1616

1616 (MDCXVI) was a leap year starting on Friday of the Gregorian calendar and a leap year starting on Monday of the Julian calendar, the 1616th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 616th year of the 2nd millennium, the 16th year of the 17th century, and the 7th year of the 1610s decade. As of the start of 1616, the Gregorian calendar was 10 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.

Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
March 11: Galileo assures Pope Paul V that he will not teach Copernican theory
1616 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1616
MDCXVI
Ab urbe condita2369
Armenian calendar1065
ԹՎ ՌԿԵ
Assyrian calendar6366
Balinese saka calendar1537–1538
Bengali calendar1023
Berber calendar2566
English Regnal year13 Ja. 1  14 Ja. 1
Buddhist calendar2160
Burmese calendar978
Byzantine calendar7124–7125
Chinese calendar乙卯年 (Wood Rabbit)
4313 or 4106
     to 
丙辰年 (Fire Dragon)
4314 or 4107
Coptic calendar1332–1333
Discordian calendar2782
Ethiopian calendar1608–1609
Hebrew calendar5376–5377
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1672–1673
 - Shaka Samvat1537–1538
 - Kali Yuga4716–4717
Holocene calendar11616
Igbo calendar616–617
Iranian calendar994–995
Islamic calendar1024–1025
Japanese calendarGenna 2
(元和2年)
Javanese calendar1536–1537
Julian calendarGregorian minus 10 days
Korean calendar3949
Minguo calendar296 before ROC
民前296年
Nanakshahi calendar148
Thai solar calendar2158–2159
Tibetan calendar阴木兔年
(female Wood-Rabbit)
1742 or 1361 or 589
     to 
阳火龙年
(male Fire-Dragon)
1743 or 1362 or 590
The Dutch establish the colony of Essequibo

Events

January–March

April–June

  • April 25 – Sir John Coke, in the Court of King's Bench (England), holds the King's actions in a case of In commendam to be illegal.
  • May 3 – The Treaty of Loudun is signed, ending a series of rebellions in France.[14]
  • May 25 – King James I of England's former favourite, the Earl of Somerset, and his wife Frances, are convicted of the murder of Thomas Overbury in 1613. They are spared death, and are sentenced to imprisonment in the Tower of London (until 1622).[15] Although the King has ordered the investigation of the poet's murder and allowed his former court favorite to be arrested and tried, his court, now under the influence of George Villiers, gains the reputation of being corrupt and vile. The sale of peerages (beginning in July)[16] and the royal visit of James's brother-in-law, Christian IV of Denmark, a notorious drunkard, add further scandal.
  • June 12Pocahontas (now Rebecca) arrives in England, with her husband, John Rolfe,[17] their one-year-old son, Thomas Rolfe, her half-sister Matachanna (alias Cleopatra) and brother-in-law Tomocomo, the shaman also known as Uttamatomakkin (having set out in May). Ten Powhatan Indians are brought by Sir Thomas Dale, the colonial governor, at the request of the Virginia Company, as a fund-raising device. Dale, having been recalled under criticism, writes A True Relation of the State of Virginia, Left by Sir Thomas Dale, Knight, in May last, 1616, in a successful effort to redeem his leadership. Neither Pocahontas or Dale see Virginia again.

July–September

October–December

Date unknown

  • Abbas I's Kakhetian and Kartlian campaigns occur as progressive combats. Abbas I of Persia captures Tbilisi following a conflict with the Georgian soldiers and the general populace. After the capture of Tbilisi, Abbas I confronts an Ottoman army. The battle takes place near Lake Gökçe, and results in a Safavid victory.
  • Oorsprong en voortgang der Nederlandtscher beroerten (Origin and progress of the disturbances in the Netherlands), by Johannes Gysius, is published.[31]
  • The Collegium Musicum is founded in Prague.
  • Physician Aleixo de Abreu is granted a pension of 16,000 reis, for services to the crown in Angola and Brazil, by Philip III of Spain, who also appoints him physician of his chamber.
  • Ngawang Namgyal arrives in Bhutan, having escaped Tibet.
  • The Swiss Guard is appointed part of the household guard of King Louis XIII of France.
  • Week-long festivities in honor of the Prince of Urbano, of the Barberini family, occur in Florence, Italy.[32]
  • Richard Steel and John Crowther complete their journey from Ajmeer in the Mughal Empire to Ispahan in Persia.
  • Captain John Smith publishes his book A description of New England in London. Smith relates one voyage to the coast of Massachusetts and Maine, in 1614, and an attempted voyage in 1615, when he was captured by French pirates and detained for several months before escaping.
  • The New England Indian smallpox or leptospirosis epidemic of 1616–19 begins to depopulate the region, killing an estimated 90% of the coastal native peoples.[33][34]
  • A slave ship carries smallpox from the Kingdom of Kongo to Salvador, Brazil.[35]
  • In England, louse-borne epidemic typhus ravages the poor and crowded.
  • A fatal disease of cattle, probably rinderpest, spreads through the Italian provinces of Padua, Udine, Treviso and Vicenza, introduced most likely from Dalmatia or Hungary. Great numbers of cattle die in Italy, as they had in previous years (1559, 1562, 1566, 1590, 1598) in other European regions when harvest failure also drives people to the brink of starvation (for example, 159597 in Germany). The consumption of beef and veal is prohibited, and Pope Paul V issues an edict prohibiting the slaughter of draught oxen that are suitable for plowing. Calves are also not slaughtered for some time afterwards, so that Italy's cattle herds can be replenished.[36]
  • At the behest of Sir Ferdinando Gorges, Dr. Richard Vines, a physician, passes the winter of 1616–17 at Biddeford, Maine, at the mouth of the Saco River, that he calls Winter Harbor. This is the site of the earliest permanent settlement in Maine, of which there is a conclusive record. Maine will become an important refuge for religious dissenters persecuted by the Puritans.[37]
  • In Spanish Florida, the Cofa Mission at the mouth of the Suwannee River disappears.
  • The first African slaves are brought to Bermuda, an English colony, by Captain George Bargrave to dive for pearls, because of their reputed skill in this activity. Harvesting pearls off the coast proves unsuccessful, and the slaves are put to work planting and harvesting the initial large crops of tobacco and sugarcane.[38] At the same time, some English refuse to purchase Brazilian sugar because it is produced by slave labour.[39]
  • Italian natural philosopher Giulio Cesare Vanini publishes a radically heterodox book in France, after his English interlude De admirandis naturae reginae deaeque mortalium arcanis, for which he is condemned and forced to flee Paris. For his opinion that the world is eternal and governed by immanent laws, as expressed in this book, he is executed in 1619.
  • Francesco Albani paints the ceiling frescoes of Apollo and the Seasons, at the Palazzo Verospi in Via del Corso, for Cardinal Fabrizio Verospi.
  • Elizabethan polymath and alchemist Robert Fludd publishes Apologia Compendiaria, Fraternitatem de Rosea Cruce suspicionis … maculis aspersam, veritatis quasi Fluctibus abluens at Leiden, countering the arguments of Andreas Libavius. Later theories propose that he was linked with Rosicrucians and the Family of Love.
  • Johannes Valentinus Andreae claims to be the author of Chymische Hochzeit Christiani Rosencreutz Anno 1459 published in Strasbourg.
  • Witch trials:
    • John Cotta writes his influential book The Triall of Witch-craft.
    • Elizabeth Rutter is hanged as a witch in Middlesex, England, Agnes Berrye in Enfield, and nine women in Leicester on the testimony of a raving 13-year-old named John Smith, under the Witchcraft Act 1603.[40] In Orkney, Elspeth Reoch is tried. In France Leger (first name unknown) is condemned for witchcraft on May 6, Sylvanie de la Plaine is burned at Pays de Labourde as a witch, and in Orléans eighteen witches are killed.
    • A second witch-hunt breaks out in Biscay, Spain. An Edict of Silence is issued by the Inquisition, but the king overturns the Edict, and 300 accused witches are burned alive.
  • Latest probable date of Thomas Middleton composition of The Witch, a tragicomedy that may have entered into the present-day text of Shakespeare's Macbeth.[41]
  • "Drink to me only with thine eyes" comes from Ben Jonson's love poem, To Celia. Jonson's poetic lamentation On my first Sonne is also from this year.
  • Francis de Sales' literary masterpiece Treatise on the Love of God is published, while he is Bishop of Geneva.
  • Orlando Gibbons' anthem See, the Word is Incarnate is written.
  • Italian naturalist Fabio Colonna states that "tongue stones" (glossopetrae) are shark teeth, in his treatise De glossopetris dissertatio.
  • An important English dictionary is published by Dr. John Bullokar with the title An English Expositor: teaching the interpretation of the hardest words used in our language, with sundry explications, descriptions and discourses.
  • English mathematician Henry Briggs goes to Edinburgh, to show John Napier his efficient method of finding logarithms, by the continued extraction of square roots.
  • Moralist writer John Deacon publishes a quarto entitled Tobacco Tortured in the Filthy Fumes of Tobacco Refined (supporting the views of James I of England). Deacon writes the same year that syphilis is a "Turkished", "Spanished", or "Frenchized" disease that the English contract by "trafficking with the contagious courruptions."
  • Fortunio Liceti publishes De Monstruorum Natura in Italy, which marks the beginning of studies into malformations of the embryo.
  • Dutch traders smuggle the coffee plant out of Mocha, a port in Yemen on the Red Sea, and cultivate it at the Amsterdam Botanical Gardens. The Dutch later introduce it to Java.
  • Muhammad Baqir Majlisi, known as Allameh Majlesi, is born in the city of Isfahan.
  • Fort San Diego, in Acapulco Bay, Mexico, is completed by the Spanish as a defence against their erstwhile vassals, the Dutch.[42]
  • Anti-Christian persecutions break out in Nanjing, China, and Nagasaki, Japan. The Jesuit-lead Christian community in Japan at this time is over 3,000,000 strong.
  • Master seafarer Henry Mainwaring, Oxford graduate and lawyer turned successful Newfoundland pirate, returns to England, is pardoned after rescuing a Newfoundland trading fleet near Gibraltar, and begins to write a revealing treatise on piracy.
  • The first Thai embassy to Japan arrives.
  • William Harvey gives his views on the circulation of blood, as Lumleian Lecturer at the Royal College of Physicians. It is not until 1628 that he gives his views in print.
  • The Dutch establish their colony of Essequibo, in the region of the Essequibo River, in northern South America (present-day Guyana), for sugar and tobacco production. The colony is protected by Fort Kyk-Over-Al, now in ruins. The Dutch also map the Delaware River in North America.
  • The Ottoman Empire attempts landings at the shoreline between Cádiz and Lisbon.
  • Croatian mathematician Faustus Verantius publishes his book Machinae novae, a book of mechanical and technological inventions, some of which are applicable to the solutions of hydrological problems, and others concern the construction of clepsydras, sundials, mills, presses bridges and boats for widely different uses.
  • John Speed publishes an edition of his Atlas of Britain, with descriptive text in Latin.
  • Pierre Vernier is employed, with his father, in making fine-scale maps of France (Franche-Comté area).
  • Danish natural philosopher Ole Worm collects materials that will later be incorporated into his museum in Copenhagen. His museum is the nucleus of the University of Copenhagen Zoological Museum.
  • Isaac Beeckman, Dutch intellectual and future friend of René Descartes, leaves his candle factory in Zierikzee, to return to Middelburg to study medicine.[43]
  • In Sardinia, the Faculty of Medicine and Surgery of the University of Sassari is founded.
  • Gian Lorenzo Bernini sculpts Bacchanal: A Faun Teased by Children, at the age of 18 years. This work is now in New York, at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  • The States of Holland set up a commission to advise them on the problem of Jewish residency and worship. One of the members of the commission is Hugo Grotius, a highly regarded jurist and one of the most important political thinkers of his day.
  • Marie Venier (called Laporte) is the first female actress to appear on the stage in Paris.[44]
  • Jesuit astronomer Christoph Scheiner becomes the advisor to Archduke Maximilian, brother of Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor in Vienna. A lifelong enemy of Galileo, following a dispute over the nature of sunspots, Scheiner is credited with reopening the 1616 accusations against Galileo in 1633.
  • Tommaso Campanella's book In Defence of Galileo is written.
  • Istanbul's Sultan Ahmed Mosque (also known as the Blue Mosque) is completed during the rule of Ahmed I.
  • In Tunis, the mosque of Youssef Deyis is built. Today it has an octagonal minaret crowned with a miniature green-tiled pyramid for a roof.
  • Inigo Jones designs the Queen's House at Greenwich, near London.[10]
  • Ambrose Barlow, recently graduated from the College of Saint Gregory, Douai, France, and the Royal College of Saint Alban in Valladolid, Spain, enters the Order of Saint Benedict. In 1641 he will be martyred in England.
  • John Vaughan, 1st Earl of Carbery is appointed to the post of comptroller, in the newly formed household of Prince Charles in England; Vaughan later claims that serving the Prince has cost him £20,000.

Ongoing

Births

January–March

April–June

  • April 1 – Christian Günther II, Count of Schwarzburg-Sondershausen-Arnstadt (1642–1666) (d. 1666)
  • April 2 – Herbert Morley, English politician (d. 1667)
  • April 5 – Frederick, Count Palatine of Zweibrücken (d. 1661)
  • April 7 – Thomas Hopkins, early Providence, Rhode Island settler (d. 1684)
  • April 19 – Louis IV of Legnica, Duke of Oława and Brzeg (1633–1654) (d. 1663)
  • April 24 – Gustav, Count of Vasaborg, illegitimate son of King Gustavus Adolphus and his mistress Margareta Slots (d. 1653)
  • April 27 – Jeremias Felbinger, German Socinian writer (d. 1690)
  • May 1 – Frederick III, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach (1625–1634) (d. 1634)
  • May 16 – Archibald Primrose, Lord Carrington, Scottish judge (d. 1679)
  • May 19 – Johann Jakob Froberger, German composer and keyboardist (d. 1667)
  • May 23 – Sir Edward Bagot, 2nd Baronet, English politician (d. 1673)
  • May 24 – John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale (d. 1682)
  • May 25Carlo Dolci, Italian painter (d. 1686)
  • May 27 – Christina Magdalena of the Palatinate-Zweibrücken, Swedish Princess by birth; margravine of Baden-Durlach by marriage (d. 1662)
  • June – John Thurloe, English spymaster for Oliver Cromwell (d. 1668)
  • June 3 – George Courthope, English politician (d. 1685)
  • June 23Shah Shuja, second son of Shah Jahan and Mumtaz Mahal (d. 1661)
  • June 24
    • Ferdinand Bol, Dutch Dutch painter, etcher and draftsman (d. 1680)
    • Philipp, Prince of Hohenzollern-Hechingen (1661–1671) (d. 1671)
  • June 25 – James Livingstone, 1st Viscount Kilsyth of Scotland (d. 1661)
  • June 28 – Lucas Franchoys the Younger, Flemish painter (d. 1681)

July–September

October–December

Date unknown

  • Charles Albanel, French missionary (d. 1696)
  • Henry Bard, 1st Viscount Bellomont, English Royalist (d. 1656)
  • Jan Kazimierz Chodkiewicz, Polish nobleman (szlachcic) (d. 1660)
  • Thomas Harrison, English Puritan soldier and Fifth Monarchist (d. 1660)
  • William Holder, English music theorist (d. 1698)
  • Kamalakara, Indian astronomer/mathematician (d. 1700)
  • Johann Klaj, German poet (d. 1656)
  • Kuzma Minin, merchant from Nizhny Novgorod
  • Sokuhi Nyoitsu, Buddhist monk (d. 1671)
  • John Owen, English Nonconformist theologian (d. 1683)
  • Edward Sexby, English Puritan soldier/Leveller (d. 1658)
  • Obadiah Walker, Master of University College, Oxford (d. 1699)

Probable

  • Caesar van Everdingen, Dutch older brother of Allart van Everdingen (d. 1678)
  • Matthias Weckmann, German musician/composer (d. 1674)
  • Trijntje Keever, presumed to have been the tallest woman ever (d. 1633)
  • A Greenland shark, still alive

Deaths

Jacob Le Maire

January–March

April–June

  • April 19 – Juan de Silva, Spanish military commander and governor of the Philippines
  • April 22Miguel de Cervantes, Spanish author (b. 1547)
  • April 23
  • April 27 – Francesco Barbaro, Italian diplomat (b. 1546)
  • May 4 – Magdalene of Brandenburg, Landgravine consort of Hesse-Darmstadt (1598–1616) (b. 1582)
  • May 8 – Gilbert Talbot, 7th Earl of Shrewsbury, English politician and earl (b. 1552)
  • May 24 – Margaret Clifford, Countess of Cumberland, British noble (b. 1560)
  • May 30 – Thomas Parry, English politician (b. 1541)
  • June 1Tokugawa Ieyasu, Japanese shōgun (b. 1543)
  • June 4 – Adam Hieronim Sieniawski, Polish–Lithuanian noble (b. c. 1576)
  • June 9 – Cornelis Schuyt, Dutch organist and composer (b. 1557)
  • June 18Thomas Bilson, English bishop (b. 1547)
  • June 19 – Henry Robinson, English bishop (b. 1553)

July–September

October–December

  • October 10 – Countess Maria of Nassau (b. 1556)
  • October 11 – Aleksander Józef Lisowski, Polish noble (szlachcic) (b. 1580)
  • October 17 – John Pitts, Catholic scholar and writer (b. 1560)
  • October 21 – Sakazaki Naomori, Japanese daimyō (b. 1563)
  • October 23 – Leonhard Hutter, German theologian (b. 1563)
  • October 27 – Johannes Praetorius, German astronomer and mathematician (b. 1537)
  • November 3Agnes Hedwig of Anhalt, Abbess of Gernrode, Electress of Saxony, Duchess of Schleswig-Holstein-Sønderborg-Plön (b. 1573)
  • November 8 – Robert Dormer, 1st Baron Dormer, English politician (b. 1551)
  • November 14 – William Harris, English knight (b. 1556)
  • November 20 – Matsumae Yoshihiro, Japanese daimyo of Ezochi (Hokkaidō) (b. 1548)
  • December 6 – Ahmad Ibn al-Qadi, Moroccan writer, judge and mathematician (b. 1552)
  • November 23 – Richard Hakluyt, English author, editor and translator (b. 1553)
  • December 7 – Guillaume Fouquet de la Varenne, French chef (b. 1560)
  • December 22 – Jacob Le Maire, Dutch mariner (b. 1585)
  • December 24György Thurzó, Palatine of Hungary (b. 1567)
  • December 31 – Jan Szczęsny Herburt, Polish political writer (b. 1567)

Date unknown

  • Shimozuma Chūkō, Japanese monk of the Hongan-ji (b. 1551)
  • Meir Lublin, Polish rabbi (b. 1558)

Probable

  • Hendrick Christiaensen, Dutch explorer
  • Krzysztof Klabon, Polish Renaissance composer (b. 1550)
  • Alexander Whitaker, Virginia Colony religious leader (b. 1585)

References

  1. Research Opportunities in Renaissance Drama: The Report of the Modern Language Association Conference. Northwestern University Press. 1989. p. 36.
  2. Jehângïr's period of stay at Ajmer was from 5 Shawwäl 1022 to 1 Zil-qä'da 1025 equivalent to November 8, 1613, to October 31, 1616.
  3. Strachan, Michael (2004). "Roe, Sir Thomas (1581–1644)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/23943. Retrieved October 9, 2012. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  4. Donaldson, Ian (2004). "Jonson, Benjamin (1572–1637)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/15116. Retrieved October 9, 2012. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  5. Event dated with reference to historical documents. "Global Volcanism Program". Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original on October 24, 2012. Retrieved March 12, 2008.
  6. "Galileo", by Edward S. Holden, The Popular Science Monthly (May, 1905) p.66, 68
  7. "East Indies: February 1616". Calendar of State Papers Colonial, East Indies, China and Japan: 1513–1616. Vol. 2. 1864. pp. 457–461. Retrieved March 1, 2008.
  8. The Pontifical Decrees against the Motion of the Earth, Considered in their Bearing on the Theory of Advanced Ultramontanism (Longmans, Green, Reader & Dyer, 1870) pp.5-6
  9. Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
  10. Everett, Jason M., ed. (2006). "1616". The People's Chronology. Thomson Gale.
  11. The Jahangirnama: memoirs of Jahangir, Emperor of India. Translated by Thackston, W. M. Washington, D.C.; New York: Freer Gallery of Art; Arthur M. Sackler Gallery; Smithsonian Institution; Oxford University Press. 1999 [1829]. ISBN 9780195127188.
  12. Findly, Ellison Banks (2000). Nur Jahan: Empress of Mughal India. New York: Oxford University Press. p. 94. ISBN 0-19-507488-2.
  13. Nath, Renuka (1990). Notable Mughal and Hindu women in the 16th and 17th centuries A.D. New Delhi: Inter-India Publ. p. 72. ISBN 9788121002417.
  14. Victor L. Tapié (July 12, 1984). France in the Age of Louis XIII and Richelieu. CUP Archive. pp. 76–. ISBN 978-0-521-26924-7.
  15. Bellany, Alastair (2004). "Carr, Robert, earl of Somerset (1585/6?–1645)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/4754. Retrieved October 9, 2012. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  16. Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 170–172. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2.
  17. Robert S. Tilton (November 25, 1994). Pocahontas: The Evolution of an American Narrative. Cambridge University Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-521-46959-3.
  18. Elliott O'Donnell (January 1, 1915). The Irish abroad, a record of the achievements of wanderers from Ireland. Dalcassian Publishing Company. p. 303.
  19. Arano, Yasunori (2005). "The Formation of a Japanocentric World Order". International Journal of Asian Studies. 2 (2): 201. doi:10.1017/s1479591405000094. S2CID 145541884.
  20. Plate now in the Rijksmuseum in Amsterdam.
  21. Kellett, Arnold (2003). King James's School, 1616–2003. Knaresborough: King James's School. ISBN 0-9545195-0-7.
  22. Published 1631.
  23. Bland, M. (1998). "William Stansby and the production of the Workes of Beniamin Jonson, 1615–16". The Library. 20. Bibliographical Society: 10. doi:10.1093/library/20.1.1.
  24. Charlotte M. Gradie, The Tepehuan Revolt of 1616 (University of Utah Press, 2000) p. 32
  25. The Encyclopedia of English Renaissance Literature. The Wiley-Blackwell Encyclopedia of Literature (1st ed.). Chichester: Wiley-Blackwell. 2012. doi:10.1002/9781118297353.wbeerlb043.
  26. "Robert Burton | English author, scholar, and clergyman". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved September 7, 2018.
  27. "A Basic European Earthquake Catalogue and a Database for the evaluation of long-term seismicity and seismic hazard (BEECD)" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on October 9, 2022. Retrieved March 5, 2008.
  28. Visram, Rozina (2002). Asians in Britain: 400 Years of History. London: Pluto Press. ISBN 0-7453-1373-6.
  29. Ratnikas, Algirdas J. "Timeline Indonesia". Timelines.ws. Archived from the original on July 10, 2010. Retrieved 2010-08-12.
  30. Milton, Giles (1999). Nathaniel's Nutmeg: Or the True and Incredible Adventures of the Spice Trader Who Changed the Course of History. New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0-374-21936-9.
  31. "Mirror of the Cruel and Horrible Spanish Tyranny Perpetrated in the Netherlands, by the Tyrant, the Duke of Alba, and Other Commanders of King Philip II". World Digital Library. 1620. Retrieved August 25, 2013.
  32. From an etching in the Guerre de Beauté, a series of six etchings depicting a celebration which took place in Florence in the year 1616 in honor of the prince of Urbino.
  33. Bratton, Timothy (1988). "Identity of the New England Indian Epidemic of 1616–1619". Bulletin of the History of Medicine. 62 (3): 352–383.
  34. Marr, J. S.; Cathey, J. T. (February 2010). "New hypothesis for cause of epidemic among native Americans, New England, 1616-1619". Emerging Infectious Diseases. 16 (2): 281–6. doi:10.3201/eid1602.090276. PMC 2957993. PMID 20113559.
  35. Dobyns, Henry F. (1993). "Disease Transfer at Contact". Annual Review of Anthropology. 22: 273–291. doi:10.1146/annurev.anthro.22.1.273.
  36. Spinage, Clive A. (2003). Cattle plague: a history. New York: Springer. ISBN 0-306-47789-0.
  37. Charles L. Butler (2003). Biddeford. Arcadia Publishing. p. 12. ISBN 978-0-7385-1303-4.
  38. Bernhard, Virginia (1999). Slaves and Slaveholders in Bermuda, 1616–1782. Columbia: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 9780826212276.
  39. Mintz, Sidney W. (1986). Sweetness and Power: The Place of Sugar in Modern History. New York: Penguin. ISBN 0140092331.
  40. Robbins, Russell Hope (1959). The Encyclopedia of Witchcraft and Demonology. New York: Bonanza Books.
  41. Logan, Terence P.; Smith, Denzell S., eds. (1975). The Popular School: A Survey and Bibliography of Recent Studies in English Renaissance Drama. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. p. 69. ISBN 9780803208445.
  42. Sluiter, Engel (1949). "The Fortification of Acapulco, 1615–1616". The Hispanic American Historical Review. 29 (1): 69–80. doi:10.2307/2508294. JSTOR 2508294. Today the fort houses the Acapulco Historical Museum.
  43. His notebooks, not fully published until the 20th century, reveal a coherent mechanical philosophy of nature with incipient atomism, a force of inertia, and mathematical interpretations of natural philosophy are present. van Berkel, K. (1983). Isaac Beeckman (1588–1637) en de mechanisering van het wereldbeeld. Amsterdam.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  44. Searles, Colbert (1925). "Allusions to the Contemporary Theater of 1616 by Francois Rosset". Modern Language Notes. 40 (8): 481–483. doi:10.2307/2914581. JSTOR 2914581.
  45. Charles Wells Moulton (1959). The Library of Literary Criticism of English and American Authors. P. Smith. p. 586. ISBN 978-0-8446-7157-4.
  46. Sunil Kumar Sarker (1998). Shakespeare's Sonnets. Atlantic Publishers & Dist. p. 10. ISBN 978-81-7156-725-6.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.