1641 in literature
Appearance
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This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1641.
Events
- March 12 – Abraham Cowley's play The Guardian is acted before Prince Charles (later to be King Charles II) at Trinity College, Cambridge.
- Spring – Pierre Corneille marries Marie de Lampérière.
- c. May – William Davenant is convicted of high treason for participation in the First Army Plot in England.
- c. December – Edward Hyde, 1st Earl of Clarendon becomes an advisor to King Charles I of England.
New books
Prose
- George Abbot – Vindiciae Sabbathi
- Moses Amyraut – De l'elevation de la foy et de l'abaissement de la raison en la creance des mysteres de la religion
- Richard Baker – Apologie for Laymen's Writing in Divinity, with a Short Meditation upon the Fall of Lucifer
- Sir Edward Coke – The Complete Copyholder
- Luís Vélez de Guevara – El Diablo cojuelo
- William Habington – Observations upon History
- Joseph Hall – Episcopacy by Divine Right
- Samuel Hartlib (nominal author, really by Gabriel Plattes) – A Description of the Famous Kingdom of Macaria
- Thomas Heywood – The Life of Merlin surnamed Ambrosius
- Thomas Hobbes – De Cive
- Sir Francis Kynaston – Leoline and Sydanis
- John Milton – Of Reformation
- Sir Robert Naunton (died 1635) – Fragmenta Regalia, or Observations on the late Queen Elizabeth, her Times and Favourites
- Gabriel Plattes – A Description of the Famous Kingdome of Macaria
- Mother Shipton (died 1561, attributed) – The prophesie of Mother Shipton in the raigne of King Henry the eighth
- Sir Henry Spelman – De Sepultura
- Heinrich Stahl – Leyen Spiegel
- John Taylor – John Taylors Last Voyage and Adventure
- Nicolaes Tulp – Observationes Medicae
- John Wilkins – Mercury, or The Secret and Swift Messenger
- Francisco de Quevedo – Providencia de Dios
- Juan Eusebio Nieremberg – De la hermosura de Dios y su amabilidad, por las infinitas perfecciones del ser divino
- Luis Vélez de Guevara – El diablo Cojuelo
Drama
- Richard Braithwaite – Mercurius Britanicus
- Richard Brome – A Jovial Crew
- Abraham Cowley – The Guardian
- John Day – The Parliament of Bees (published)
- John Denham – The Sophy
- Thomas Killigrew – The Prisoners and Claricilla (published)
- Shackerley Marmion – The Antiquary (published)
- James Shirley – The Cardinal
- John Tatham – The Distracted State
- Lope de Vega (died 1635) – El caballero de Olmedo (posthumous, written in 1620)
- Jan Vos – Aran en Titus, of wraak en weerwraak (Aran and Titus, or Revenge and Vengeance)
Births
- April 8 (baptised) – William Wycherley, English playwright (died 1716)
- April 15 – Robert Sibbald, Scottish historian (died 1722)[1]
- March 15 (baptised) – Laurence Hyde, 1st Earl of Rochester, English politician and writer (died 1711)
- May 16 – Dudley North, English economist, merchant and politician (died 1691)
- May – Juan Núñez de la Peña, Spanish historian (died 1721)
- Late October – Henry Dodwell, Irish-born theologian (died 1711)
- Unknown dates
- Pierre Allix, French Protestant author (died 1717)
- William Sherlock, English theologian (died 1707)
Deaths
- January 11
- Franciscus Gomarus, Dutch theologian (born 1563)
- Juan de Jáuregui, Spanish poet and painter (born 1583)
- April 6 (buried) – Thomas Nabbes, English dramatist (born 1605)
- April 13 – Richard Montagu, English theologian (born 1577)
- June 26 – Antony Hickey, Irish Franciscan theologian (born 1586)
- August 9 – Augustine Baker, Welsh-born Benedictine writer (born 1575)
- August 16 – Thomas Heywood, English playwright, actor, poet and author (born c. 1573)
- Between August 14 and 27 – Sir William Vaughan, Welsh writer and colonist (born 1575)
- Unknown dates
- Arthur Johnston, Scottish poet and physician (born c. 1579)
- Gerard de Malynes, English merchant and author (born 1586)
References
- ^ "Robert Sibbald - Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh". www.rcpe.ac.uk. Retrieved 15 June 2018.