This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1660.
Quick Facts List of years in literature (table) ...
Close
- January 11 – Samuel Pepys starts his diary, still using the Old Style date of 1 January.[1]
- February/March – John Rhodes reopens the old Cockpit Theatre in London, forms a company of young actors and begins to stage plays.[2] His production of Pericles will be the first Shakespearean performance of the Restoration era; Thomas Betterton makes his stage debut in the title rôle.[3]
- May – The English Restoration brings a host of Royalist exiles back to England, Richard Baxter among them, and many panegyrics are produced to commemorate the event.
- June – A warrant is issued for the arrest of the anti-monarchist John Milton, who is forced into hiding, whilst his writings are burned.[4]
- August 21 – The newly restored King Charles II of England issues a royal grant for two theatre companies: a King's Company under his own patronage, led by Thomas Killigrew, and a Duke's Company under the patronage of his brother, the Duke of York and future King James II, led by Sir William Davenant. On November 8, the King's Company moves from the old Red Bull Theatre to the new Vere St. Theatre, and in the same month the Duke's Company begins performing at the Salisbury Court Theatre.
- September 5 – Roger Boyle receives the title of Earl of Orrery.
- October 14 – Blaise Pascal's Lettres Provinciales is burned as a heretical work on the orders of King Louis XIV of France.[5]
- October – John Milton is arrested and imprisoned.[4]
- December – John Milton is released from prison, two weeks after his brother Christopher is appointed a judge.[4]
- December 8 – The first English actress to appear on the professional stage in England in a non-singing rôle, as Desdemona in Othello, is variously considered to be Margaret Hughes, Anne Marshall or Katherine Corey.[6][7][8]
- unknown dates
- The Royalist poet Robert Herrick returns to his parish in Devon after the English Restoration.[9]
- The Klencke Atlas is commissioned by Dutch merchants as a gift to King Charles II of England; at 1.75 metres (5 feet 9 inches) tall it is one of the world's largest books.
- Danish writer Birgitte Thott is given permission by King Frederick III of Denmark to receive an annual grant from the Soro Academy to pursue her studies, expand her library, and research into language.[10]
Poetry
- Rachel Jevon – Exultationis Carmen[13]
- Robert Wild – Iter Boreale. Attempting Something upon the Successful and Matchless March of the Lord General George Monk from Scotland to London[14]
Gilder, Rosamond (1931). Enter the Actress: The First Women in the Theatre. Boston: Houghton Mifflin. p. 166.