transylvania, devastate many towns, including Cavnic, Sighet and Dej.
  • Lady Mary Wortley Montagu, wife of the British ambassador to Istanbul, has her son inoculated.
  • The Casa de Contratación (House of Trade) is set up in Cádiz.
  • Maharaja Pamheiba of Manipur is converted to Hinduism by Shantidas Goswami, and decrees it to be the official religion of his state.
  • Most recent rupture of New Zealand's Alpine Fault, with an earthquake estimated to have had a magnitude between 7.8 and 8.1.
  • The Charleville musket enters service in France.
  • Thomas Fairchild, a nurseryman at Hoxton in the East End of London, becomes the first person to produce a successful scientific plant hybrid, Dianthus Caryophyllus barbatus, known as Fairchild's Mule.[68]
  • Murshid Quli Khan declares himself the first Nawab of the Bengal Subah. The Nawabs of Bengal will effectively function as near-sovereign rulers of Bengal while being nominally loyal to the Mughal Empire.[69]

1718

January – March[]

  • January 7 – In India, Sufi rebel leader Shah Inayat Shaheed from Sindh who had led attacks against the Mughal Empire, is beheaded days after being tricked into meeting with the Mughals to discuss peace. [70]
  • January 17Jeremias III reclaims his role as the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, chief leader within the Eastern Orthodox Church, 16 days after the Metropolitan Cyril IV of Pruoza had engineered an election to become the Patriarch. [71]
  • February 14 – The reign of Victor Amadeus over the principality of Anhalt-Bernburg (now within the state of Saxony-Anhalt in northeastern Germany) ends after 61 years and 7 months. He had ascended the throne on September 22, 1656. He is succeeded by his son Karl Frederick.
  • February 21Manuel II (Mpanzu a Nimi) becomes the new monarch of the Kingdom of Kongo (located in western Africa at present day Angola) when King Pedro IV (Nusamu a Mvemba) dies after a reign of 22 years. Manuel reigns until 1743. [72]
  • March 12Anton Florian becomes the new Prince of Liechtenstein, succeeding Joseph Wenzel
  • March 13Daniel Overbeek becomes the new Dutch Governor of Ceylon (now the nation of Sri Lanka), arriving after a 10-month sea voyage from the Netherlands.
  • March 18Edward Wortley Montagu, the four-year-old son of the British Ambassador to Turkey, becomes the first British person to be innocculated with the smallpox vaccine, administered by Dr. Charles Maitland at the request of Edward's mother, Lady Mary Wortley Montagu. [73]
  • March 20 – The Privy Council of the United Kingdom, at the time the British Government prior to the creation of the officer of Prime Minister, is reorganized, with a reorganized Second Stanhope–Sunderland ministry. Secretary of State for the Northern Department Charles Spencer, 3rd Earl of Sunderland succeeds James Stanhope as the new First Lord of the Treasury, and Stanhope takes Sunderland's job.

April – June[]

  • April 4 – Great Britain, France and the Dutch Republic agree on the phasing out of the authority of the House of Medici over the semi-independent Grand Duchy of Tuscany by declaring that Gian Gastone de' Medici will be the last of the Medici family to rule the Italian duchy and that Spain's House of Borbón will eventually control the Tuscan monarchy. Don Carlos of Spain, the two-year old son of King Philip V, is designated as the eventual heir, despite the objections of the 75-year old Grand Duke, Cosimo III de' Medici. [74]
  • May 1San Antonio is founded by Father Antonio de San Buenaventura y Olivares with the construction of the initial Mission San Antonio de Valero.
  • May 7 – The settlement of New Orleans is founded in New France.[75]
  • May 22 – Sailing the Queen Anne's Revenge English pirate Edward Teach ("Blackbeard") leads 400 sailors in four ships, and blockades the port of Charleston, South Carolina for an entire week, plundering all arriving ships.[76] After their departure, Queen Anne's Revenge and Adventure are both lost at Beaufort Inlet, North Carolina, a week later. Blackbeard allows Stede Bonnet to command the Revenge (which is renamed the Royal James) once again. Bonnet rescues 25 sailors abandoned by Blackbeard on a sandbar and continues his life of piracy.
  • June 3 – Pirates Edward Teach (better known as Blackbeard) and Stede Bonnet accidentally run aground in the ship Queen Anne's Revenge after sailing into Topsail Inlet in the British colony of North Carolina. Learning of the royal pardon available to all pirates who surrender before September 5, Teach negotiates a settlement with Colonial Governor Charles Eden for a pardon for himself, Bonnet and the rest of his crew in return for the Governor receiving some of the pirates' plunder. [77]
  • June 16 – The Treaty of Baden is signed, ending the Toggenburg War.

July–September[]

May 7: New Orleans
  • July 21 – The Treaty of Passarowitz, ending the Austro-Turkish War, is signed.
  • July 25 – At the behest of Tsar Peter the Great, the construction of the Kadriorg Palace, dedicated to his wife Catherine, began in Tallinn.[78]
  • August 11Battle of Cape Passaro: a Spanish fleet is defeated by the British Royal Navy under Admiral George Byng, off Capo Passero, Sicily, a prelude to the War of the Quadruple Alliance.
  • September 10 – In France, Armande Félice de La Porte Mazarin and the Vicomtesse de Polignac, both mistresses of the Duc de Richelieu, fight a duel with pistols at the Bois de Boulogne near Paris. Lady Mazarin, who had initiated the duel, is wounded in the shoulder and both survive. Richelieu, though impressed by the willingness of the ladies to fight over his affections, comments Je ne sacrifierai pas un de mes cheveux, ni à l’une, ni à l’autre ("I will not sacrifice anything, not to one, nor to the other.") [79]
  • September 27 – The Battle of Cape Fear River begins as pirate Stede Bonnet and his crew on the Royal James are confronted in North Carolina by Colonel William Rhett and the ships Henry and Sea Nymph.
  • September – In Tibet, forces of the Tibetan Dzungar Khanate destroys an advancing expedition of the Chinese Imperial Army, under the command of General Erentei, in the Battle of the Salween River.

October –December[]

  • October 3Stede Bonnet and his crew are captured near the mouth of the Cape Fear River and taken to Charleston, South Carolina, where they are tried for piracy. All but four are found guilty and sentenced to death (with 22 hanged on November 8), but Bonnet escapes from prison on October 24.
  • October 31 – The Mughal Emperor of India, Farrukhsiyar, restores the titles and responsibilities of his chief adviser, Mir Jumla III, almost three years after dismissing him.
  • November 11 – Lightning strikes the powder magazine at the Old Fortress, Corfu, causing an explosion that kills a large number of people on the island.
  • November 18Voltaire's first play, Oedipus, premières at the Comédie-Française in Paris. This is his first use of the pseudonym.
  • November 22 – Citing violations of the amnesty agreement with Blackbeard, Virginia Governor Alexander Spotswood sends a Royal Navy contingent to North Carolina, where they battle Blackbeard and his crew in Ocracoke Inlet. Blackbeard is killed in action, after receiving five musketball wounds and twenty sword lacerations.
  • December 5 – Following the death of Charles XII on November 30, his sister Ulrika Eleonora proclaims herself Queen regnant of Sweden, as the news of her brother's death reaches Stockholm.
  • December 10 – Stede Bonnet is hanged at Charleston, after being recaptured.
  • December 17 – The Holy Roman Empire, Kingdom of Great Britain and Dutch Republic join the Kingdom of France in formally declaring war on Spain, launching the War of the Quadruple Alliance.

Date unknown[]

  • Islamization of Sudan: The Funj warrior aristocracy deposes the reigning mek and places one of their own ranks on the throne of Sennar.
  • The white potato reaches New England from England.
  • Coffee is grown in Surinam (Dutch colony).[80]

1719

January–March[]

  • January 8Carolean Death March begins: A catastrophic retreat by a largely-Finnish Swedish-Carolean army under the command of Carl Gustaf Armfeldt across the Tydal mountains in a blizzard kills around 3,700 men and cripples a further 600 for life.[81]
  • January 23 – The Principality of Liechtenstein is created, within the Holy Roman Empire.[82]
  • February 3 (January 23 Old Style) – The Riksdag of the Estates recognizes Ulrika Eleonora's claim to the Swedish throne, after she has agreed to sign a new Swedish constitution. Thus, she is recognized as queen regnant of Sweden.
  • February 20 – The first Treaty of Stockholm is signed.
  • February 28Farrukhsiyar, the Mughal Emperor of India since 1713, is deposed by the Sayyid brothers, who install Rafi ud-Darajat in his place. In prison, Farrukhsiyar is strangled by assassins on April 19.
  • March 17 – The coronation of Ulrika Eleonora as Queen of Sweden takes place in Stockholm.

April–June[]

  • April 4 – The French army under James FitzJames, 1st Duke of Berwick invades the Basque provinces of Spain, with 20,000 troops crossing into Navarre. [83]
  • April 19 – In Louisiana (New France), Jean-Baptiste Le Moyne, Sieur de Bienville's brother Serigny arrives on a French man-of-war, bringing news that war had been declared between France and Spain (from December 1718).
  • April 25Daniel Defoe publishes Robinson Crusoe.
  • April 26 – King Philip V of Spain departs Madrid and leads 15,000 men of the Spanish Army into Navare to fight the French under Berwick. [84]
  • May 14 – In Louisiana (New France), Bienville, from Mobile, captures Pensacola, but Pensacola is later recaptured by the Spanish, and again re-taken by Bienville.[85]
  • June 4Battle of Ösel Island: A Russian naval force defeats the Swedish fleet.
  • June 18 – Captain John Perry fixes Dagenham Breach.
  • June 10Battle of Glen Shiel: British forces defeat the Jacobites and their Spanish allies.
  • June 20Battle of Francavilla: The Austrians are defeated by the Spanish.
  • June 30 – French forces under the Duke of Berwick open the Siege of San Sebastian

July–September[]

  • July 11Russia's Baltic Sea fleet is first spotted from the Swedish coast, starting the Russian Pillage of 1719–21 as part of the Great Northern War.
  • July 16 – The Carlsten fortress in Sweden surrenders to a Danish and Norwegian force after a siege of seven days. Colonel Henrich Danckwardt, who surrendered the fortress to Peter Tordenskjold after being away from it while it was still defensible, is beheaded on September 16.
  • August 13 – In the Battle of Stäket, Crown Prince Frederick I of Sweden leads the successful defense of Stockholm from Russian Admiral Fyodor Apraksin's Baltic Fleet during the Russian Pillage.
  • August 19Siege of San Sebastian. The Spanish garrison surrenders to the Duke of Berwick.
  • August 20 – Princess Maria Josepha of Austria, at one time the heir presumptive to the throne of Austria's Habsburg Empire, marries Frederick Augustus, Elector of Saxony ten days of renouncing any claim to the Austrian throne.
  • September 3 – The three-story tall Opernhaus am Zwinger, one of the largest opera houses in the world at the time, opens in Dresden by staging Antonio Lotti's Giovi in Argo. [86]
  • September 18James Figg claims the title of bare-knuckle boxing champion of England and defends his title 270 times before retiring in 1730.[87]
  • September 29Muhammad Shah is crowned as the 12th Mughal Emperor of India at Shahjahanabad (now Delhi), 12 days after the death of Shah Jahan II from tuberculosis. [88]

October–December[]

  • October 11Fernando Manuel de Bustillo Bustamante y Rueda, the Spanish Governor-General of the Philippines, is assassinated in a bloody coup d'etat by supporters of the Archbishop of Manila, whom Bustamante had imprisoned.
  • October 14 – The British Army, under the command of Major General George Wade, invades and captures the forts of Vigo on the Atlantic coast of Spain. [89]
  • October 21 – The Red Canal is opened in the Russian capital, Saint Petersburg, after seven years of construction, at a ceremony in the presence of the Tsar Peter the Great. [90]
  • October 28Sweden and Denmark sign an armistice, halting combat in the Great Northern War between them, with final terms agreed to in the Treaty of Frederiksborg on July 3, 1720. [91]
  • November 9 – In a treaty between Sweden and Hanover at the close of the Great Northern War, Sweden cedes the Duchies of Bremen and Verden (in northern Germany) to Hanover.
  • December 22Andrew Bradford publishes the American Weekly Mercury, Pennsylvania's first newspaper.

Date unknown[]

  • Prussia conducts Europe's first systematic census.
  • Miners in Falun, Sweden find the apparently petrified body of Fet-Mats Israelsson (d. 1677), in an unused part of the copper mine.
  • Raine's Foundation School, Bethnal Green (founded by Henry Raine), opens in Wapping, England.

Births[]

1710

Jakob Langebek born 23 January
Louis XV of France born 15 February
György Klimó born 4 April
Peter Anton von Verschaffelt born 8 May
John Cruger Jr. born 18 July
William Heberden born 13 August
Abraham Trembley born 3 September
Anne-Marie du Boccage born 22 October
Adam Gottlob Moltke born 10 November
Paolo Renier born 21 November
Carlo Bertinazzi born 2 December
  • January 3Richard Gridley, American Revolutionary soldier (d. 1796)
  • January 4
    • Margravine Sophie Christine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth (d. 1739)
    • Giovanni Battista Pergolesi, Italian composer (d. 1736)[92]
  • January 5Friedrich Wilhelm Riedt, German flautist (d. 1783)
  • January 16Sir William Ashburnham, 4th Baronet, Church of England priest and baronet (d. 1797)
  • January 23Jakob Langebek, Danish historian (d. 1775)
  • January 28Jean-Martial Frédou, French portrait painter (d. 1795)
  • January 30
    • Septimus Robinson, British Army officer who became Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod (d. 1765)
    • Raimondo di Sangro, Italian nobleman (d. 1771)
  • February 1Konrad Ernst Ackermann, German actor (d. 1771)
  • February 12John Affleck, British Tory politician (d. 1776)
  • February 15 – King Louis XV of France, Bourbon monarch who ruled as King of France and of Navarre 1715–1774 (d. 1774)
  • February 21Willem van Haren, Dutch nobleman and poet (d. 1768)
  • February 28Peter Delmé, wealthy English merchant and landowner (d. 1770)
  • March 3Johann Sigismund Mörl, German theologian (d. 1791)
  • March 4Aert Schouman, painter from the Dutch Republic (d. 1792)
  • March 7Casto Innocenzio Ansaldi, Italian professor (d. 1780)
  • March 10Christian Ditlev Reventlow, Danish Privy Councillor (d. 1775)
  • March 15George Forbes, 4th Earl of Granard, Irish soldier and politician (d. 1769)
  • March 18Ezekiel Worthen, New Hampshire native who participated in the American Revolutionary War (d. 1793)
  • March 19Otto Didrik Schack, 3rd Count of Schackenborg, Danish nobleman and enfeoffed count (d. 1741)
  • March 26Louis Guillouet, comte d'Orvilliers (d. 1792)
  • March 27Joseph Abaco, Italian violoncellist and composer (d. 1805)
  • April 2Samuel White, lawyer in the Province of Massachusetts Bay (d. 1769)
  • April 4
    • György Klimó, Bishop of Pécs and founder of the Klimo Library and printing press (d. 1777)
    • Edmund Lechmere, British politician (d. 1805)
  • April 10George Charles Dyhern, Saxon general (d. 1759)
  • April 12Caffarelli, Italian castrato and opera singer (d. 1783)
  • April 13Jonathan Carver, colonial American military officer (d. 1780)
  • April 15
    • Marie-Anne de Cupis de Camargo, French dancer (d. 1770)
    • William Cullen, Scottish physician and chemist (d. 1790)
  • April 17Henry Erskine, 10th Earl of Buchan, British Freemason (d. 1767)
  • April 18Friedrich Bogislav von Tauentzien, Prussian general during the wars of King Frederick the Great (d. 1791)
  • April 20Jean-Joseph Sue, French surgeon and anatomist (d. 1792)
  • April 23John Tempest Sr., landowner and Member of Parliament (d. 1776)
  • April 24Louis-Philippe Mariauchau d'Esgly, eighth bishop of the diocese of Quebec (d. 1788)
  • April 25James Ferguson, Scottish astronomer (d. 1776)
  • April 26Thomas Reid, Scottish philosopher (d. 1796)
  • April 30Johann Kaspar Basselet von La Rosée, Bavarian general (d. 1795)
  • May 6Richard Bland, American planter and statesman from Virginia (d. 1776)
  • May 8
    • Charles Hope-Weir, Scottish politician (d. 1791)
    • Peter Anton von Verschaffelt, Flemish sculptor and architect (d. 1793)
  • May 10François Bonamy, French botanist and physician (d. 1786)
  • May 14Adolf Frederick, King of Sweden (d. 1771)
  • May 16
    • Joan Gideon Loten, Governor of Zeylan, Fellow of the Royal Society (d. 1789)
    • Lorenzo Peracino, Italian painter active near Novara in northern Italy (d. 1789)
    • William Talbot, 1st Earl Talbot, English politician (d. 1782)
  • May 18
  • May 21Thomas Thynne, 2nd Viscount Weymouth (d. 1751)
  • May 23François Gaspard Adam, French rococo sculptor (d. 1761)
  • June 6 – Andrea Scacciati, Italian painter (b. 1642)
  • June 10James Short, Scottish mathematician and optician (d. 1768)
  • June 14Peder Kofod Ancher, Danish jurist (d. 1788)
  • June 15Robert Oliver, priest (d. 1784)
  • June 18Klaas Annink, notorious Dutch serial killer in Twente, Netherlands (d. 1775)
  • July 4Thomas Hay, 9th Earl of Kinnoull (d. 1787)
  • July 10Robert O'Callaghan, politician (d. 1761)
  • July 11Sir John Morgan, 4th Baronet (d. 1767)
  • July 18John Cruger Jr., speaker of the Province of New York assembly, Mayor of New York City (d. 1791)
  • July 21Paul Möhring, German physician and scientist (d. 1792)
  • July 23Jonathan Belcher, British-American lawyer (d. 1776)
  • July 26John Lambton, senior officer in the British Army and MP (d. 1794)
  • July 31Jacob Houblon, British landowner and Tory politician (d. 1770)
  • August 6Frances Jones, colonist (d. 1785)
  • August 10Princess Luise Dorothea of Saxe-Meiningen, member of German royalty (d. 1767)
  • August 13
  • August 14Corbyn Morris, English official and economic writer (d. 1779)
  • August 18Landon Carter, American planter from Lancaster County (d. 1778)
  • August 19Charles Wyndham, 2nd Earl of Egremont (d. 1763)
  • August 20Thomas Simpson, British mathematician (d. 1761)
  • August 22Johann August Nahl, German sculptor and plasterer (d. 1781)
  • August 27
    • Joseph Tiefenthaler, Jesuit missionary, one of the earliest European geographers to write about India (d. 1785)
    • Giuseppe Vasi, Italian engraver and architect (d. 1782)
  • August 28Pierre Augustin Boissier de Sauvages, French naturalist, researcher in provençal dialect and encyclopédist (d. 1795)
  • September 3Abraham Trembley, Genevan naturalist (d. 1784)
  • September 9Friedrich Rudolf von Rothenburg, lieutenant general (d. 1751)
  • September 11Louis Frederick of Saxe-Hildburghausen, Prince, General Field Marshal in the Bavarian army (d. 1759)
  • September 22Georg Matthias Bose, famous early experimenter in electrostatics (d. 1761)
  • September 24William Bull II, landowner (d. 1791)
  • September 25
  • September 29
    • Johann Andreas Michael Nagel, German Hebrew scholar and Orientalist (d. 1788)
    • Pompilio Maria Pirrotti, Italian Roman Catholic priest and a professed member of the Piarists (d. 1766)
  • September 30John Russell, 4th Duke of Bedford, British statesman (d. 1771)
  • October 3Jean Robert Tronchin, Attorney General, member of the State Council of Geneva (d. 1793)
  • October 7François-Josué de La Corne Dubreuil, officer in the colonial regular troops of New France and (d. 1759)
  • October 11Christophe-Gabriel Allegrain, French sculptor who tempered a neoclassical style with Rococo charm and softness (d. 1795)
  • October 12Jonathan Trumbull, Governor of the Colony and the state of Connecticut (d. 1785)
  • October 13Alban Butler, English Roman Catholic priest and hagiographer (d. 1773)
  • October 16András Hadik, Austro-Hungarian general (d. 1790)
  • October 19Franz Karl Ludwig von Wied zu Neuwied, lieutenant general in Frederick the Great's army (d. 1765)
  • October 22Anne-Marie du Boccage, French writer (d. 1802)
  • October 26Lukrecija Bogašinović Budmani, Serb-catholic poet (d. 1784)
  • October 31Ole Tidemand, Norwegian theologian and priest (d. 1778)
  • November 2Andrea Negroni, Italian Cardinal who was Cardinal-Deacon of the titular Church of Santi Vito (d. 1789)
  • November 4Charles-François Tarieu de La Naudière, officer in the colonial regular troops and seigneur in Lower Canada (d. 1776)
  • November 6David McGregore, Presbyterian minister and member of the Colonial America Christian Clergy (d. 1777)
  • November 8Sarah Fielding, English author, sister of the novelist Henry Fielding (d. 1768)
  • November 10Adam Gottlob Moltke, Danish statesman (d. 1792)
  • November 13Charles Simon Favart, French playwright (d. 1792)
  • November 19
    • Johann Wilhelm Hoffmann, German historian (d. 1739)
    • Giovanni Andrea Lazzarini, Italian painter (d. 1801)
  • November 21
    • Johann Ernst Gotzkowsky, Prussian merchant with a successful trade in trinkets (d. 1775)
    • Paolo Renier, Venetian statesman (d. 1789)
  • November 22Wilhelm Friedemann Bach, German composer, organist, harpsichordist (d. 1784)
  • November 27Robert Lowth, English bishop and grammarian (d. 1787)
  • November 28Henry Hyde, Viscount Cornbury (d. 1753)
  • December 1Michele Marieschi, Italian painter and engraver (d. 1744)
  • December 2Carlo Bertinazzi, Italian actor and writer (d. 1783)
  • December 5Nicolò Porta, Italian painter of the late-Baroque period (d. 1784)
  • December 15Francesco Zahra, Maltese painter (d. 1773)
  • December 24Tibout Regters, portrait painter from the Northern Netherlands (d. 1768)
  • December 28Henrik Teofilus Scheffer, Swedish chemist (d. 1759)
  • date unknownAhmad bin Said al-Busaidi, first ruler of the Al Said Dynasty of Oman (d. 1783)

1711

Charles Sackville, 2nd Duke of Dorset born 6 February
Samuel Gotthold Lange born 22 March
Eleazar Wheelock born 22 April
Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont born 26 April
David Hume born 26 April
Henry Muhlenberg born 6 September
Charles Holmes (Royal Navy officer) born 19 September
Qianlong Emperor born 25 September
Daniel Parke Custis born 15 October
Robert Hay Drummond born 10 November
  • January 1Baron Franz von der Trenck, Austrian noble (d. 1749)
  • January 3
    • Charles Moss, British bishop of Bath and Wells (d. 1802)
    • Giuseppe Capece Zurlo, Italian cardinal who served as Archbishop of Naples (d. 1801)
  • January 12Gaetano Latilla, Italian opera composer (d. 1788)
  • January 15Sidonia Hedwig Zäunemann, German poet (d. 1740)
  • January 22Johann Phillip Fabricius, German missionary (d. 1791)
  • January 28Johan Hörner, Swedish-born Danish portrait painter (d. 1763)
  • January 29Giuseppe Bonno, Austrian composer (d. 1788)
  • January 30Abraham Roentgen, German Ébéniste (cabinetmaker) (d. 1793)
  • February 2Wenzel Anton, Prince of Kaunitz-Rietberg, Austrian diplomat and chancellor (d. 1794)
  • February 3Omar Ali Saifuddin I, Sultan of Brunei (d. 1795)
  • February 4Józef Aleksander Jabłonowski, Polish prince (d. 1777)
  • February 5Joseph Umstatt, Austrian composer of the early Classical era (d. 1762)
  • February 6Charles Sackville, 2nd Duke of Dorset, English cricketer (d. 1769)
  • February 9
    • Anthony Ashley Cooper, 4th Earl of Shaftesbury, England (d. 1771)
    • Luis Vicente de Velasco, Spanish officer and commander in the Royal Spanish Navy (d. 1762)
  • February 10John Plumptre, British politician (d. 1791)
  • February 13Domènec Terradellas, Spanish opera composer (d. 1751)
  • February 14Alexandra Kurakina, daughter of Lieutenant-General and Senator Ivan Panin (d. 1786)
  • February 23Louis de Brienne de Conflans d'Armentières, French general (d. 1774)
  • February 25
    • Tokugawa Gorōta, Japanese daimyō (d. 1713)
    • John Perceval, 2nd Earl of Egmont, British politician with Irish connections (d. 1770)
  • February 27
    • Gerrit de Graeff, member of the De Graeff family from the Dutch Golden Age (d. 1752)
    • Constantine Mavrocordatos, Prince of Wallachia and Moldavia (d. 1769)
  • March 4Matthäus Stach, Moravian missionary in Greenland (d. 1787)
  • March 5Carl Gustaf Pilo, Swedish-born artist and painter (d. 1793)
  • March 11Joseph Leeson, 1st Earl of Milltown, Irish peer and politician (d. 1783)
  • March 22Samuel Gotthold Lange, German poet (d. 1781)
  • March 24William Brownrigg, doctor and scientist (d. 1800)
  • April 2Job Baster, Dutch naturalist (d. 1775)
  • April 3Hartwig Karl von Wartenberg, Royal Prussian major general (d. 1757)
  • April 10John Gambold, British bishop (d. 1771)
  • April 13John Mitchell, colonial American physician and botanist (d. 1768)
  • April 14Lord John Murray, British general and politician (d. 1787)
  • April 22
  • April 26
    • Jeanne-Marie Leprince de Beaumont, French writer (d. 1780)
    • David Hume, Scottish philosopher, economist, and historian (d. 1776)
  • May 1Richard Clarke, Massachusetts merchant (d. 1795)
  • May 7Johann Friedrich Gräfe, German civil servant and an amateur composer (d. 1787)
  • May 9Sir Mark Sykes, 1st Baronet, priest in the Church of England (d. 1783)
  • May 10Frederick, Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, member of the House of Hohenzollern (d. 1763)
  • May 12Abraham Darby II, English ironmaster (d. 1763)
  • May 17Agustín de Jáuregui, Spanish colonial governor (d. 1784)
  • May 18Roger Joseph Boscovich, Croatian-Italian priest and mathematician (d. 1787)
  • May 22Guillaume du Tillot, French politician (d. 1774)
  • May 23Ulla Tessin, Swedish courtier (d. 1768)
  • May 31Johann Heinrich Samuel Formey, German writer (d. 1797)
  • June 6Jean-Baptiste Coye, Occitan language writer (d. 1771)
  • June 7François Jacquier, French Franciscan mathematician and physicist (d. 1788)
  • June 8Charles Morris, Canadian judge (d. 1781)
  • June 12Louis Legrand, French Sulpician priest and theologian (d. 1780)
  • June 13Sir Richard Glyn, 1st Baronet, of Ewell, British banker and politician (d. 1773)
  • June 16François-Louis de Pourroy de Lauberivière, fifth bishop of the diocese of Quebec (1739–1740) (d. 1740)
  • June 19Jacob Bremer, Swedish merchant and industrialist (d. 1785)
  • June 23Giovanni Battista Guadagnini, Italian luthier (d. 1786)
  • July 10Princess Amelia of Great Britain, Second daughter of George II of Great Britain (d. 1786)
  • July 11Anne Poulett, British politician (d. 1785)
  • July 18John Olmius, 1st Baron Waltham, of Ireland (d. 1762)
  • July 22Georg Wilhelm Richmann, German physicist (d. 1753)
  • July 24Richard FitzWilliam, 6th Viscount FitzWilliam (d. 1776)
  • July 26
    • Lorenz Christoph Mizler, German music historian, polymath (d. 1778)
    • Jacques Hardouin-Mansart de Sagonne, French architect (d. 1778)
  • July 27Christian Ancher, Norwegian merchant (d. 1765)
  • July 29Claude-Adrien Nonnotte, French writer (d. 1793)
  • August 19
    • Daniel Liénard de Beaujeu, Canadian officer during King George's War and the Seven Years' War (d. 1755)
    • Edward Boscawen, British Royal Navy admiral (d. 1761)
    • Gabriel de Solages, French soldier and industrialist (d. 1799)
  • August 21Bernardo de Hoyos, Beatified Spanish priest (d. 1735)
  • September 1William IV, Prince of Orange, first hereditary stadtholder of the Netherlands (d. 1751)[93]
  • September 2Noël Hallé, French painter (d. 1781)
  • September 5Johann Nathanael Lieberkühn, German physician (d. 1756)
  • September 6Henry Muhlenberg, Lutheran clergyman and missionary (d. 1787)
  • September 8Flavio Chigi, Italian Catholic cardinal (d. 1771)
  • September 9Thomas Hutchinson, historian and last civilian Governor of the Province of Massachusetts Bay (d. 1780)
  • September 11Alexandre Guy Pingré, Catholic priest and scientist (d. 1796)
  • September 14Michele Foschini, Italian painter (d. 1770)
  • September 15Heinrich IX, Count Reuss of Köstritz, Count of Reuss-Köstritz and Minister of Prussia (d. 1780)
  • September 17John Zephaniah Holwell, British surgeon (d. 1798)
  • September 18Ignaz Holzbauer, composer of symphonies (d. 1783)
  • September 19Charles Holmes, Rear admiral in the British Navy during the Seven Years' War (d. 1761)
  • September 20
    • Ignazio Cirri, Italian organist and composer in the 18th century (d. 1787)
    • Frederick August I, Duke of Oldenburg (d. 1785)
  • September 22Thomas Wright, English astronomer (d. 1786)
  • September 23Louis Nicolas Victor de Félix d'Ollières, Marshal of France (d. 1775)
  • September 25Qianlong Emperor, sixth Emperor of the Qing dynasty in China (d. 1799)
  • September 26Richard Grenville-Temple, 2nd Earl Temple, British politician and first Lord of the Admiralty (d. 1779)
  • September 28Joseph Richardson Sr., American silversmith (d. 1784)
  • October 8Kumara Swamy Desikar, Indian philosopher (d. 1810)
  • October 9James Grimston, 2nd Viscount Grimston, British peer and Member of Parliament (d. 1773)
  • October 14John Smith, British astronomer (d. 1795)
  • October 15
    • William Cooke, English cleric and academic (d. 1797)
    • Daniel Parke Custis, American planter (d. 1757)
    • Elisabeth Therese of Lorraine, Sardinian queen consort (d. 1741)
  • October 17Jupiter Hammon, American writer (d. 1806)
  • October 20Timothy Ruggles, American colonial politician (d. 1795)
  • October 21Armand-Jérôme Bignon, French lawyer (d. 1772)
  • October 31Laura Bassi, Italian physicist and academic (d. 1778)
  • November 1Marcus Fredrik Bang, Norwegian bishop (d. 1789)
  • November 5Kitty Clive, British actor (d. 1785)
  • November 10Robert Hay Drummond, Archbishop of York (d. 1776)
  • November 11Stepan Krasheninnikov, Russian scientist (d. 1755)
  • November 18Franz Töpsl, German historian and Augustinian Canon Regular (d. 1796)
  • November 19
    • John Berrien, farmer and merchant from Rocky Hill (d. 1772)
    • Mikhail Lomonosov, Russian polymath (d. 1765)
  • November 20Niclas Gustaf Duncan, Swedish post official and spy (d. 1771)
  • November 21Samuel Morris, merchant and Patriot in colonial and revolutionary-era Philadelphia (d. 1782)
  • November 27Gerard Joan Vreeland, 28th Governor of Ceylon during the Dutch period in Ceylon (d. 1752)
  • November 30Ebenezer Kinnersley, American scientist (d. 1778)
  • December 4Barbara of Portugal, infanta of Portugal and later Queen of Ferdinand VI of Spain (d. 1758)
  • December 21Thomas Whitmore, British Whig politician and MP (d. 1773)
  • December 23Jacob Fortling, German-Danish sculptor (d. 1761)
  • December 25Jean-Joseph de Mondonville, French composer and violinist (d. 1772)
  • December 26Maria Menshikova, daughter of Aleksandr Danilovich Menshikov (d. 1729)
  • December 28Samuel Egerton, British landowner and politician (d. 1780)
  • Full Date UnknownMariot Arbuthnot, British admiral during the American War for Independence (d. 1794)

1712

Frederick the Great born 24 January
Tokugawa Ieshige born 28 January
Nasir Jung born 26 February
Louis-Joseph de Montcalm born 28 February
Empress Xiaoxianchun born 28 March
Devasahayam Pillai born 23 April
Benjamin Ingham born 11 June
George Grenville born 14 October
John Thomas (bishop of Rochester) born 14 October
Joanna Elisabeth of Holstein-Gottorp born 24 October
Francesco Algarotti born 11 December
Peter Boehler born 31 December
  • January 1Sir Richard Acton, 5th Baronet, English baronet (d. 1791)
  • January 2Marie-Angélique Memmie Le Blanc, French feral child (d. 1775)
  • January 5
    • Ludwig van Beethoven, Flemish-born German professional singer and music director, grandfather of the well known composer of the same name (d. 1773)
    • Hongzhou, Manchu prince of the Qing dynasty (d. 1770)
  • January 17John Stanley, English composer and organist (d. 1786)
  • January 24
  • January 26James Habersham, merchant and statesman in the British North American colony of Georgia (d. 1775)
  • January 28Tokugawa Ieshige, ninth shōgun of the Tokugawa shogunate of Japan (d. 1761)
  • January 29Ralph Bigland, English officer of arms (d. 1784)
  • February 2Lydia Taft, American suffragist (d. 1778)
  • February 12Felton Hervey, aristocratic English politician (d. 1773)
  • February 19Arthur Devis, English painter (d. 1787)
  • February 20Sir Cordell Firebrace, 3rd Baronet, English landowner and politician (d. 1759)
  • February 22Péter Bod, Hungarian theologian and historian (d. 1768)
  • February 26
    • Nasir Jang Mir Ahmad, son of Turkic noble Nizam-ul-Mulk (d. 1750)
    • Nasir Jung, Head of Hyderabad State (d. 1750)
  • February 28Louis-Joseph de Montcalm, French general (d. 1759)
  • March 4Joachim Friedrich Henckel, Prussian surgeon at Charité hospital in Berlin (d. 1779)
  • March 8John Fothergill, British botanist (d. 1780)
  • March 12
    • Sir Hew Dalrymple, 2nd Baronet, Scottish politician and MP for Haddington Burghs on two occasions (d. 1790)
    • Ioan II Mavrocordat, prince of Moldva (d. 1747)
  • March 14Charles-Antoine Jombert, French bookseller and publisher (d. 1784)
  • March 15Lambert Krahe, German history painter and art collector (d. 1790)
  • March 19
  • March 22Edward Moore, English dramatist (d. 1757)[94]
  • March 27
    • Claude Bourgelat, French veterinary surgeon (d. 1779)
    • Jane Mecom, American correspondent, youngest sister of Benjamin Franklin and one of his closest confidants (d. 1794)
  • March 28Empress Xiaoxianchun, empress consort of Qing dynasty China (d. 1748)
  • March 31Anders Johan von Höpken, Swedish politician (d. 1789)
  • April 8Pierre Pouchot, French military engineer officer (d. 1769)
  • April 23Devasahayam Pillai, beatified Indian Catholic (d. 1752)
  • April 28James Hewitt, 1st Viscount Lifford, Lord Chancellor of Ireland (d. 1789)
  • May 2Thomas Bond, American physician and surgeon (d. 1784)
  • May 5Janusz Aleksander Sanguszko, magnate in the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth (d. 1775)
  • May 9William Pitcairn, Scottish physician and botanist (d. 1791)
  • May 12Charles William Frederick, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach (d. 1757)
  • May 13Count Johann Hartwig Ernst von Bernstorff, German-Danish statesman (d. 1772)
  • May 17Jean-Baptiste Greppo, French canon and archaeologist (d. 1767)
  • May 18Increase Moseley, American politician (d. 1795)
  • May 27Sir Thomas Cave, 5th Baronet of England (d. 1778)
  • May 28Jacques Claude Marie Vincent de Gournay, French economist (d. 1759)
  • May 29Thomas Dimsdale, English physician, banker (d. 1800)
  • June 4Thomas Cotes, British Royal Navy officer, Commander-in-Chief of the Jamaica Station (d. 1767)
  • June 7Infante Philip of Spain, Spanish infante (d. 1719)
  • June 11Benjamin Ingham, American missionary (d. 1772)
  • June 14
    • Samuel Blair, Ulster-born American pastor (d. 1751)
    • Sayat-Nova, Armenian musician and poet (d. 1795)
  • June 15Andrew Gordon, Scottish Benedictine monk (d. 1751)
  • June 21Luc Urbain de Bouëxic, comte de Guichen, French admiral (d. 1790)
  • June 22Michael Heltzen, Norwegian mining engineer (d. 1770)
  • June 25Exupere Joseph Bertin, French anatomist (d. 1781)
  • June 26Johann Andreas Silbermann, German organ-builder (d. 1783)
  • June 28Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Genevan philosopher (d. 1778)
  • July 4George Hadow, British historian (d. 1780)
  • July 9Charles-Étienne Pesselier, French playwright and librettist (d. 1763)
  • July 12
    • Sir Francis Bernard, 1st Baronet, British Colonial governor of New Jersey and Massachusetts Bay (d. 1779)
    • Thomas Estcourt Cresswell, English politician (d. 1788)
  • July 18Karl Frederick, Duke of Saxe-Meiningen, German noble (d. 1743)
  • July 19Carl Fredrik Mennander, Swedish bishop (d. 1786)
  • July 21Johann Karl Philipp von Cobenzl, Habsburg politician (d. 1770)
  • July 24Richard Handcock, Irish priest (d. 1791)
  • July 25Vincenzo Miotti, Italian physicist and astronomer (d. 1787)
  • July 26
    • George Montagu, 1st Duke of Montagu, English peer (d. 1790)
    • William Pery, 1st Baron Glentworth, Anglican bishop (d. 1794)
  • July 31Johann Samuel König, German mathematician (d. 1757)
  • August 2Prince George of Kartli, Georgian prince (d. 1786)
  • August 12
    • Jonas Hanway, English traveller and philanthropist (d. 1786)
    • Karl Jakob Weber, Italian archaeologist (d. 1764)
  • August 15César Gabriel de Choiseul, French officer (d. 1785)
  • August 24Michel-Barthélémy Ollivier, French painter and engraver (d. 1784)
  • August 26Tadeusz Franciszek Ogiński, Polish noble (d. 1783)
  • August 27William Graham, 2nd Duke of Montrose, member of the peerage of Scotland, son of James Graham (d. 1790)
  • August 30George Montgomerie, British Member of Parliament (d. 1766)
  • September 4Jan Verbruggen, Dutch master gun-founder in the Netherlands and later at the Royal Arsenal in Woolwich (d. 1781)
  • September 11Giovanni Targioni Tozzetti, Italian naturalist (d. 1783)
  • September 15Pierre Simon Fournier, French punch-cutter (d. 1768)
  • September 22François-Joseph-Gaston de Partz de Pressy, French cleric (d. 1789)
  • September 25James Veitch, Lord Elliock, Scottish politician (d. 1793)
  • September 26
    • Alexander Hamilton, Scottish-born doctor and writer in colonial Maryland (d. 1756)
    • Dominique de La Rochefoucauld, French Catholic cardinal (d. 1800)
  • October 1William Shippen Sr., American physician, anatomist and public figure (d. 1801)
  • October 5Francesco Guardi, Italian painter (d. 1793)
  • October 8Alison Cockburn, Scottish poet (d. 1794)
  • October 14
    • George Grenville, Prime Minister of Great Britain (1763–1765) (d. 1770)
    • John Thomas, English churchman (Dean of Westminster, Bishop of Rochester) (d. 1793)
  • October 15Leslie Corry, Irish politician (d. 1741)
  • October 17
    • Landgravine Eleonore of Hesse-Rotenburg, countess (d. 1759)
    • Age Wijnalda, Dutch Mennonite minister (d. 1792)
  • October 18Jeremias van Riemsdijk, Dutch colonial governor (d. 1777)
  • October 19
    • Pedro, Prince of Brazil, second child of John V of Portugal and Maria Ana of Austria (d. 1714)
    • Zenobia Revertera, Italian noble and courtier (d. 1779)
  • October 20Gregor Zallwein, Bavarian-born expert on canon law (d. 1766)
  • October 21James Steuart, Scottish economist (d. 1780)
  • October 22James Hamilton, 8th Earl of Abercorn, member of the peerage of Scotland and landowner in Ireland (d. 1789)
  • October 24
    • Joanna Elisabeth of Holstein-Gottorp, German duchess (d. 1760)
    • Jonathan Nichols Jr., Rhode Island colonial deputy governor (d. 1756)
  • October 29Paolo Gamba, Italian painter (d. 1782)
  • October 30
    • Christian Wilhelm Ernst Dietrich, German painter and art administrator (d. 1774)
    • Giovanni Pietro Francesco Agius de Soldanis, Maltese linguist, historian and cleric (d. 1770)
  • October 31Prince Moritz of Anhalt-Dessau, German prince of the House of Ascania (d. 1760)
  • November 4
    • Charles de Fitz-James, Marshal of France (d. 1787)
    • Charles Louis de Marbeuf, French general (d. 1786)
  • November 7Antoine Choquet de Lindu, French architect (d. 1790)
  • November 11Hugolín Gavlovič, Slovak Franciscan priest, author of religious, moral and educational writings (d. 1787)
  • November 20Guillaume Voiriot, French portrait painter (d. 1799)
  • November 24
    • Ali II ibn Hussein, fourth leader of the Husainid Dynasty, ruler of Tunisia (d. 1782)
    • Charles-Michel de l'Épée, French priest and educator of the deaf (d. 1789)
  • November 27Fernando de Sousa e Silva, fourth Patriarch of Lisbon (d. 1786)
  • December 1George Boscawen, British Army general and politician (d. 1775)
  • December 3
    • Joseph Relph, English poet (d. 1743)
    • William Sawyer, English professional cricketer (d. 1761)
  • December 9Alexander Murray of Elibank, Scottish Jacobite intriguer, fourth son of Alexander Murray (d. 1778)
  • December 11Francesco Algarotti, Venetian philosopher (d. 1764)
  • December 12
    • Prince Charles Alexander of Lorraine, Lorraine-born Austrian general and soldier (d. 1780)
    • François-Antoine Devaux, Lorraine-born poet and man of letters (d. 1796)
    • John Turner, Massachusetts politician and delegate from Pembroke (d. 1794)
  • December 25Pietro Chiari, Italian playwright (d. 1785)
  • December 31
    • Peter Boehler, German-English Moravian bishop and missionary (d. 1775)
    • Charles, Prince of Nassau-Usingen (1718–1775) and Nassau-Saarbrücken (1728–1735) (d. 1775)

1713

  • January 2Marie Dumesnil, French actor (d. 1803)
  • January 5Jorge Juan y Santacilia, Spanish geodesist (d. 1773)
  • January 7Giovanni Battista Locatelli, Italian opera director (d. 1785)
  • January 13Charlotte Charke, British actor and writer (d. 1760)
  • January 17Jean Chrétien Fischer, French general (d. 1762)
  • January 22Marc-Antoine Laugier, French Jesuit priest and architectural theorist (d. 1769)
  • January 31
    • Anthony Benezet, French-born American abolitionist and educator active in Philadelphia (d. 1784)
    • Adam Drummond, Scottish merchant banker and politician (d. 1786)
  • February 2Maria Margarida de Lorena, 2nd Duchess of Abrantes, Portuguese noblewoman and courtier (d. 1780)
  • February 11Diane Adélaïde de Mailly, third of the five famous French de Nesle sisters (d. 1769)
  • February 13Domènec Terradellas, Spanish opera composer (d. 1751)
  • February 20Anna Maria Elvia, Swedish feminist writer (d. 1784)
  • March 5
    • Edward Cornwallis, British military officer, first Governor of Nova Scotia (d. 1776)
    • Frederick Cornwallis, Archbishop of Canterbury (d. 1783)
  • March 8Gian Carlo Passeroni, Italian writer (d. 1803)
  • March 12Johann Adolph Hass, German clavichord maker (d. 1771)
  • March 17Sir Charles Asgill, 1st Baronet, British politician (d. 1788)
  • March 21Francis Lewis, signer of the United States Declaration of Independence (d. 1802)
  • March 23Bowen Southwell, Irish politician (d. 1796)
  • March 26Peter Oliver, Massachusetts loyalist colonial judge (d. 1791)
  • March 28Juan Nentvig, German anthropologist (d. 1768)
  • March 29John Ponsonby, Irish politician (d. 1787)
  • April 7Nicola Sala, Italian opera composer (d. 1801)
  • April 10John Whitehurst, English clockmaker (d. 1788)
  • April 11Luise Gottsched, German poet, playwright, essayist and translator (d. 1762)
  • April 12Guillaume Thomas François Raynal, French writer, man of letters during the Age of Enlightenment (d. 1796)
  • April 13Pierre Jélyotte, French operatic tenor (d. 1797)
  • April 17Samuel Graves, British Royal Navy admiral, known for his role early in the American War of Independence (d. 1787)
  • April 21
    • Anna Maria Hilfeling, Swedish artist (d. 1783)
    • Louis de Noailles, French peer and Marshal of France (d. 1793)
  • April 22Peter Du Cane, Sr., British businessman (d. 1803)
  • May 6Charles Batteux, French philosopher, writer on aesthetics (d. 1780)
  • May 7Charles Townley, British Officer of Arms (d. 1774)
  • May 11James Drummond, 3rd Duke of Perth, British noble (d. 1746)
  • May 13
Edward Wortley Montagu
  • May 15
    • József Károly Hell, Hungarian mining engineer (d. 1789)
    • Edward Wortley Montagu, English traveller and author (d. 1776)
  • May 25
    • Andrzej Mokronowski, Polish general (d. 1784)
    • John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute, Prime Minister of Great Britain (1762–1763) (d. 1792)
  • May 31Giuseppe Maria Buonaparte, Corsican politician (d. 1763)
  • June 3Robert Petre, 8th Baron Petre, British peer, renowned horticulturist (d. 1742)
  • June 10Princess Caroline of Great Britain, fourth child and third daughter of George II (d. 1757)
  • June 11
    • John Allen, 3rd Viscount Allen, Irish politician (d. 1745)
    • Edward Capell, English Shakespearian critic (d. 1781)
  • June 16Meshech Weare, First Governor of New Hampshire (d. 1786)
  • June 20Georg Anton Urlaub, German painter (d. 1759)
  • June 22Lord John Sackville, English gentleman and cricketer, second son of Lionel Sackville (d. 1765)
  • July 1Benjamin Green, Canadian merchant and judge (d. 1772)
  • July 5
    • Stanhope Aspinwall, British diplomat (d. 1771)
    • Jean Godin des Odonais, French cartographer and naturalist (d. 1792)
  • July 9John Newbery, English publisher and bookseller (d. 1767)
  • July 10Anna Rosina de Gasc, German portrait painter (d. 1783)
  • July 18Gaetano Matteo Pisoni, Swiss-Italian architect (d. 1782)
  • July 22Jacques-Germain Soufflot, French architect in the international circle that introduces neoclassicism (d. 1780)
  • July 23Luís António Verney, Portuguese philosopher and pedagogue (d. 1792)
  • July 27Margravine Sophie Charlotte of Brandenburg-Bayreuth, German noble (d. 1747)
  • August 1Charles I, Duke of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel (d. 1780)
  • August 4
    • Bernardo de Miera y Pacheco, Spanish cartographer (d. 1785)
    • Princess Elisabeth Albertine of Saxe-Hildburghausen, Duchess consort of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (d. 1761)
  • August 6Marie Sophie de Courcillon, French noblewoman and Duchess of Rohan-Rohan, Princess of Soubise by marriage (d. 1756)
  • August 11Lebbeus Harris, Canadian politician (d. 1792)
  • August 17Antoine de Montazet, French archbishop (d. 1788)
  • August 25Vijaya Raghunatha Raya Tondaiman I, Raja of Pudukkottai (d. 1769)
  • August 27Anton August Beck, German engraver (d. 1787)
  • September 3Jean Baptiste de La Vérendrye, eldest son of Pierre Gaultier de Varennes et de La Vérendrye and Marie-Anne Dandonneau Du Sablé (d. 1736)
  • September 10
    • Gowin Knight, British physicist (d. 1772)
    • John Needham, British biologist and priest (d. 1781)
  • September 13Giuseppe Maria Buondelmonti, Italian philosopher (d. 1757)
  • September 14Johann Kies, German astronomer and mathematician (d. 1781)
Charles Lucas
  • September 16Charles Lucas, Irish apothecary and politician (d. 1771)
  • September 23Ferdinand VI of Spain, King of Spain (d. 1759)
  • October 3Antoine Dauvergne, French composer and violinist (d. 1797)
Denis Diderot
  • October 5Denis Diderot, French philosopher (d. 1784)
  • October 7Granville Elliott, Army General, British military expert, working for Britain and Palatine forces (d. 1759)
  • October 8Yechezkel Landau, influential Polish authority on halakha (Jewish law) (d. 1793)
  • October 12Khawaja Muhammad Zaman of Luari, Sindhi Sufi poet (d. 1775)
  • October 13
    • Allan Ramsay, Scottish portrait painter (d. 1784)
    • Jacques de Romas, French physicist (d. 1776)
  • October 20
    • Benjamin Andrew, American politician (d. 1790)
    • James Cecil, 6th Earl of Salisbury, English noble (d. 1780)
    • Joseph Redlhamer, Austrian physicist (d. 1761)
  • October 23Pieter Burman the Younger, Dutch academic (d. 1788)
  • October 24Marie Fel, French opera singer (d. 1794)
  • October 30Giuseppe Antonio Landi, Italian painter (d. 1791)
  • November 1Antonio Genovesi, Italian economist (d. 1769)
  • November 5Gorges Lowther, Member of the Irish House of Commons (d. 1792)
  • November 6Thomas Osborne, 4th Duke of Leeds, British politician (d. 1789)
  • November 24
    • Junípero Serra, Spanish Christian missionary (d. 1784)
    • Laurence Sterne, Anglo-Irish novelist, Anglican clergyman (d. 1768)
  • November 30Johann Balthasar Bullinger, Swiss landscape painter (d. 1793)
  • December 4Gasparo Gozzi, Venetian critic and dramatist (d. 1786)
  • December 10Johann Nicolaus Mempel, German composer, musician (d. 1747)
  • December 13John Baptist Caryll, third Jacobite Baron Caryll of Durford (d. 1788)
  • December 14Martin Knutzen, German philosopher (d. 1751)
  • December 15Welbore Ellis, 1st Baron Mendip, British politician (d. 1802)
  • December 23Maruyama Gondazaemon, Japanese sumo wrestler (d. 1749)
  • December 27Giovanni Battista Borra, Italian architect and engineer (d. 1770)
  • December 29Nicolas Louis de Lacaille, French astronomer (d. 1762)

1714

Christoph Willibald Gluck
Alaungpaya
Hedvig Taube
  • January 1
    • Kristijonas Donelaitis, Prussian-Lithuanian Lutheran pastor, poet, author of The Seasons (d. 1780)
    • Giovanni Battista Mancini, Italian soprano castrato, voice teacher and author of books on singing (d. 1800)[95]
  • January 6
    • John Christopher Hartwick, Lutheran minister in Colonial America, founder of Hartwick College (d. 1796)[96]
    • Percivall Pott, English surgeon (d. 1788)
  • January 9Elisabeth Stierncrona, Swedish noble (d. 1769)[97]
  • January 10Johann Georg Dominicus von Linprun, German scientist (d. 1787)
  • January 16
    • Francis V de Beauharnais, French nobleman, soldier, politician, colonial governor and admiral (d. 1800)
    • Carl Jesper Benzelius, Swedish bishop (d. 1793)
  • January 20Hugh Farmer, British theologian (d. 1787)
  • January 21Anna Morandi Manzolini, internationally known Italian anatomist and anatomical wax modeler (d. 1774)
  • January 24Henri Joseph Bouchard d'Esparbès de Lussan d'Aubeterre, Marshal of France (d. 1788)
  • January 26Jean-Baptiste Pigalle, French sculptor (d. 1785)
  • February 1
    • Nicolaus Christian Friis, Norwegian priest and writer (d. 1777)
    • Ralph Verney, 2nd Earl Verney of Ireland (d. 1791)
  • February 2Gottfried August Homilius, German composer, cantor and organist (d. 1785)[98]
  • February 5Johann Gottlieb Gleditsch, German botanist (d. 1786)
  • February 11Count Karl-Wilhelm Finck von Finckenstein, German-Prussian diplomat and later Prime Minister of Prussia (d. 1800)
  • February 12Sebastian Sailer, German Premonstratensian preacher, writer (d. 1777)
  • February 14William Vane, 2nd Viscount Vane of Ireland (d. 1789)
  • February 18John Howe, 2nd Baron Chedworth of England, eldest son of John Howe (d. 1762)
  • February 22
  • February 25
  • February 26James Hervey, English clergyman and writer (d. 1758)
  • February 28Gioacchino Conti, Italian opera singer (d. 1761)
  • March 1Aleksandr Aleksandrovich Menshikov, Russian army officer (d. 1764)
  • March 2John Hamilton, Royal Navy officer (d. 1755)
  • March 6Jean-Baptiste Marie Pierre, French painter (d. 1789)
  • March 7Charles Thomas, Prince of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rochefort, German nobleman, head of the House of Löwenstein-Wertheim-Rochefort (d. 1789)
  • March 8Carl Philipp Emanuel Bach, German Classical composer (d. 1788)[99]
  • March 11Cornelis Elout, Dutch regent (d. 1779)
  • March 17Maximilian Reichsgraf von Hamilton, German-born Czech Catholic bishop (d. 1776)
  • March 19Aymar Joseph de Roquefeuil et du Bousquet, French admiral (d. 1782)
  • March 21Charles Pratt, 1st Earl Camden, British judge (d. 1794)
  • March 25
    • Friedrich Christian Glume, German artist (d. 1752)
    • Matthew Griswold (governor), 17th Governor of Connecticut (1784–1786) (d. 1799)
  • March 27Francesco Antonio Zaccaria, Italian theologian (d. 1795)
  • March 29Mahadhammaraza Dipadi, last Toungoo Dynasty king of Burma (Myanmar) (1733–1752) (d. 1754)
  • April 1Jean-François de Neufforge, Flemish architect and engraver (d. 1791)
  • April 7John Elwes (politician), British politician (d. 1789)
  • April 14Adam Gib, Scottish religious leader (d. 1788)
  • April 15Claude Yvon, French encyclopedist (d. 1791)
  • April 16Pedro António Avondano, Italian composer (d. 1782)
  • April 18Jacques-Nompar III de Caumont, duc de La Force, French nobleman (d. 1755)
  • April 25Emer de Vattel, Swiss philosopher (d. 1767)
  • May 6
    • Anton Raaff, German opera tenor (d. 1797)
    • James Townley, British dramatist (d. 1778)
  • May 10Sophie Charlotte Ackermann, German actress from Berlin (d. 1792)
  • May 12Johan Daniel Berlin, Norwegian composer and organist (d. 1787)
  • May 14William Whitmore, British general (d. 1771)
  • May 17Princess Anne Charlotte of Lorraine, French royal (d. 1773)
  • May 20Henry Bathurst, 2nd Earl Bathurst, British lawyer and politician (d. 1794)
  • June 6Joseph I of Portugal, Prince of Brazil (d. 1777)
  • June 17César-François Cassini de Thury, French astronomer and cartographer (d. 1784)
  • June 23Giovanni Sarnelli, Italian painter (d. 1793)
  • July 1Michael Lally (brigadier-general), Irish-born French brigadier-general (d. 1773)
  • July 2Christoph Willibald Gluck, German composer (d. 1787)[100]
  • July 8
    • Friedrich Gottfried Abel, German physician (d. 1794)
    • Pieter van Reede van Oudtshoorn, Dutch administrator of the Cape Colony (d. 1773)
  • July 12Mikhail Illarionovich Vorontsov, Russian noble, politician (d. 1767)
  • July 16Marc René, marquis de Montalembert, French military engineer and writer (d. 1800)
  • July 17
    • Alexander Gottlieb Baumgarten, German philosopher (d. 1762)
    • John Forbes (Royal Navy officer), British admiral of the fleet (d. 1796)
  • July 21Grand Duchess Natalya Alexeyevna of Russia (1714–1728), Russian grand duchess (d. 1728)
  • August 1
    • Edward Penny, British painter (d. 1791)
    • Richard Wilson (painter), Welsh landscape painter (d. 1782)
  • August 14Claude Joseph Vernet, French painter (d. 1789)[101]
  • August 15Philip Stanhope, 2nd Earl Stanhope of Great Britain (d. 1786)
  • August 18Landgravine Caroline of Hesse-Rotenburg, German noble (d. 1741)
  • August 23Hans Jacob Scheel, Norwegian general (d. 1774)
  • August 28
    • Duke Anthony Ulrich of Brunswick, Russian general (d. 1774)
    • Jean-Baptiste Descamps, Flemish painter and art historian (d. 1791)
  • August 29Princess Friederike Luise of Prussia, Prussian princess (d. 1784)
  • September 1Samuel Martin (Secretary to the Treasury), British politician (d. 1788)
  • September 10Niccolò Jommelli, Italian composer (d. 1774)[102]
  • September 17Gottlieb Rabener, German writer of prose satires (d. 1771)
  • September 19Charles Humphreys, miller and statesman from Haverford Township, Pennsylvania (d. 1786)
  • September 23Eugene Jean, Count of Soissons, Prince of Savoy (d. 1734)
  • September 24Alaungpaya, King of Burma (d. 1760)
  • September 29
    • Petrus Albertus van der Parra, Dutch colonial governor (d. 1775)
    • Johann Joachim Schwabe, German poet (d. 1784)
  • September 30Étienne Bonnot de Condillac, French academic (d. 1780)
  • October 1
  • October 3Joseph Spencer, American general (d. 1789)
  • October 14Christoph Anton Migazzi, Austrian Catholic bishop (d. 1803)
  • October 16Giovanni Arduino (geologist), Italian geologist (d. 1795)
  • October 19Joseph von Petrasch, German philologist (d. 1772)
  • October 25James Burnett, Lord Monboddo, Scottish judge, scholar of language evolution and philosopher (d. 1799)
  • October 26Princess Marie Victoire d'Arenberg, Margravine of Baden-Baden as consort of Augustus George (d. 1793)
  • October 27Fernando de Silva, 12th Duke of Alba, Spanish duke (d. 1776)
  • October 31Hedvig Taube, Swedish courtier (d. 1744)
  • November 1Johann Joachim Spalding, German theologian (d. 1804)
  • November 2Camillo Almici, Italian priest (d. 1779)
  • November 3Anica Bošković, Ragusan writer (d. 1804)
  • November 4John Boyle, 3rd Earl of Glasgow, Scottish nobleman (d. 1775)
  • November 10Mathieu Tillet, French botanist (d. 1791)
  • November 18William Shenstone, English poet and landscape gardener (d. 1763)[103]
  • November 24Thomas Zebrowski, Lithuanian Jesuit scientist (d. 1758)
  • November 26Pierre-François Brice, French artist (d. 1794)
  • November 27Jean Philippe Goujon de Grondel, French general (d. 1807)
  • December 1Pierre Gaultier de La Vérendrye, French-Canadian explorer (d. 1755)
  • December 3Edward Pickard, British minister (d. 1778)
  • December 4Israel Acrelius, Swedish missionary and clergyman (d. 1800)
  • December 14Leonard Lispenard, American politician (d. 1790)
  • December 15Étienne Mignot de Montigny, French engineer, geographer (d. 1782)
  • December 16George Whitefield, English Anglican priest (d. 1770)
  • December 18
  • December 19John Winthrop (educator), 2nd Hollis Professor of Mathematics and Natural Philosophy in Harvard College (d. 1779)
  • December 21
    • John Bradstreet, British Army officer during King George's War (d. 1774)
    • Paschen von Cossel, German lawyer (d. 1805)
  • December 23
    • Ranieri de' Calzabigi, Italian poet and librettist (d. 1795)
    • William Howard, Viscount Andover, British MP (d. 1756)
  • December 31

1715

  • January 9Robert-François Damiens, French domestic servant, executed for the attempted assassination of Louis XV of France (d. 1757)
  • January 10
  • January 12Jacques Duphly, French composer (d. 1789)
  • January 23Jean-Olivier Briand, French-born Catholic bishop of Quebec (d. 1794)
  • January 24Ōkubo Tadaoki, Japanese daimyō (d. 1764)
  • January 25
    • George Hay, British politician (d. 1778)
    • Thomas Walker, distinguished Virginia physician, explorer (d. 1794)
  • January 29Georg Christoph Wagenseil, Austrian composer (d. 1777)
  • January 30Jean-Baptiste Lestiboudois, French botanist (d. 1804)
  • January 31
    • Giovanni Fagnano, Italian mathematician (d. 1797)
    • John Wayles, American lawyer and planter (d. 1773)
  • February 4John Hamilton, British politician (d. 1796)
  • February 5Baltazar Adam Krčelić, Croatian historian and theologian (d. 1778)
  • February 11Margaret Bentinck, Duchess of Portland, British duchess (d. 1785)
  • February 12James Grenville, British Member of Parliament (d. 1783)
Charles-Nicolas Cochin
  • February 22
    • Charles-Nicolas Cochin, French artist (d. 1790)
    • Jean Georges Lefranc de Pompignan, Roman Catholic archbishop (d. 1790)
  • February 26Claude Adrien Helvétius, French philosopher (d. 1771)
  • February 27Mateo Aimerich, Spanish philologist (d. 1799)
  • March 4James Waldegrave, 2nd Earl Waldegrave of Great Britain (d. 1763)
  • March 7
    • Ewald Christian von Kleist, German poet and officer (d. 1759)
    • Ephraim Williams, English benefactor of Williams College, soldier in the French and Indian War (d. 1755)
  • March 14Johan Martin Preisler, German artist (d. 1794)
  • March 18John Bushell, first (Massachusetts-born) Canadian printer (d. 1761)
  • March 24William Strahan, British politician (d. 1785)
  • March 25Mary Frances of the Five Wounds, Italian Franciscan saint (d. 1791)
  • March 28Margrave Frederick William of Brandenburg-Schwedt, Prussian major general and titular Margrave of Brandenburg-Schwedt (d. 1744)
  • March 31Johan Samuel Augustin, German-Danish astronomical writer, civil servant (d. 1785)
  • April 3William Watson, English scientist (d. 1787)
  • April 9Giovanni Carlo Boschi, Italian Catholic cardinal (d. 1788)
  • April 11
    • John Alcock, English composer and organist (d. 1806)
    • Jacob Rodrigues Pereira, academic, first teacher of deaf-mutes in France (d. 1780)
  • April 13John Martin Mack, American missionary (d. 1784)
  • April 19James Nares, English composer of mostly sacred vocal works (d. 1783)
  • April 20
    • James Brudenell, 5th Earl of Cardigan, English noble and politician (d. 1811)
    • Saliha Sultan, daughter of Ottoman Sultan (d. 1778)
  • April 23
    • Johann Friedrich Doles, German composer (d. 1797)
    • John Hicks, Canadian politician (d. 1790)
    • Auguste de Keralio, French nobleman (d. 1805)
    • Carl Tersmeden, Swedish admiral (d. 1797)
  • April 28
    • Carl Fredrik Scheffer, Swedish politician (d. 1786)
    • Franz Sparry, Austrian composer (d. 1767)
  • May 4
  • May 7Charles Roe, English businessman (d. 1781)
  • May 11
    • Johann Gottfried Bernhard Bach, fourth child of Johann Sebastian Bach and Maria Barbara Bach to reach adulthood (d. 1739)
    • Ignazio Fiorillo, Italian composer (d. 1787)
  • May 12Otto William Schwartz, Canadian politician (d. 1785)
  • May 20William Whitfield II, American Army officer (d. 1795)
  • May 22François-Joachim de Pierre de Bernis, French cardinal and statesman (d. 1794)
  • June 7Lodewijk Caspar Valckenaer, Dutch classical scholar (d. 1785)
  • June 12
  • June 13Anna Wilhelmine of Anhalt-Dessau, German noblewoman (d. 1780)
  • June 15John Blennerhassett, Anglo-Irish politician (d. 1763)
  • June 18Harry Grey, 4th Earl of Stamford, British earl, politician (d. 1768)
  • June 25Joseph Foullon de Dou��, French politician and a Controller-General of Finances under Louis XVI (d. 1789)
  • June 29Pedro Antonio de Cevallos, Spanish military Governor of Buenos Aires between 1757 and 1766 (d. 1778)
  • July 2Samuel Finley, American clergyman and educator (d. 1766)
  • July 4
  • July 11Jean-Joseph Balechou, French artist (d. 1765)
  • July 14Caterina Sagredo Barbarigo, Venetian aristocrat and salon holder (d. 1772)
  • July 16Charles, Prince of Soubise, Marshal of France (d. 1787)
  • July 17Fredericka of Saxe-Gotha-Altenburg, German noblewoman member of the House of Wettin and by marriage Duchess of Saxe-Weissenfels (d. 1775)
  • July 26Jakob van der Schley, Dutch engraver (d. 1779)
  • August 5Charlotte Sophie of Aldenburg, German sovereign (d. 1800)
  • August 6Luc de Clapiers, marquis de Vauvenargues, French writer (d. 1747)
  • August 18Cyrus Trapaud, British Army general (d. 1801)
  • August 25Luis González Velázquez, Spanish painter (d. 1763)
  • September 5Ignác Raab, Czech artist (d. 1787)
  • September 15Jean-Baptiste Vaquette de Gribeauval, French artillery officer and engineer who revolutionized French cannon (d. 1789)
  • September 19
  • September 22Jean-Étienne Guettard, French scientist (d. 1786)
  • September 25Princess Victoria Charlotte of Anhalt-Zeitz-Hoym, Margravine of Brandenburg-Bayreuth (d. 1772)
  • September 26Lord George Graham, Royal Navy officer and MP (d. 1747)
  • October 1Richard Jago, English clergyman poet and minor landscape gardener from Warwickshire (d. 1781)
  • October 2Domenico Caracciolo, Italian politician (d. 1789)
  • October 5
    • John Hustler, English Quaker industrialist (d. 1790)
    • Victor de Riqueti, marquis de Mirabeau, French economist of the Physiocratic school (d. 1789)
  • October 6Antoine-Gabriel-François Benoist, soldier in the French army, served in North America (d. 1776)
  • October 16Joseph Allegranza, Historian, archaeologist, antiquary (d. 1785)
  • October 23Peter II of Russia, Emperor of Russia (d. 1730)
  • October 29Aaron Cleveland, American clergyman (d. 1757)
  • November 5
    • John Brown, English divine and author (d. 1766)
    • Felix of Nicosia, Cypriot Catholic saint (d. 1787)
    • Johann Georg Wille, German engraver (d. 1808)
  • November 6Heneage Finch, 3rd Earl of Aylesford, Member of the Parliament of Great Britain (d. 1777)
  • November 8Elisabeth Christine of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel-Bevern, Crown Princess of Prussia (d. 1797)
  • November 9Edward Bligh, 2nd Earl of Darnley, British noble (d. 1747)
  • November 12Kajetan Sołtyk, Polish Catholic priest (d. 1788)
  • November 13Dorothea Erxleben, first German female physician (d. 1762)
  • November 16Girolamo Abos, Maltese-Italian composer (d. 1760)
  • November 17Sir Danvers Osborn, 3rd Baronet, British politician and colonial governor (d. 1753)
  • November 19Bertrand Philip, Count of Gronsveld, Dutch diplomat (d. 1772)
  • November 20Pierre Charles Le Monnier, French astronomer (d. 1799)
  • November 24Anna Nitschmann, German poet (d. 1760)
  • November 26Jean-Charles Gervaise de Latouche, French writer (d. 1782)
  • November 27Johann Gottlob Leidenfrost, German physician (d. 1794)
  • November 30
    • Johann Philipp Bethmann, German merchant and banker (d. 1793)
    • Johan Jacob Bruun, Danish artist (d. 1789)
  • December 4Abraham Drake, New Hampshire politician (d. 1781)
  • December 9Joseph Marie Terray, Controller-General of Finances during the reign of Louis XV of France (d. 1778)
  • December 11Johann Valentin Tischbein, German painter (d. 1768)
  • December 12Gennaro Manna, Italian composer (d. 1779)
  • December 18Johan Heinrich Becker, German physician and chemist who settled in Norway (d. 1761)
  • December 21
    • Tommaso Gherardini, Italian painter (d. 1797)
    • Gottlieb Heinrich Totleben, German noble (d. 1773)
    • François-Vincent Toussaint, French writer most famous for Les Mœurs (The Manners) (d. 1772)
  • December 27Philippe de Noailles, Marshal of France (d. 1794)
  • December 30Thomas Watson, 3rd Earl of Rockingham, British politician (d. 1746)
  • December 31Nicolas-Sylvestre Bergier, French Catholic theologian (d. 1790)

1716

  • January 1Joshua Loring, colonial American captain in British service (d. 1781)
  • January 4Aaron Burr, Sr., President of Princeton University (d. 1757)
  • January 11Edmund Sheffield, 2nd Duke of Buckingham and Normanby, English nobleman (d. 1735)
  • January 12Antonio de Ulloa, Spanish general and scientist (d. 1795)
  • January 15
Charles III of Spain
  • January 20
    • King Charles III of Spain (d. 1788)
    • Jean-Jacques Barthélemy, French writer and numismatist (d. 1795)
    • Franz Wilhelm Rabaliatti, German architect (d. 1782)
  • January 26George Germain, 1st Viscount Sackville, British Army general (d. 1785)
  • January 30Carl Fredrik Adelcrantz, Swedish architect and civil servant (d. 1796)
  • February 2David Graeme, British Army general (d. 1797)
  • February 4José Solís Folch de Cardona, Spanish colonial governor (d. 1770)
  • February 8Pasquale Cafaro, Italian composer (d. 1787)
  • February 9Mary Palmer, English writer (d. 1794)
  • February 23Antoine-Joseph Pernety, French writer (d. 1796)
  • March 6Pehr Kalm, Finnish scientist (d. 1779)
  • March 13Princess Philippine Charlotte of Prussia (d. 1801)
  • March 18Friedrich Wilhelm, Graf von Wylich und Lottum, Prussian army officer (d. 1774)
  • March 19Guillaume Coustou the Younger, French artist (d. 1777)
  • March 21Josef Seger, Czech composer and organist (d. 1782)
  • April 1Morgan Rhys, Welsh hymn-writer (d. 1779)
  • April 5Jeremiah Theus, American artist (d. 1774)
  • April 12Felice Giardini, Italian composer, violinist (d. 1796)
  • April 24Johann Georg Weishaupt, German lawyer (d. 1753)
  • May 2Infante Carlos of Portugal, Portuguese infante (prince) (d. 1736)
  • May 8James Wright, Governor of Georgia (d. 1785)
  • May 20Friedrich Samuel Bock, German philosopher and theologian (d. 1785)
  • May 24Constantine, Landgrave of Hesse-Rotenburg (d. 1778)
  • May 28Sir Robert Burdett, 4th Baronet, British politician and member of the English gentry (d. 1797)
  • May 29Louis-Jean-Marie Daubenton, French scientist (d. 1799)
  • June 10Carl Gustaf Ekeberg, Swedish explorer (d. 1784)
  • June 18
    • Charles Edzard, Prince of East Frisia (d. 1744)
    • Joseph-Marie Vien, French painter (d. 1809)
  • June 23Fletcher Norton, 1st Baron Grantley (d. 1789)
  • June 25Johann Baptist Babel, Swiss sculptor (d. 1799)
  • June 26Charles-Nicolas d'Oultremont, Roman Catholic bishop (d. 1771)
  • June 27Louise Diane d'Orléans, last child of Philippe II, Duke of Orleans (d. 1736)
  • July 3Philipp Gotthard von Schaffgotsch, German Prince-Bishop (d. 1795)
  • July 14Michael Schlatter, American clergyman (d. 1790)
  • July 17William Errington, English priest (d. 1768)
  • July 22Jan Jakub Zamoyski, Polish noble (d. 1790)
  • August 2Richard Edgcumbe, 2nd Baron Edgcumbe, British baron, politician (d. 1761)
  • August 4Sir John Dashwood-King, 3rd Baronet, English country gentleman (d. 1793)
  • August 8
  • August 15Karl Joseph von Firmian, Austrian diplomat (d. 1782)
  • August 18Johan Maurits Mohr, Dutch-German pastor and astronomer (d. 1775)
Lancelot Brown
  • August 30Capability Brown, English landscape architect (d. 1783)
  • September 2Jacques-Nicolas Tardieu, French engraver (d. 1791)
  • September 6Charles Bennet, 3rd Earl of Tankerville, British Earl (d. 1767)
  • September 16Angelo Maria Amorevoli, Italian musician (d. 1798)
  • September 19Jan Jacob Schultens, Dutch linguist (d. 1788)
  • October 1Benjamin Waller, American politician (d. 1786)
  • October 3Giovanni Battista Beccaria, Italian physicist (d. 1781)
  • October 4James Lind, Scottish physician (d. 1794)
  • October 5Alexei Senyavin, Russian admiral (d. 1797)
  • October 6George Montagu-Dunk, 2nd Earl of Halifax, British statesman (d. 1771)
  • October 8Gaspar of Braganza, Archbishop of Braga, Portuguese clergyman (d. 1780)
  • October 16Lord Augustus FitzRoy, Royal Navy officer during the War of the Austrian Succession (d. 1741)
  • October 26Charles Christian Erdmann, Duke of Württemberg-Oels (d. 1792)
  • November 1
    • William Foye, Canadian politician (d. 1771)
    • Joseph Dinouart, French preacher (d. 1786)
  • November 4Wilhelm von Knyphausen, Prussian soldier (d. 1800)
  • November 16John Monro, British physician of Bethlem Hospital (d. 1791)
  • November 26Elizabeth Percy, Duchess of Northumberland, British duchess; Lady of the Bedchamber (d. 1776)
  • December 1Étienne Maurice Falconet, French artist (d. 1791)
  • December 7Henry Ernest of Stolberg-Wernigerode, German politician, canon, provost and author of numerous hymns (d. 1778)
  • December 12Leopoldine Marie of Anhalt-Dessau, Margravine of Brandenburg-Schwedt (d. 1782)
  • December 16
    • Johann Rudolf Tschiffeli, Swiss agronomist (d. 1780)
    • Louis Jules Mancini Mazarini, French diplomat and writer (d. 1798)
  • December 23Johann Heinrich Rolle, German baroque composer (d. 1785)
  • December 25Johann Jakob Reiske, German scholar (d. 1774)
  • December 26
  • December 27Leonardo Ximenes, Italian mathematician (d. 1786)
  • approximate date
    • Arnarsaq, Inuit translator, interpreter and missionary (d. after 1771)
    • Catherine Théot, French visionary (d. 1794)
    • Anna Margareta Salmelin, Finnish prisoner of war (d. 1789)

1717

  • January 2Edward Seymour, 9th Duke of Somerset, English nobleman, son of Edward Seymour, 8th Duke of Somerset and Mary Webb (d. 1792)
  • January 5William Barrington, 2nd Viscount Barrington, English statesman (d. 1793)
  • January 18Jean-François-Marie de Surville, French trader and navigator (d. 1770)
  • January 21Antonio María de Bucareli y Ursúa, Spanish military officer (d. 1779)
  • January 23Benjamin Beddome, English Baptist minister and hymnist (d. 1795)
  • January 28Mustafa III, Ottoman Sultan (d. 1773)
  • January 29Jeffrey Amherst, 1st Baron Amherst, British soldier and conqueror of Quebec (d. 1797)
  • February 2Ernst Gideon Freiherr von Laudon, Austrian field marshal (d. 1790)
  • February 3Nicholas Cooke, first Governor of Rhode Island (d. 1782)
  • c. February 11William Williams Pantycelyn, Welsh hymn-writer, a key leader of the 18th century Methodist revival (d. 1791)
  • February 17Adam Friedrich Oeser, German etcher (d. 1799)
  • February 19David Garrick, English actor (d. 1779)
  • February 27Johann David Michaelis, German biblical scholar and teacher (d. 1791)
  • April 6Luis de Unzaga, American-Spanish governor (d. 1793)
  • AprilPieter Barbiers, Dutch artist (d. 1780)
  • April 9Georg Matthias Monn, Austrian composer (d. 1750)
  • April 10Isaac de Pinto, Dutch Jew of Portuguese origin, investor and scholar (d. 1787)
  • May 8Charles Guillaume Le Normant d'Étiolles, French official, husband of Madame de Pompadour (d. 1799)
Maria Theresa of Austria
  • May 13Maria Theresa of Austria, Archduchess of Austria and Queen of Hungary and Bohemia, consort of the Holy Roman Emperor (d. 1780)
  • June 5Emanuel Mendez da Costa, English botanist (d. 1791)
  • June 8John Collins, Continental Congressman, third Governor of Rhode Island (d. 1795)
  • June 19Johann Stamitz, Czech-born composer (d. 1757)
  • June 20Jacques Saly, French sculptor (d. 1776)
  • June 27Louis Guillaume Lemonnier, French botanist (d. 1799)
  • June 28Matthew Stewart, Scottish mathematician (d. 1785)
  • July 5Peter III of Portugal, consort of Queen Maria I of Portugal (d. 1786)
  • AugustSophie de Lafont, Russian educator (d. 1797)
  • August 13Louis François, Prince of Conti, French nobleman, military leader (d. 1776)
  • August 15
    • Louis Carrogis Carmontelle, French dramatist (d. 1806)
    • John Metcalf, "Blind Jack of Knaresborough", English roadbuilder (d. 1810)
  • September 4Job Orton, English dissenting minister (d. 1783)
  • September 7
    • Agui, Chinese nobleman, general for the Ch'ing dynasty (d. 1797)
    • Martin Dobrizhoffer, Austrian Jesuit missionary (d. 1791)
  • September 22Pehr Wilhelm Wargentin, Swedish astronomer (d. 1783)
  • September 24Horace Walpole, English art historian, man of letters, antiquarian and politician (d. 1797)
  • September 28William Nassau de Zuylestein, 4th Earl of Rochford, British diplomat and statesman (d. 1781)
  • OctoberJames Paine, English architect (d. 1789)
  • October 5Marie-Anne de Mailly-Nesle duchess de Châteauroux, French mistress of King Louis XV of France (d. 1744)
  • October 13John Armstrong, American civil engineer, major general in the Revolutionary War (d. 1795)
  • October 30Jonathan Hornblower, English pioneer of steam power (d. 1780)
  • November 13Prince George William of Great Britain, member of the British Royal Family (d. 1718)
  • November 16Jean le Rond d'Alembert, French mathematician and encyclopædist (d. 1783)
  • November 17Caroline Townshend, 1st Baroness Greenwich, English peeress (d. 1794)
  • November 23Antoine Guenée, French priest and Christian apologist (d. 1803)
  • November 25Alexander Sumarokov, Russian poet and playwright (d. 1777)
Johann Joachim Winckelmann
  • December 9Johann Joachim Winckelmann, German classical scholar and archaeologist (d. 1768)
  • December 16Elizabeth Carter, English writer (d. 1806)[104]
  • December 25George Augustus Eliott, 1st Baron Heathfield, British army officer (d. 1790)
  • December 27Pope Pius VI, born Count Giovanni Angelo Braschi, Italian pontiff (d. 1799)
  • December 28Johann Heinrich Gottlob Justi, leading German Kameralist in the 18th century (d. 1771)
  • December 29Charles Gravier, comte de Vergennes, French statesman and diplomat (d. 1785)
  • date unknown
    • Giambattista Almici, Italian jurist (d. 1793)
    • Claude Humbert Piarron de Chamousset, French philanthropist (d. 1773)
    • Gottlieb Sigmund Gruner, Swiss cartographer and geologist (d. 1778)
    • Elimelech of Lizhensk, Polish Orthodox Jewish rabbi, one of the great founding rebbes of Hasidic Judaism (d. 1787)
    • Henry Middleton, South Carolina plantation owner, second President of the Continental Congress (d. 1784)
    • Lewis Nicola, Irish-born officer in the American army during the American Revolutionary War (d. 1807)
    • Anne Steele ("Theodosia"), English Baptist hymn-writer (d. 1778)
    • Molla Panah Vagif, Azerbaijani poet (d. 1797)

1718

Infanta Mariana Victoria of Spain
  • January 7Israel Putnam, American Revolutionary War general (d. 1790)
  • January 29Paul Rabaut, French Huguenot pastor (d. 1794)
  • February 17Matthew Tilghman, American delegate to the Continental Congress (d. 1790)
  • March 31Infanta Mariana Victoria of Spain, queen regent of Portugal (d. 1781)
  • April 4Benjamin Kennicott, English churchman and Hebrew scholar (d. 1783)
  • April 7Hugh Blair, Scottish preacher and man of letters (d. 1800)
  • April 20David Brainerd, American missionary (d. 1747)
  • April 24Nathaniel Hone, Irish-born painter (d. 1784)
  • April 26Esek Hopkins, American Revolutionary War admiral (d. 1802)
  • April 27Thomas Lewis, Irish-born Virginia settler (d. 1790)
  • May 16Maria Gaetana Agnesi, Italian mathematician (d. 1799)
  • May 17Robert Darcy, 4th Earl of Holderness, English diplomat and politician (d. 1778)
  • May 23William Hunter, Scottish anatomist (d. 1783)
  • May 30Wills Hill, 1st Marquess of Downshire, English politician (d. 1793)
  • May 31Jacob Christian Schäffer, German inventor, botanist and professor (d. 1790)
  • June 5Thomas Chippendale, English furniture maker (d. 1779)
  • June 17George Howard, British field marshal (d. 1796)
  • July 5Francis Seymour-Conway, 1st Marquess of Hertford, Viceroy of Ireland (d. 1794)
  • July 18Saverio Bettinelli, Italian writer (d. 1808)
  • July 31John Canton, English physicist (d. 1772)
  • August 11Frederick Haldimand, Swiss-born British colonial governor (d. 1791)
  • September 18Nikita Ivanovich Panin, Russian statesman (d. 1783)
  • October 19Victor-François, 2nd duc de Broglie, Marshal of France (d. 1804)
  • October 2Louisa Catharina Harkort, German ironmaster (d. 1795)
  • October 28Ignacije Szentmartony, Croatian Jesuit missionary and geographer (d. 1793)
  • November 3John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, English statesman (d. 1792)
  • November 28Hedvig Charlotta Nordenflycht, Swedish writer (d. 1763)
  • date unknown

1719

  • January 2Jacques-Alexandre Laffon de Ladebat, French shipbuilder and merchant (d. 1797)
  • January 3
    • Francisco José Freire, Portuguese historian, philologist (d. 1773)
    • Friedrich Karl Joseph von Erthal, Archbishop of Mainz (d. 1802)
  • January 17
    • William Vernon, American merchant (d. 1806)
    • Samuel Enderby, English whale oil merchant known for sponsoring Arctic exploration (d. 1797)
  • January 22Henry Paget, 2nd Earl of Uxbridge (d. 1769)
  • January 23John Landen, English mathematician (d. 1790)
  • January 28Johann Elias Schlegel, German critic and poet (d. 1749)
  • February 6Alberto Pullicino, Maltese painter (d. 1759)
  • March 4George Pigot, 1st Baron Pigot, British governor of Madras (d. 1777)
  • March 13John Griffin, 4th Baron Howard de Walden, British field marshal (d. 1797)
  • April 2Johann Wilhelm Ludwig Gleim, German poet (d. 1803)
  • April 9Sir Edward Blackett, 4th Baronet, English politician (d. 1804)
  • April 24Giuseppe Marc'Antonio Baretti, Italian literary critic (d. 1789)
  • May 30Roger Newdigate, English politician, antiquities collector (d. 1806)
  • June 28Étienne François, duc de Choiseul, French statesman (d. 1785)
  • July 4Michel-Jean Sedaine, French dramatist (d. 1797)
  • August 4Johann Gottlob Lehmann, German mineralogist, geologist (d. 1767)
  • August 20
  • August 25Charles-Amédée-Philippe van Loo, French painter (d. 1795)
  • September 6Somerset Hamilton Butler, 1st Earl of Carrick (d. 1754)
  • September 11Tanuma Okitsugu, Japanese government official (d. 1788)
  • September 27Abraham Gotthelf Kästner, German mathematician (d. 1800)
  • October 13Marco Coltellini, Italian librettist (d. 1777)
  • October 17Jacques Cazotte, French writer (d. 1792)
  • October 20Gottfried Achenwall, German statistician (d. 1772)
  • November 6Louis-Antoine Caraccioli, French writer (d. 1803)
  • November 14Leopold Mozart, German/Austrian composer, father of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, and Maria Anna Mozart (Nannerl) (d. 1787)
  • November 23Spranger Barry, Irish actor (d. 1777)
Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha
  • November 30Princess Augusta of Saxe-Gotha, Princess of Wales (d. 1772)
  • December 15Ludwig IX, Landgrave of Hesse-Darmstadt (d. 1790)
  • date unknown
    • William Bradford, American revolutionary and printer (d. 1791)
    • Dominic Serres, French-born painter (d. 1793)
    • Thomas Sheridan, Irish actor (d. 1788)
    • Marie Marguerite Bihéron, French anatomist (d. 1795)
    • Thomas Elfe, successful colonial period furniture craftsman in Charleston, South Carolina (d. 1775)

Deaths[]

1710

  • January 4Sir Richard Newdigate, 2nd Baronet, English landowner (b. 1644)
  • January 6Thomas Fairfax, 5th Lord Fairfax of Cameron, English politician (b. 1657)
  • January 16Emperor Higashiyama of Japan (b. 1675)
  • January 28Philip Verheyen, Flemish physician (b. 1648)
  • January 21
    • John Ashburnham, 1st Baron Ashburnham, English politician (b. 1656)
    • Johann Georg Gichtel, German mystic (b. 1638)
  • January 30
  • February 16Esprit Fléchier, French writer and Bishop of Nîmes (b. 1632)
  • February 17George Bull, English theologian and Bishop of St David's (b. 1634)
  • February 20Johan Vibe, Norwegian noble (b. 1637)
  • February 25Daniel Greysolon, Sieur du Lhut, French explorer (b. c. 1639)
  • March 4Louis III, Prince of Condé (b. 1668)
  • March 5John Holt, English politician (b. 1642)
  • March 14Michel Bégon, French ancien regime official (b. 1638)
  • March 28Charles Fanshawe, 4th Viscount Fanshawe, English politician (b. 1643)
  • May 29John Dolben, British politician (b. 1662)
  • April 7Sir Richard Bulkeley, 2nd Baronet of England (b. 1660)
  • April 28Thomas Betterton, English actor (b. c. 1635)
  • May 13Henry, Duke of Saxe-Römhild (b. 1650)
  • May 29Henri Basnage de Beauval, French historian, lexicographer (b. 1657)
  • June 1David Mitchell, British admiral (b. 1642)
  • June 4James Stuart, 1st Earl of Bute
  • June 7Louise de La Vallière, mistress of King Louis XIV of France (b. 1644)
  • July 2Domenico Freschi, Italian opera composer, Catholic priest (b. 1634)
  • July 12Robert Treat, American colonial leader (b. 1624)
  • July 25Gottfried Kirch, German astronomer, first 'Astronomer Royal' in Berlin (b. 1639)
  • September 19Ole Rømer, Danish astronomer (b. 1644)
  • September 22Jacques-René de Brisay de Denonville, Marquis de Denonville (b. 1637)
  • September 24Charles Berkeley, 2nd Earl of Berkeley, English diplomat (b. 1649)
  • September 26Sir Robert Kemp, 2nd Baronet, English politician (b. 1627)
  • October 19Suzanne Henriette of Lorraine, French noblewoman, Duchess of Mantua and Montferrat (b. 1686)
  • November 3Maria de Croll, Swedish vocalist
  • November 21Bernardo Pasquini, Italian composer of operas (b. 1637)
  • December 15Albert Anton, Prince of Schwarzburg-Rudolstadt (b. 1641)
  • December 18Petrus Codde, Dutch cleric, first Old Catholic bishop (b. 1648)
  • date unknownAnna Maria Thelott, Swedish artist (b. 1683)

1711

  • January 6Philips van Almonde, Dutch admiral (b. 1646)
Joseph Vaz
  • January 16 – Blessed Joseph Vaz, Apostle of Ceylon (b. 1651)
  • January 10John Manners, 1st Duke of Rutland, English nobleman and politician (b. 1638)
  • January 21Augustinus Terwesten, 18th century painter from the Northern Netherlands (b. 1649)
  • January 26Luis Francisco de la Cerda, Spanish noble, politician (b. 1660)
  • February 3Francesco Maria de' Medici, Duke of Rovere and Montefeltro, Italian Catholic cardinal (b. 1660)
  • March 3Charles, Landgrave of Hesse-Wanfried (1676–1711) (b. 1649)
  • March 13Nicolas Boileau-Despréaux, French poet and critic (b. 1636)
  • March 15Eusebio Kino, Italian Catholic missionary (b. 1645)
  • March 19Thomas Ken, English bishop and hymn-writer (b. 1637)
  • March 29Gabriel Gerberon, French Jansenist monk (b. 1628)
  • April 9Charles Duncombe, British politician (b. 1648)
  • April 14Louis, Grand Dauphin, son of Louis XIV of France (b. 1661)
  • April 17Joseph I, Holy Roman Emperor (b. 1678)
  • May 2Laurence Hyde, 1st Earl of Rochester, English statesman (b. 1641)
  • June 7Henry Dodwell, Irish theologian (b. 1641)
  • June 8Katharyne Lescailje, Dutch writer (b. 1649)
  • June 16Maria Amalia of Courland, Landgravine of Hesse-Kassel (b. 1653)
  • July 6James Douglas, 2nd Duke of Queensberry, Scottish politician (b. 1662)
  • July 15John Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle, England (b. 1662)
  • July 18Richard Verney, 11th Baron Willoughby de Broke, English baron (b. 1622)
  • July 19Date Tsunamune, Japanese daimyō of Sendai han (b. 1640)
  • August 22Louis François, duc de Boufflers, Marshal of France (b. 1644)
  • August 25Edward Villiers, 1st Earl of Jersey, English politician (b. c. 1656)
  • August 30Pieter Spierinckx, Flemish painter (b. 1635)
  • August 31Jean Le Pelletier, French polygraph and alchemist (b. 1633)
  • September 3Élisabeth Sophie Chéron, French musician (b. 1648)
  • September 14Claude Aveneau, French missionary (b. 1650)
  • September 17Giovanni Maria Gabrielli, Italian Catholic cardinal (b. 1654)
  • September 19Davide Cocco Palmieri, Italian Catholic bishop (b. 1632)
  • October 5Paulet St John, 3rd Earl of Bolingbroke, English politician (b. 1634)
  • October 14Tewoflos, Emperor of Ethiopia
  • October 30Wilhelmus à Brakel, Dutch theologian (b. 1635)
  • November 3
    • John Ernest Grabe, German-born Anglican theologian (b. 1666)
    • Giordano Vitale, Italian mathematician (b. 1633)
  • Date unknownCille Gad, Norwegian poet (b. 1675)

1712

  • January 5Richard Jones, 1st Earl of Ranelagh, Irish politician (b. 1641)
  • January 10John Houblon, first Governor of the Bank of England (1694-1697) (b. 1632)
  • February 2Martin Lister, English naturalist, physician (b. c. 1638)
  • February 12Marie Adélaïde of Savoy, wife of Louis, Dauphin of France, Duke of Burgundy (b. 1685)
  • February 18Louis, duc de Bourgogne, heir to the throne of France (b. 1682)
  • February 22Nicolas Catinat, French military commander and Marshal of France under Louis XIV (b. 1637)
  • February 27Bahadur Shah I, Mughal Emperor of India (b. 1643)
  • March 2Lorenzo Magalotti, Italian philosopher (b. 1637)
  • March 18Azim-ush-Shan, Mughal prince (b. 1664)
  • March 25Nehemiah Grew, English naturalist (b. 1641)
Jan van der Heyden
  • March 28Jan van der Heyden, Dutch painter (b. 1637)
  • March 30Johann Friedrich Mayer, German Lutheran theologian (b. 1650)
  • April 9Giuseppe Archinto, Italian cardinal, Archbishop of Milan (b. 1651)
  • April 11Richard Simon, French Biblical critic (b. 1638)
  • April 27John Crowne, English playwright (b. 1641)
  • April 29Juan Bautista Cabanilles, Spanish composer (b. 1644)
  • April 30Philipp van Limborch, Dutch Protestant theologian (b. 1633)
  • May 6Henric Piccardt, Dutch lawyer (b. 1636)
  • May 20Christian Ernst, Margrave of Brandenburg-Bayreuth (1655–1712) (b. 1644)
  • June 10Christian Franz Paullini, German physician (b. 1643)
  • June 11Louis Joseph, Duke of Vendôme, French military commander (b. 1654)
  • June 24Simon van der Stel, last Commander and first Governor of the Cape Colony (b. 1639)
  • July – Baltacı Mehmet Pasha, Ottoman (Turkish) grand vizier (b. 1662)
  • July 1William King, English poet (b. 1663)
  • July 4Johann Kasimir Kolbe von Wartenberg, Prussian politician (b. 1643)
Richard Cromwell
  • July 12Richard Cromwell, Lord Protector of England, Scotland, and Ireland (b. 1626)
  • July 13Isaac de Porthau, Gascon black musketeer of the Maison du Roi (b. 1617)
  • July 28Theodorus Janssonius van Almeloveen, Dutch classical scholar (b. 1657)
  • July 26Thomas Osborne, 1st Duke of Leeds, English statesman (b. 1631)
  • August 3Joshua Barnes, English scholar (b. 1654)
  • August 7Friedrich Wilhelm Zachow, German composer (b. 1663)
  • August 11Magdalena Sibylla of Hesse-Darmstadt, German regent (b. 1652)
  • August 18Richard Savage, 4th Earl Rivers, English soldier (b. c. 1660)
  • August 26Sebastian Anton Scherer, German organist and composer (b. 1631)
  • August 29Gregory King, English statistician (b. 1648)
  • September 9Edward Hyde, Governor of North Carolina (b. c. 1650)
Giovanni Domenico Cassini
  • September 14Giovanni Domenico Cassini, Italian-French astronomer and engineer (b. 1625)
  • September 15Sidney Godolphin, 1st Earl of Godolphin, English politician (b. c.1645)
  • September 23Thomas Halyburton, Scottish theologian (b. 1674)
  • October 4Philip Reinhard, Count of Hanau-Münzenberg (b. 1664)
  • October 25Ōkubo Tadatomo, Japanese daimyō (b. 1632)
  • October 30Daniel Erich, German organist and composer (b. 1649)
  • November 5Charles Honoré d'Albert, duc de Luynes, French noble (b. 1646)
  • November 12Tokugawa Ienobu, Japanese Edo shōgun (b. 1662)
  • November 15
    • James Hamilton, 4th Duke of Hamilton, Scottish peer (b. 1658)
    • Charles Mohun, 4th Baron Mohun, English politician (b. 1675)
  • November 19Wolfgang Carl Briegel, German organist and composer (b. 1626)
  • November 20Humphrey Humphreys, British bishop (b. 1648)
  • November 26Pietro Dandini, Italian painter (b. 1646)
  • November 30Sir Henry Furnese, 1st Baronet, English merchant and politician (b. 1658)

1713

  • January 1Giuseppe Maria Tomasi, Sicilian saint (b. 1649)
  • January 5Jean Chardin, French jeweller, traveller (b. 1643)
  • January 8Arcangelo Corelli, Italian composer (b. 1653)
  • January 11Pierre Jurieu, French Protestant leader (b. 1637)
  • January 12John Vaughan, 3rd Earl of Carbery, Governor of Jamaica, President of the British Royal Society (b. 1639)
  • January 20Pavao Ritter Vitezović, Croatian historian (b. 1652)
Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 3rd Earl of Shaftesbury
Frederick I of Prussia
  • February 25 – King Frederick I of Prussia (b. 1657)
  • February 26William Paget, 6th Baron Paget, English peer and ambassador (b. 1637)
  • March 15Wolfgang William Romer, Dutch military engineer (b. 1640)
  • March 18Juraj Jánošík, the Slovak Robin Hood (executed)
  • March 24Toussaint de Forbin-Janson, French Catholic cardinal and Bishop of Beauvais (b. 1631)
  • March 26
  • March 30Govert Bidloo, Dutch physician, anatomist, poet and playwright (b. 1649)
  • April 3Henri, Count of Brionne, French noble (b. 1661)
  • May 20Thomas Sprat, English minister (b. 1635)
  • July 7Henry Compton, Bishop of Oxford, privy councillor (b. 1632)
  • August 4William Cave, English divine (b. 1637)
  • August 26 (bur.)Denis Papin, French inventor (b. 1647)
  • October 15Johann Michael Feuchtmayer the Elder, German artist (b. 1666)
  • October 18Tripo Kokolja, Venetian painter (b. 1661)
  • October 20Archibald Pitcairne, Scottish physician (b. 1652)
  • October 28Paolo Lorenzani, Italian composer (b. 1640)
  • October 31Ferdinando de' Medici, Grand Prince of Tuscany (b. 1663)
  • November 6Franz Karl of Auersperg, Prince of Auersperg, Duke of Münsterberg (1705-1713) (b. 1660)
  • November 7Elizabeth Barry, English actress (b. 1658)
  • November 17Abraham van Riebeeck, Governor-General of the Dutch East Indies (b. 1653)
  • December 14Thomas Rymer, English historian (b. 1641)
  • December 15Carlo Maratta, Italian painter (b. 1625)
  • December 18Frederick Heinrich of Saxe-Zeitz-Pegau-Neustadt (b. 1668)
  • December 31Edward Proger, Member of Parliament for Brecknockshire (b. 1621)
  • date unknown
    • Basil Lazarus III, Syriac Orthodox Maphrian of the East[105]
    • Thomas Ellwood, English religious writer (b. 1639)

1714

Prince Mamia III Gurieli
Eugen Alexander Franz
Charles, Duke of Berry
Anne, Queen of Great Britain
Christoffel Pierson
Pedro, Prince of Brazil
  • January 4Atto Melani, Italian opera singer (b. 1626)
  • January 5Mamia III Gurieli, Prince of Guria
  • January 10Constantin Ranst de Jonge, son of Hieronimus Rans(t) (1607–1660) (b. 1635)
  • January 17Gabriel Álvarez de Toledo, Royal Librarian of King Felipe V of Spain (b. 1662)
  • February 2John Sharp, English Archbishop of Yorkshire (b. 1643)
  • February 21Eugen Alexander Franz, 1st Prince of Thurn and Taxis (b. 1652)
  • February 24Edmund Andros, English governor in North America (b. 1637)
  • March 3Hans Carl von Carlowitz, German forester (b. 1645)
  • March 13John Talbot of Lacock, British politician and general (b. 1630)
  • March 27
  • April 10Samuel Carpenter, Deputy Governor of colonial Pennsylvania (b. 1649)
  • April 15Esther Liebmann, German banker (b. 1649)
  • April 17
    • Philipp Heinrich Erlebach, German composer (b. 1657)[106]
    • Haquin Spegel, Swedish bishop (b. 1645)
  • May 5Charles, Duke of Berry, grandson of Louis XIV of France (b. 1686)
  • May 15Roger Elliott, British general and Governor of Gibraltar (b. c. 1665)
  • May 18Ivan Botsis, Russian admiral of Greek origin (unknown birth date)
  • May 24Henry Somerset, 2nd Duke of Beaufort (b. 1684)
  • May 27George Saunderson, 5th Viscount Castleton, English Member of Parliament (b. 1631)
  • May 30Gottfried Arnold, German church historian (b. 1666)
  • June 8 – Electress Sophia of Hanover, heir to the throne of Great Britain (b. 1630)
  • June 22Matthew Henry, English non-conformist minister (b. 1662)
  • June 28Daniel Papebroch, Flemish Jesuit hagiographer (b. 1628)
  • July 4Antonio Magliabechi, Italian librarian (b. 1633)
  • August 1Anne, Queen of Great Britain (b. 1665)[107]
  • August 11Christoffel Pierson, Dutch painter (b. 1631)
  • August 26Constantin Brâncoveanu, Prince of Wallachia (b. 1654)
  • August 26Edward Fowler, English Bishop of Gloucester (b. 1632)
  • September 20Anna Waser, Swiss painter (b. 1678)
  • September 27Thomas Britton, English concert promoter (b. 1644)
  • OctoberRaja Sitaram Ray, autonomous king, vassal of the Mughal Empire
  • October 3Jeanne Le Ber, religious recluse in New France (b. 1662)
  • October 5Kaibara Ekiken, Japanese philosopher (b. 1630)
  • October 10Pierre Le Pesant, sieur de Boisguilbert, French economist (b. 1646)
  • October 25Sébastien Leclerc, French painter (b. 1637)
  • October 29Pedro, Prince of Brazil, second child of John V of Portugal and Maria Ana of Austria (b. 1712)
  • November 5Bernardino Ramazzini, Italian physician (b. 1633)
  • November 7Charles Davenant, English economist, politician and pamphleteer (b. 1656)[108]
  • November 8Filippo II Colonna, Italian noble (b. 1663)
  • November 29Jerolim Kavanjin, Croatian poet (b. 1641)
  • December 10Anthony Günther, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst (b. 1653)
  • December 29Charles Churchill, British general (b. 1656)
  • December 30François Adhémar de Monteil, Comte de Grignan, French aristocrat (b. 1632)
  • date unknownJulianna Géczy, Hungarian heroine (b. 1680)

1715

  • January 7
  • January 29Bernard Lamy, French Oratorian mathematician and theologian (b. 1640)
  • January 27Caspar Neumann, German professor and clergyman (b. 1648)
  • February 3Gottfried Vopelius, German academic (b. 1645)
  • February 4Martín de Ursúa, Spanish conquistador (b. 1653)
  • February 17Antoine Galland, French archaeologist (b. 1646)
  • February 19Domenico Egidio Rossi, Italian architect (b. 1659)
  • February 21Charles Calvert, 3rd Baron Baltimore, Colonial governor of Maryland (b. 1637)
  • February 25Pu Songling, Qing Dynasty Chinese writer (b. 1640)
  • March 2Cardinal de Bouillon, French Catholic cardinal (b. 1643)
  • March 17Gilbert Burnet, Scottish Bishop of Salisbury (b. 1643)
  • March 18William Fraser, 12th Lord Saltoun, (b.1654)
  • March 27August, Duke of Saxe-Merseburg-Zörbig, German prince (b. 1655)
Perizonius
  • April 6Perizonius, Dutch linguist (b. 1651)
  • April 16Benedict Calvert, 4th Baron Baltimore, Colonial governor of Maryland (b. 1679)
  • May 8Marie Mancini, Italian courtier, third of the five Mancini sisters (b. 1639)
  • May 19Charles Montagu, English Chancellor of the Exchequer (b. 1661)
  • May 21Pierre Magnol, French botanist (b. 1638)
  • May 30Roeloff Swartwout, American city founder in New York (b. 1634)
  • June 19Nicolas Lemery, French chemist (b. 1645)
  • June 25Jean-Baptiste du Casse, French admiral and buccaneer (b. 1646)
  • July 5Charles Ancillon, French Huguenot pastor (b. 1659)
  • July 28Jakub Kresa, Czech mathematician (b. 1648)
  • July 30Nahum Tate, Irish poet (b. 1652)
  • August 21Countess Johanna Magdalene of Hanau-Lichtenberg, German countess (b. 1660)
  • September 1François Girardon, French sculptor (b. 1628)
Louis XIV of France
  • September 1 – King Louis XIV of France (b. 1638)
  • September 24Wilhelm Homberg, Dutch alchemist (b. 1652)
  • October 13Nicolas Malebranche, French philosopher (b. 1638)
  • October 14Thomas Tenison, Archbishop of Canterbury (b. 1636)
  • October 15Humphry Ditton, English mathematician (b. 1675)
  • October 17Ernest, Duke of Saxe-Hildburghausen (b. 1655)
  • October 30Juliane Louise of East Frisia, Princess of East Frisia (b. 1657)
  • October 31Elisha Cooke, Sr., Massachusetts colonial politician and judge (b. 1637)
  • NovemberMirwais Hotak, Pashtun emir, and founder of the Hotaki Dynasty (b. 1673)
  • November 24Hedwig Eleonora of Holstein-Gottorp, queen consort of King Charles X of Sweden (b. 1636)
  • December 9Benedetto Gennari II, Italian painter (b. 1633)
  • December 15George Hickes, English minister and scholar (b. 1642)
  • December 28
    • William Carstares, Scottish clergyman (b. 1649)
    • Joanna Koerten, Dutch painter (b. 1650)
  • date unknownElizabeth Boutell, British stage actor (b. 1650)

1716

  • January 1William Wycherley, English playwright (b. 1641)[109]
  • January 18Sir Robert Burdett, 3rd Baronet, English politician (b. 1640)
  • January 30Marie Casimire Louise de La Grange d'Arquien, French-born Polish consort to King John III Sobieski (b. 1641)
  • February 2Juan Domingo de Zuñiga y Fonseca, Spanish Governor of the Habsburg Netherlands (b. 1640)
  • February 19Dorothe Engelbretsdotter, Norway's first professional female author (b. 1634)
  • March 26Johann Friedrich Gleditsch, German book publisher (b. 1653)
  • March 28John Vesey, Irish archbishop (b. 1638)
  • April 14Arthur Herbert, 1st Earl of Torrington, British admiral (b. c. 1648)
  • April 26John Somers, 1st Baron Somers, Lord Chancellor of England (b. 1651)
  • April 28 – Saint Louis de Montfort, author, True Devotion to Mary
  • April 29Sir Richard Myddelton, 3rd Baronet, English politician (b. 1655)
  • May 11Francis de Geronimo, Italian priest (b. 1642)
  • May 14Henry Oxburgh, executed Irish Jacobite leader
Painting by Ogata Kōrin.
  • June 2Ogata Kōrin, Japanese painter (b. c. 1657)
  • June 5Roger Cotes, English mathematician and philosopher (b. 1682)
  • June 8Johann Wilhelm, Elector Palatine (b. 1658)
  • June 9Banda Bahadur, Sikh military commander (executed) (b. 1670)
  • June 19Tokugawa Ietsugu, 7th Tokugawa shogunate of Japan (b. 1709)
  • June 28George FitzRoy, 1st Duke of Northumberland, English general (b. 1665)
  • July 8Robert South, English churchman (b. 1634)
  • July 9Joseph Sauveur, French mathematician (b. 1653)
  • July 14Edward Lee, 1st Earl of Lichfield, English peer (b. 1663)
  • July 26Paolo Alessandro Maffei, Italian antiquarian, humanist (b. 1653)
  • August 5Silahtar Ali Pasha, Ottoman (Turkish) grand vizier (b. 1667)
  • August 6Frederick Augustus, Duke of Württemberg-Neuenstadt (b. 1654)
  • September 25Johann Christoph Pez, German composer (b. 1664)
  • October 17Anne Hamilton, 3rd Duchess of Hamilton, Scottish peeress (b. 1631)
  • October 28Stephen Fox, English politician (b. 1627)
  • October 10Anton Egon, Prince of Fürstenberg-Heiligenberg, Governor of the Electorate of Saxony (b. 1656)
  • November 2Engelbert Kaempfer, German traveler, physician (b. 1651)
  • November 9Maria, Curaçaoan slave rebel leader
Gottfried Wilhelm Leibniz
  • November 14Gottfried Leibniz, German philosopher, scientist, and mathematician (b. 1646)
  • November 22Inaba Masamichi, Japanese daimyō (b. 1640)
  • November 26Nils Bielke, member of the High Council of Sweden (b. 1644)
  • November 29Ofspring Blackall, Bishop of Exeter (b. 1655)
  • December 13Charles de La Fosse, French painter (b. 1640)
  • December 14William Trumbull, English diplomat and politician (b. 1639)
  • date unknown
    • Stefano Erardi, Maltese painter (b. 1630)[110]
    • Lalla Aisha Mubarka, Empress of Morocco

1717

  • January 6Lambert Bos, Dutch scholar and critic (b. 1670)
  • January 7Empress Xiaohuizhang, second consort of the Qing dynasty Shunzhi Emperor of China (b. 1641)
  • January 13Maria Sibylla Merian, German-born Swiss naturalist and scientific illustrator, who studied plants and insects and made detailed paintings of them (b. 1647)
  • January 30John Hartstonge, Irish bishop (b. 1654)
Maria Sibylla Merian
  • February 18Giovanni Maria Morandi, Italian painter (b. 1622)
  • February 21Jan Dobrogost Krasiński, Polish nobleman (szlachcic) (b. 1639)
  • February 23Magnus Stenbock, Swedish military officer (b. 1664)
  • March 3Pierre Allix, French Protestant clergyman (b. 1641)
  • March 5François de Callières, French diplomat, member of the Académie française (b. 1645)
  • March 8Abraham Darby I, English ironmaster, first of that name of three generations of a Quaker family that was key to the development of the Industrial Revolution (b. 1678)
  • March 19John Campbell, 1st Earl of Breadalbane and Holland, Scottish royalist (b. 1636)
  • April 3Jacques Ozanam, French mathematician (b. 1640)
  • April 5Jean Jouvenet, French painter (b. 1647)
  • April 11Abraham ben Saul Broda, Bohemian Talmudist (b. c. 1640)
  • April 26
  • May 10John Hathorne, American magistrate (b. 1641)
  • May 17Bon Boullogne, French painter (b. 1649)
  • May 20John Trevor, Welsh lawyer and politician, Speaker of the House of Commons of England (b. 1637)
  • June 3Fernando de Alencastre, 1st Duke of Linares, Spanish nobleman and military officer (b. c. 1641)
Jeanne Guyon
  • June 9Jeanne Guyon, French mystic (b. 1648)
  • June 11Louis de Carrières, French priest and Bible commentator (b. 1662)
  • June 15Fabrizio Spada, Italian Catholic cardinal (b. 1643)
  • June 23John Verney, 1st Viscount Fermanagh, British politician (b. 1640)
  • July 1Princess Anna Sophie of Denmark, daughter of King Frederick III of Denmark (b. 1647)
  • July 17Juan María de Salvatierra, Milanese Jesuit missionary to the Americas (b. 1648)
  • AugustWilliam Cochrane, Scottish MP in the Parliament of Great Britain
  • August 10Nicolaes Witsen, Mayor of Amsterdam, Netherlands (b. 1641)
  • August 16William Blathwayt, English civil servant and politician (b. 1649)
  • August 30William Lloyd, English bishop (b. 1627)
  • September 17Robert Cotton, English politician (born 1644)
  • OctoberPhilippe Pastour de Costebelle, French naval officer and Governor of Newfoundland (b. 1661)
  • October 22Henry Luttrell, Irish army officer, Jacobite commander (b. c. 1655; shot and mortally wounded in his sedan chair in Dublin)
  • October 26Catherine Sedley, Countess of Dorchester, English mistress of James II of England (b. 1657)
  • November 16Hester Davenport, English stage actress (b. 1642)
  • November 21Jean-Baptiste Santerre, French painter (b. 1650)
  • November 26Daniel Purcell, English composer (b. 1664)
  • December 4William Hamilton, surgeon in the British East India Company
  • December 5Richard Onslow, 1st Baron Onslow, English politician (b. 1654)
  • December 13Nicholas Noyes, Massachusetts colonial minister, during the time of the Salem witch trials (b. 1647)
  • December 25Robert Shirley, 1st Earl Ferrers, English peer and courtier (b. 1650)
  • date unknown
    • William Diaper, English poet of the Augustan era (b. 1685)
    • William Boyd, 3rd Earl of Kilmarnock, Scottish nobleman
    • Niccolao Manucci, Italian writer and traveller in India (b. 1639)
    • Osei Kofi Tutu I, founder of the Ashanti Confederacy (b. c. 1660; killed in action)
    • Wang Hui, Chinese landscape painter (b. 1632)
    • Jane Wiseman, English actress, poet and playwright (b. c. 1682)

1718

  • January 6
    • Giovanni Vincenzo Gravina, Italian writer and jurist (b. 1664)
    • Richard Hoare, English goldsmith and banker (b. 1648)
  • January 7Empress Xiaohuizhang, Qing Dynasty empress and consort of the Shunzhi Emperor of China (b. 1641)
  • January 17Captain Benjamin Church, Plymouth Colony settler and military officer (b. c. 1639)
  • February 1Charles Talbot, 1st Duke of Shrewsbury, English politician (b. 1660)
  • February 5Elizabeth Capell, Countess of Essex, British countess (b. 1636)
  • February 17
    • Charlotte Lee, Countess of Lichfield, illegitimate daughter of King Charles II of England (b. 1664)
    • Prince George William of Great Britain, member of the British Royal Family (b. 1717)
  • February 18Pierre Antoine Motteux, French-born English dramatist (b. 1663)
  • March 9Marko Gerbec, Carniolan physician, scientist (b. 1658)
  • March 13Friedrich Nicolaus Bruhns, German organist and composer (b. 1637)
  • April 3Jacques Ozanam, French mathematician (b. 1640)
  • April 18Michael Wening, German engraver (b. 1645)
  • April 21Philippe de La Hire, French mathematician and astronomer (b. 1640)
  • April 23Sir Edward Blackett, 2nd Baronet, English politician (b. 1649)
Mary of Modena
  • May 7Mary of Modena, queen of James II of England (b. 1658)
  • May 19Juan Andrés de Ustariz, Royal Governor of Cuba (b. 1656)
  • May 16Jonas Danilssønn Ramus, Norwegian priest and historian (b. 1649)
  • May 24Jeremiah Dummer, American silversmith (b. 1643)
  • May 30
    • Arnold Joost van Keppel, 1st Earl of Albemarle, Dutch favorite of William III of England (b. 1670)
    • Bernard Nieuwentyt, Dutch mathematician and philosopher (b. 1654)
  • June 9Jonathan Corwin, American judge of the Salem witch trials (b. 1640)
  • June 13Louis, Count of Armagnac, French noble (b. 1641)
  • June 17
    • Margherita Maria Farnese, Italian noblewoman (b. 1664)
    • James Tyrrell, English barrister and writer (b. 1642)
  • July 28Étienne Baluze, French scholar (b. 1630)
  • July 30William Penn, American settler, founder of Pennsylvania (b. 1644)
  • August 2Al-Mahdi Muhammad, Yemeni imam (b. 1637)
  • August 4René Lepage de Sainte-Claire, lord-founder of Rimouski in eastern Quebec, Canada (b. 1656)
  • September 11Domenico Martinelli, Italian architect (b. 1650)
  • September 12Louise de Maisonblanche, illegitimate daughter of Louis XIV of France (b. 1676)
  • September 20George St Lo, Royal Navy officer and administrator (b. 1655)
  • October 9Richard Cumberland, English philosopher (b. 1631)
  • October 19Alphonse Henri, Count of Harcourt, French noble (b. 1648)
  • November 3Karl, Prince of Anhalt-Zerbst (b. 1652)
  • November 22
    • Blackbeard, English pirate (b. 1680)
    • Durgadas Rathore, Indian ruler (b. 1638)
Charles XII of Sweden
  • c. December – Black Caesar, African pirate (hanged)
  • December 6Nicholas Rowe, English poet and dramatist (b. 1674)
  • December 9Vincenzo Coronelli, Italian cartographer and encyclopedist (b. 1650)
  • December 11 (November 30 Old Style) – King Charles XII of Sweden (b. 1682)
  • December 10Stede Bonnet, Barbadian "gentleman pirate" (b. 1688)
  • December 28Jan Brokoff, German sculptor (b. 1652)
  • date unknownMarie Grubbe, Danish countess (b. 1643)

1719

  • January 15Tikhon Streshnev, Russian boyar (b. 1649)
  • January 16Petar Kanavelić, Venetian writer (b. 1637)
  • January 17Sophie Amalie Moth, royal mistress of King Christian V of Denmark (b. 1654)
  • January 27Ferdinando d'Adda, Italian Catholic cardinal (b. 1649)
  • March 1Richard Ingoldesby, British soldier and colonial governor
  • March 19Isaac Addington, functionary of the colonial government of Massachusetts (b. 1645)
  • April 7Jean-Baptiste de La Salle, French educational reformer (b. 1651)
  • April 15Françoise d'Aubigné, Marquise de Maintenon, second wife of Louis XIV of France (b. 1635)
  • April 21Philippe de La Hire, French mathematician and astronomer (b. 1640)
  • April 29Farrukhsiyar, Mughal Emperor (b. 1683)
  • MayAnne-Marguerite Petit du Noyer, French journalist (b. 1663)
  • May 17Laurentius Christophori Hornæus, Swedish witch hunter (b. 1645)
  • May 23Lucia Wijbrants, Dutch artist (b. 1638)
  • May 29
    • Joseph de Jouvancy, French historian (b. 1643)
    • Sir Alexander Seton, 1st Baronet, Scottish judge
  • May 31Edmund Dunch (Whig), English politician (b. 1657)
  • June 6Louis Ellies Dupin, French ecclesiastical historian (b. 1657)
Joseph Addison
  • June 17Joseph Addison, English politician and writer (b. 1672)
  • June 23Christopher Wandesford, 2nd Viscount Castlecomer, 2nd Viscount Castlecomer and Member of Parliament (b. 1684)
  • July 5
    • Meinhardt Schomberg, 3rd Duke of Schomberg, Irish general (b. 1641)
    • Samuel Schotten, German rabbi (b. 1644)
  • July 17Elinor James, British pamphleteer (b. 1644)
  • July 22Giovanni Gioseffo dal Sole, Italian painter and engraver (b. 1654)
  • July 28Arp Schnitger, German organ builder (b. 1648)
  • August 5Date Tsunamura, Japanese daimyō at the center of the Date Sōdō (b. 1659)
  • August 8Christoph Ludwig Agricola, German painter (b. 1667)
  • August 11Leonard Goffiné, German Catholic priest and writer (b. 1648)
  • September 7John Harris, English writer (b. c.1666)
  • September 8Carlo Cignani, Italian painter of the Bolognese and the Forlivese school (b. 1628)
  • September 21Johann Heinrich Acker, German writer (b. 1647)
  • September 27George Smalridge, English Bishop of Bristol (b. 1662)
  • September 29Jean Orry, French economist (b. 1652)
  • October 14Arnold Houbraken, Dutch painter (b. 1660)
  • October 27François Baert, Belgian hagiographer (b. 1651)
  • November 8Michel Rolle, French mathematician (b. 1652)
  • November 26John Hudson, English classical scholar (b. 1662)
  • November 30Yamamoto Tsunetomo, Japanese samurai (b. 1659)
  • December 2Pasquier Quesnel, French Jansenist theologian (b. 1634)
  • December 3Adriaen Frans Boudewijns, Landscape painter (b. 1644)
  • December 28Jacob Bobart the Younger, English botanist (b. 1641)
  • December 29Infante Philip of Spain, Spanish infante (b. 1712)
John Flamsteed
  • December 31John Flamsteed, English astronomer (b. 1646)
  • date unknown
    • Robert Clicquot, French organ builder (b. 1645)
    • Benjamin Hornigold, English pirate (b. 1680)
    • André Raison, French composer and organist (b. 1650)
    • Adam Ludwig Lewenhaupt, Swedish general (b. 1659)

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