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1651 in literature

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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1651.

Events

  • August 22 – Execution on Tower Hill in London of Welsh Protestant preacher Christopher Love

New books

Prose

  • Noah Biggs – Chymiatrophilos, Matæotechnia medicinæ praxeōs, The vanity of the Craft of Physick, or, A new dispensator
  • William Bosworth – The Chaste and Lost Lovers
  • Roger Boyle, 1st Earl of Orrery – Parthenissa (first section)
  • Mary Cary (Rande) – The Little Horn's Doom and Downfall and A New and More Exact Map of the New Jerusalem's Glory
  • Marin le Roy de Gomberville – Jeune Alcidiane
  • Francisco de Quevedo – Virtud militante contra las cuatro pestes del mundo y cuatro fantasmas de la vida
  • Baltasar Gracián – El Criticón (first part)
  • Thomas Hobbes – Leviathan, or The Matter, Forme and Power of a Common Wealth Ecclesiasticall and Civil
  • John Milton – Defensio pro Populo Anglicano
  • Paul Scarron – Roman comique (Comic romance, first part)
  • Filip Stanislavov – Abagar (first printed book in modern Bulgarian)
  • Anna Weamys – A Continuation of Sir Philip Sydney's Arcadia
  • Sir Henry Wotton (posthumous) – Reliquiæ Wottonianæ; or, a collection of lives, letters, poems; with characters of sundry personages: and other incomparable pieces of language and art "By the curious pensil of the ever memorable Sr Henry Wotton Kt, late, provost of Eton Colledg"

Drama

  • William Cartwright
    • The Lady Errant
    • The Ordinary
    • The Siege, or Love's Convert
    • Comedies, Tragi-Comedies, with Other Poems
  • Pedro Calderon de la Barca – El alcalde de Zalamea
  • Jerónimo de Cáncer – Obras varias
  • Francisco López de Zárate – Hercules furente y oeta
  • Juan de Matos Fragoso – La defensa de la Fè, y Principe prodigioso
  • Thomas Randolph (attributed to) – Hey for Honesty, Down with Knavery (adapted from Aristophanes' Plutus)
  • Jerónimo de Cáncer – Vejamen
  • Leonard Willan – Astraea, or True Love's Mirror (adapted from Honoré D'Urfé's L'Astrée)

Poetry

  • William Davenant – Gondibert (second impression)
  • Francisco de Borja y Aragón – Nápoles recuperada
  • Manuel de Salinas y Lizana – La casta Susana, paráfrasis poética de su sagrada historia
  • Francisco de Trillo y Figueroa – Neapolisea
  • Henry Vaughan – Olor Iscanus (Swan of Usk)

Births

  • April 6 – André Dacier, French classicist (died 1722)
  • August 6 – François Fénelon, French theologian (died 1715)
  • October 24 – Jean de La Chapelle, French dramatist (died 1723)
  • November 12 – Juana Inés de la Cruz (Sor Juana), Mexican poet (died 1695)

Deaths

  • January 29 – Diego de Colmenares, Spanish historian (born 1586)
  • February 14 – Jean Roberti, Flemish theologian (born 1569)
  • April – Elizabeth Richardson, 1st Lady Cramond, English women's writer (born c. 1576)
  • October 7 – Jacques Sirmond, French scholar (born 1559)
  • December 14 – Pierre Dupuy, French scholar (born 1582)
  • December 22 – Arnold Johan Messenius, Swedish royal historiographer (born 1607/1608)
  • Unknown dates
    • Adho Duraso, Rajasthani poet (born c. 1550)
    • Henry Rice, Welsh courtier and writer (born c. 1585)

References

References

  1. "Biography of Christopher Love".
  2. Margaret J. M. Ezell. (14 September 2017). "The Oxford English Literary History: Volume V: 1645-1714". Oxford University Press.
  3. (1879). "Library of Universal Knowledge". American Book Exchange.
  4. Kirk, Pamela. (1999). "Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz: Religion, Art, and Feminism". Continuum.
  5. Joseph Timothy Haydn. (1870). "Haydn's Universal Index of Biography from the Creation to the Present Time". Moxon.
  6. Oskar Garstein. (1992). "Rome and the Counter-Reformation in Scandinavia: The Age of Gustavus Adolphus and Queen Christina of Sweden, 1622-1656". BRILL.
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