1666

{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2011}}

{{Year dab|1666}}

{{Year nav|1666}}

File:8 The Great Fire of London 1666.JPG: The Great Fire of London breaks out and destroys much of the English capital over the next four days.]]

{{C17 year in topic}}

File:St. James Day Fight, Pic 1.jpg: The Dutch Navy fails to invade the British Isles after the English triumph in the St. James's Day Battle]]

{{Year article header|1666}} This is the first year to be designated as an Annus mirabilis, in John Dryden's 1667 poem so titled, celebrating England's failure to be beaten either by the Dutch or by fire.

Events

= January–March =

= April–June =

  • April 20 – In colonial British North America, "Articles of Peace and Amity" are signed between the governments of the Province of Maryland and 12 Eastern Algonquian tribes — the Piscataways, Anacostancks, Doegs, Mattawomans, Portobackes, Chopticos, Mikikiwomans, Manasquesends, Chingwawateicks, Hangemaicks, Sacayos, and Panyayos.
  • April 23 – On Saint Christopher Island more commonly called St Kitts, a Caribbean Sea island divided between colonies of England and France, a battle near Sandy Point Town over control of the territory ends with a victory by the French over a numerically-superior English force two days after English Deputy Governor William Watts of Anguilla had sent an expedition to capture the neighbouring island of Saint Martin. Governor Watts and the French Governor of Saint-Christophe, Charles de Sales, are both killed in the battle.W. Earle Lockerby, "Le serment d'allégeance, le service militaire, les déportations et les Acadiens: opinions de France et de Québec aux 17e et 18e siècles", Acadiensis (March 2008)
  • May 12 – In India, General Shivaji Bhonsale of the Maratha Empire arrives at the Agra Fort for a meeting with Emperor Aurangzeb of the Mughal Empire, as part of the terms of peace under the 1665 Treaty of Purandar. After taking offence at the disrespect shown to him, he gets angry and attempts to leave; he and his son Sambhaji are immediately placed under arrest and imprisoned at the fort.Stewart Gordon, The Marathas, 1600–1818 (Cambridge University Press, 1993) p. 78
  • May 13 – French theologian Louis-Isaac Lemaistre de Sacy is imprisoned in the Bastille after his conviction for heresy in connection with the Jansenist movement. Sacy uses his two and one-half years of incarceration (which lasts until November 14, 1668), to create the Bible du Port-Royal, a first French language rendition of the Bible, finishing a translation of the Old Testament from the Vulgate, written in Latin, that had been started by his brother Antoine, and then beginning work on the New Testament.
  • May 21
  • The Holy Roman Empire, ruled by Leopold I, repurchases the territory of the Duchy of Opole and Racibórz (Oppeln und Ratibor), which it had ceded to Poland in 1645, for the sum of 120,000 guldens and consolidates it with Upper Silesia. The territory will be ceded from Germany to Poland in 1945 at the end of World War II.
  • Iliaș Alexandru becomes the ruler of Moldavia, part of modern-day Romania.
  • June 4Molière's comedy of manners The Misanthrope is premièred at the Théâtre du Palais-Royal in Paris by the King's Players with himself in the title role.{{cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=W5-nmMMLKn4C&pg=PA19|title=The Misanthrope and Other Plays by Molière|first=Donald M|last=Frame|year=1968|publisher=New American Library |isbn=9780451524157}}
  • June 6Moulai al-Rashid is let into Fes by the city's Jews, establishing the power of Morocco's Alawi dynasty, which will continue into the 21st century.{{Cite book|editor=Houdas, O.|author=Abū al-Qāsim ibn Aḥmad al-Zayyānī|url=https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/bpt6k5598026d/f32.item#|title=Le Maroc de 1631 à 1812|year=1886|location=Paris|publisher=Ernest Leroux|page=2|language=fr}}
  • June 14 (June 4 Julian calendar) – The Four Days' Battle between the Dutch Republic fleet (84 ships under the command of Admiral Michiel de Ruyter) and the English Royal Navy (79 ships led by the Duke of Albemarle) in the North Sea, one of the longest naval engagements in history, ends with a retreat by the English after having started on June 11.Frank L. Fox, The Four Days' Battle of 1666: The Greatest Sea Fight of the Age of Sail (Seaforth Publishing, 2009) A part of the Second Anglo-Dutch War, the battle ends with a Dutch victory, but heavy losses are sustained on both sides: the English lose 1,000 men and 10 ships are sunk, while the Dutch lose four ships and 1,550 men. Damaged, but not destroyed, the English fleet sets about repairs and refitting, and meets the Dutch fleet again on July 25 in the St. James's Day Battle.

= July–September =

= October–December =

  • October 10 – A "day of humiliation and fasting" is held in London churches a month after the Great Fire of London.
  • October 11 – The Sieur de Buat, Captain Henri de Fleury de Coulan of the Army of the Dutch Republic, is beheaded in public at The Hague after being convicted of attempting to overthrow Dutch leader Johan de Witt.
  • October 17 – In North America, a French Army regiment led by Alexandre de Prouville de Tracy erects crosses in the Mohawk lands of the eastern Iroquois Confederacy territory along the Mohawk River as part of an invasion that started on September 29.Jack Verney, The Good Regiment (McGill-Queen's University Press, 1991) During the expedition, Prouville's forces find four abandoned Mohawk villages in the area, located in the modern U.S. state of New York near the village of Schenectady but never confront any Mohawk defenders, and the French never attempt to enforce their claim.
  • October 23 – The most intense tornado on record in English history, an F4 storm on the Fujita scale or T8 on the TORRO scale, strikes the county of Lincolnshire with a path of destruction through the villages of Welbourn, Wellingore, Navenby and Boothby Graffoe, with winds of more than {{convert|213|mph}}.[https://www.torro.org.uk/research/tornadoes/extremes "British and European Extremes"], The Tornado and Storm Research Organisation (TORRO)
  • October 26Abbas II, the Shah of Iran, dies at the age of 34 after a reign of 24 years, without designating a successor.H. R. Roemer, "The Safavid period", in The Cambridge History of Iran (Cambridge University Press, 1986), p. 301 His 18-year old son Sam Mirza is crowned as the new Safavid dynasty emperor six days later. The Muslim World: A Historical Survey, Part III: The Last Great Muslim Empires (E. J. Brill, 1969) p. 210
  • October 27Robert Hubert, a Frenchman who has made a false confession to having started the Great Fire of London (despite not arriving in England until two days after the blaze started), is executed based on his statements.
  • November 28 – The Battle of Rullion Green takes place in the Pentland Hills near Midlothian in Scotland as the culmination of the brief 'Pentland Rising' which began on November 15 as a rebellion by the Covenanters who oppose changes in the Church of Scotland. At least 2,000 men of the Scottish Royal Army, led by General Thomas Dalyell, defeat more than 750 Covenanter rebels who have been under the command of James Wallace of Auchens.
  • December 12 – A sobor (church council) of the Russian Orthodox Church deposes Patriarch Nikon of Moscow, but accepts his liturgical reforms. Dissenters from these, known as Old Believers, continue into the 21st century.
  • December 19Lund University is founded in Lund, Sweden.{{cite book|last1=Foss|first1=Lene|last2=Gibson|first2=David V.|title=The Entrepreneurial University: Context and Institutional Change|year=2015|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-317-56894-0|page=133|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_UusCQAAQBAJ&pg=PA133}}{{cite web|title=Lund University 350 years|url=https://www.lunduniversity.lu.se/about-university/university-glance/history-lund-university/lund-university-350-years|publisher=Lund University|accessdate=2024-12-15|language=en}}
  • December 22 – The French Academy of Sciences, founded by Louis XIV, first meets.{{cite book|last=Clericuzio|first=Antonio|title=Elements, principles, and corpuscles: a study of atomism and chemistry in the seventeenth century|publisher=Kluwer Academic|location=Dordrecht; Boston|year=2000|isbn=9780792367826|page=179| language=en}}

= Date unknown =

Births

File:Guru Gobind Singh.jpg]]

Deaths

File:Shah Jahan op de pauwentroon.jpg]]

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File:After Frans Hals - Portrait of Frans Hals - Indianapolis.jpg]]

References

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