1611 (MDCXI ) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Tuesday of the Julian calendar , the 1611th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 611th year of the 2nd millennium , the 11th year of the 17th century , and the 2nd year of the 1610s decade. As of the start of 1611, the Gregorian calendar was 10 days ahead of the Julian calendar, which remained in localized use until 1923.
May 2: King James Version of the Bible first published
June 22: Explorer Henry Hudson and eight of his crew are abandoned at Hudson Bay after mutiny (pictured: The Last Voyage of Henry Hudson , painted by John Collier in 1881)
February 27: Sunspots are observed for the first time.
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January– March
January 26 – Maximilien de Béthune, Duke of Sully is forced by Queen regent Marie 's Regency Council to resign as chief minister of France .[1] He is replaced by Nicolas de Neufville, seigneur de Villeroy.
February 27 – Sunspots are observed by telescope , by Frisian astronomers Johannes Fabricius and David Fabricius . Johannes publishes the results of these observations, in De Maculis in Sole observatis in Wittenberg , later this year.[2] Such early discoveries are overlooked, however, and the first sighting is claimed a few months later, by Galileo Galilei and Christoph Scheiner .
March 4 – George Abbot is enthroned as Archbishop of Canterbury in England.[3]
March 9 – Battle of Segaba in Begemder : Yemana Kristos, brother of Emperor of Ethiopia Susenyos I , ends the rebellion of Melka Sedeq.
March 19 –20 – The Moscow Uprising , an armed rising of the inhabitants of Moscow in the Tsardom of Russia against the military Polish–Lithuanian occupation of Moscow (Fall 1610–Fall 1612), results in the occupying forces starting a major fire in the city and the death of 6–7,000 Muscovites.[4]
April– June
April 4 – Denmark-Norway declares war on Sweden , then captures Kalmar .
April 7 (March 28 O.S.) – False Dmitry III , the third pretender to the Russian throne to claim to be Prince Dmitry of Uglich , son of Ivan the Terrible , arrives at Ivangorod and proclaims himself as the Tsar Dmitry Ivanovich I.
April 28 – The Colegio de Nuestra Señora del Santísimo Rosario is established in Manila , the Philippines (later renamed Colegio de Santo Tomas, and later still the University of Santo Tomas ).[5]
April 30 – The priest implicated in the Aix-en-Provence possessions in France is executed.
May 2 – The Authorized King James Version of the Bible is published for the first time, printed by Robert Barker in London .
May 9 – At the age of 16, Emperor Go-Mizunoo succeeds his father Emperor Go-Yōzei as Emperor of Japan .
May 11 – The first known performance of William Shakespeare 's The Winter's Tale , probably new this year, is given at the Globe Theatre in London .[6]
May–December – Entrepreneur Thomas Sutton founds Charterhouse School , on the site of the old Carthusian monastery in Charterhouse Square , Smithfield, London .
June 13 – The Siege of Smolensk in Russia by the Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth succeeds after nearly two years of fighting that started on 29 September 1609. The conquest of the city is made possible by the discovery of a weakness in the walls of the fortress and the detonating of an explosive in a drainage canal.
June 22 – English explorer and sea captain Henry Hudson , his teenage son John, and seven crewmen are set adrift in or near Hudson Bay , after a mutiny on his ship Discovery . They are never seen again.
October– December
October 30 – At the age of 16, Gustav II Adolf succeeds his father Charles IX as King of Sweden .
November 1 – At Whitehall Palace in London, William Shakespeare 's last solo play, The Tempest , is given its earliest reported performance.
December 2 (Keichō 16, 10th month, 28th day) – The 1611 Sanriku earthquake of 8.1 magnitude strikes off of the coast of Japan and causes a tsunami that kills almost 5,000 people in the northern section of Honshu island.
December 5 (30 Ramadan 1020 A.H.) – To celebrate the end of the daily fasting of the month of Ramadan , the Mughal Empire Army commander, Mubariz Khan , hosts the celebration banquet and learns that Pashtun rebel leader Khwaja Usman and 250 of his men have evacuated Bokainagar (modern-day Gouripur in Bangladesh ) during the Mughal Army's holiday observance.
December – The week-long Conquest of Bakla leads to the fall of the Chandradwip kingdom and the Mughal annexation of Barisal into the Bengal Subah
John Pell
William Cartwright
January– March
January 3 – James Harrington , English political theorist of classical republicanism (d. 1677 )
January 5 – Tsarevich Ivan Dmitriyevich , pretender to the Russian throne (k. 1614 )
January 28 – Johannes Hevelius , Polish astronomer (d. 1687 )[7]
February 2 – Ulrik of Denmark , Danish prince-bishop (d. 1633 )
February 3 – Christian Ulrik Gyldenløve , Danish diplomat and military officer (d. 1640 )
February 5 (bapt.) – Philip Sherman , English-born founder of Rhode Island (d. 1687 )
February 6 – Chongzhen Emperor of China (d. 1644 )
February 19 – Andries de Graeff , Dutch politician (d. 1678 )
February 24 ? (bapt. March 4) – William Dobson , English portrait painter (d. 1646 )
February 28 – William Brereton, 2nd Baron Brereton , English politician (d. 1664 )
March 1 – John Pell , English mathematician (d. 1685 )
March 9 – Pierre-Joseph-Marie Chaumonot , French missionary (d. 1693 )
March 15 – Jan Fyt , Flemish Baroque painter (d. 1661 )
March 17 – Robert Douglas, Count of Skenninge , Swedish field marshal (d. 1662 )
March 25 – Evliya Çelebi , Ottoman Turk, travels around the Ottoman Empire for 40 years (d. 1682 )
March 28
July– September
July 15 – Jai Singh I , Maharaja of Jaipur (d. 1667 )
July 16 – Cecilia Renata of Austria , queen consort of Poland (d. 1644 )
July 21 – Jan van Balen , Flemish painter (d. 1654 )
July 23 – Henry Hungerford , English politician (d. 1673 )
July 24 – Giancarlo de' Medici , Italian Catholic cardinal (d. 1663 )
August 4 – Jan van den Hoecke , Dutch painter (d. 1651 )
August 9 – Henry of Nassau-Siegen , German count, officer in the Dutch Army, diplomat for the Dutch Republic (d. 1652 )
September 1 – William Cartwright , English dramatist (d. 1643 )
September 3 – Toussaint Rose , French writer (d. 1701 )
September 4 – George III of Brieg , Duke of Brzeg (1633–1664) (d. 1664 )
September 8 – Johann Friedrich Gronovius , German classical scholar (d. 1671 )
September 11 – Henri de la Tour d'Auvergne, Vicomte de Turenne (d. 1675 )[9]
September 17 – Johann Olearius , German hymnwriter (d. 1684 )
Juan de Ribera
Christian II, Elector of Saxony
Eleanor de' Medici
Charles IX of Sweden
January– March
January 6 – Juan de Ribera , Spanish Catholic archbishop (b. 1532 )
January 16 – Niiro Tadamoto , Japanese samurai (b. 1526 )
February 7 – Ruprecht von Eggenberg , Austrian general (b. 1546 )
February 12 – Henry Lee of Ditchley , English noble (b. 1533 )
February 26 – Antonio Possevino , Italian Jesuit protagonist of Counter Reformation, papal diplomat (b. 1533 )
March 2 – Ernest II, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg , (b. 1564 )
March 3 – William Douglas, 10th Earl of Angus , son of William Douglas (b. 1552 )
March 5 – Shimazu Yoshihisa , Japanese warlord and samurai (b. 1533 )
March 13 – Louis III, Count of Löwenstein since 1541 (b. 1530 )
March 17 – Princess Sophia of Sweden (b. 1547 )
March 20 – Johann Georg Gödelmann , German demonologist (b. 1559 )
July– September
July 9 – János Imreffy , Hungarian politician (b. 1559 )
July 26 – Horio Yoshiharu , Japanese warlord (b. 1542 )
August – Antoni Clarassó i Terès , Spanish priest
August 2 – Katō Kiyomasa , Japanese warlord and samurai (b. 1561 )
August 9 – John Blagrave , English mathematician (b. 1561 )
August 12 – Herman van den Bergh , Dutch soldier in the Eighty Years' War (b. 1558 )
August 27 – Tomás Luis de Victoria , Spanish composer (b. c. 1548 )[11]
September 9 – Eleanor de' Medici , Italian noblewoman (b. 1567 )
September 17 – Johannes Corputius , Dutch engineer, cartographer and military leader (b. 1542 )
September 18 – John Augustus, Count Palatine of Lützelstein , German count (b. 1575 )
September 25 – Šurhaci , Chinese prince (b. 1564 )
"Sully, Maximilien de Béthune, Duc de", by C. J. H. Hayes, in Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.), , Vol. 26 (Cambridge University Press, 1911) p. 58
Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History . London: Century Ltd. pp. 170–172. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2 .
The Independent . Independent Publications, Incorporated. July 1909. p. 700.