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1621 in literature

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Events from the year 1621 in literature.

Events

  • January 27 – Sir Francis Bacon is created Viscount St Alban.
  • February 3 – John Chamberlain writes to Sir Dudley Carleton telling him the anonymous author of the tract Vox Populi has been revealed to be the radical preacher Thomas Scott.
  • May 3 – Sir Francis Bacon is imprisoned in the Tower of London after being convicted of receiving bribes, but pardoned by King James I later in the year.
  • August 26 – Barten Holyday's allegorical play Technogamia, originally produced at Christ Church, Oxford in 1618, is staged before James I at Woodstock Palace. He dislikes it, but is persuaded to stay to the end for the student actors' sakes.
  • September 24 – The earliest known copy of the Corante, generally regarded as the first English newspaper, is published.
  • November 22 – The English poet John Donne is installed as Dean of St Paul's Cathedral in London.
  • December 30 – The Spanish writer Francisco de Borja y Aragón is replaced as Viceroy of Peru by Juan Jiménez de Montalvo, and embarks for home on the following day.

Uncertain date

  • Jeremias Drexel gives up preaching in order to write a biography of Elisabeth of Lorraine.

New books

Prose

  • William Alabaster – De bestia Apocalypsis
  • Robert Burton – The Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Méric Casaubon – Pietas contra maledicos patrii Nominis et Religionis Hostes
  • Mao Yuanyi (茅元儀, editor) – Wubei Zhi (武備志, Treatise on Armaments)
  • John Reynolds – The triumphs of Gods revenge, against the crying, and execrable sinne of murther
  • Rachel Speght – Mortalities Memorandum
  • John Taylor – Taylor's Motto
  • Tobias Venner – A briefe and accurate treatise concerning the taking of the fume of tobacco
  • John Widdowes – A Description of the World
  • Lady Mary Wroth – The Countess of Montgomery's Urania

Drama

  • Francis Beaumont, John Fletcher, & Philip Massinger – Thierry and Theodoret (published)
  • Thomas Dekker, John Ford, & William Rowley – The Witch of Edmonton
  • Ben Jonson – The Gypsies Metamorphosed
  • Tirso de Molina – El vergonzoso en palacio

Poetry

Main article: 1621 in poetry

  • George Wither – Wither's Motto

Births

  • January 27 – Thomas Willis, English physician and natural philosopher (died 1675)
  • March 18 – Henry Teonge, English diarist and naval chaplain (died 1690)
  • March 31 – Andrew Marvell, English poet (died 1678)
  • April 25 – Roger Boyle, 1st Earl of Orrery, Anglo-Irish dramatist (died 1679)
  • July 8 – Jean de La Fontaine, French author of fables (died 1695)
  • December 3 – Bohuslav Balbín, Czech Jesuit writer (died 1688)
  • December 14 (baptised) – Thomas Long, English writer and cleric (died 1707)
  • unknown date – Jane Cavendish, English poet and playwright (died 1669)
  • probable – Françoise Bertaut de Motteville, French memoirist (died 1689)
  • Possible year (1621 or 1622) – Richard Allestree, English scholar and cleric (died 1681)

Deaths

  • January 25 – François Pithou, French author and jurist (born 1543)
  • March 4 – Ana de Jesús, Spanish nun and writer (born 1545)
  • May 11 – Johann Arndt, German theologian (born 1555)
  • June – William Strachey, English eye-witness historian (born 1572)
  • August 3 – Guillaume du Vair, French writer (born 1556)
  • August 15 – John Barclay, Scottish writer (born 1582)
  • September 25 – Mary Sidney, English playwright and translator (born 1561)
  • October 7 or 8 – Antoine de Montchrestien, French adventurer and dramatist (born c. 1575)
  • December 4 – Andrew Willet, English polemicist and cleric (born 1562)
  • unknown date – Ludwig Hollonius, German dramatist (born c. 1570)

Notes

References

References

  1. {{cite DNB. Fowler. Thomas
  2. {{EB1911. Adamson. Robert
  3. Peltonen, Markku. (2007). "Bacon, Francis, Viscount St Alban (1561–1626)".
  4. {{cite EB9. Adamson. Robert
  5. Williams, Hywel. (2005). "Cassell's Chronology of World History". Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
  6. Alexandra G. Bennett. (23 August 2017). "The Collected Works of Jane Cavendish". Taylor & Francis.
  7. Françoise de Motteville. (1902). "Memoirs of Madame de Motteville on Anne of Austria and Her Court". Hardy, Pratt.
  8. (1971). "Theologische Literaturzeitung". [[Evangelische Verlagsanstalt]].
  9. Richard Erich Schade. (1976). "Martin Böhme (1557-1622): The Lutheran Pastor as Writer". Yale University.
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