1633 in England
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See also: | Other events of 1633 |
Incumbents
- Monarch – Charles I
- Secretary of State – Sir John Coke
- Lord Chancellor – Thomas Coventry, 1st Baron Coventry
Events
- 13 February – Fire engines are used for the first time in England to control and extinguish a fire that breaks out at London Bridge, but not before 43 houses are destroyed.[1]
- May – King Charles revives medieval forest laws to raise funds from fines.
- 1 August – Exeter School is founded in Devon
- 6 August – William Laud becomes Archbishop of Canterbury.
- 18 October – Charles I reissues the Declaration of Sports, which had originated during his father's reign, listing the sports and recreations permitted on Sundays and other holy days.
- St Paul's, Covent Garden, designed by Inigo Jones in 1631 overlooking his piazza, opens to worship, the first wholly new church built in London since the English Reformation.
- English colonists settle what will become the town of Hingham, Massachusetts.
Literature
- John Ford's play 'Tis Pity She's a Whore published.
- Earliest surviving edition of the Christopher Marlowe play The Jew of Malta published, around 40 years after its first performance.
- John Donne's collected Poems published posthumously.
Births
- 23 February – Samuel Pepys, civil servant and diarist (died 1703)
- 26 March (bapt.) – Mary Beale, portrait painter (died 1699)
- 14 October – King James II of England (died 1701)
- 11 November – George Savile, 1st Marquess of Halifax, writer and statesman (died 1695)
- Sir Edward Seymour, 4th Baronet, politician (died 1708)
Deaths
- 17 February – Frances Walsingham, noblewoman (born 1567)
- 1 March – George Herbert, poet and orator (born 1593)
- 5 August – George Abbot, Archbishop of Canterbury (born 1562)
- 10 August – Anthony Munday, writer (born 1553)
- 14 November – William Ames, philosopher (born 1576)
gollark: Pretty sure you also can't do that.
gollark: But I meant you could transmit power and data over short-range radio/microwave links inside your case.
gollark: It can't do either.
gollark: You could transmit power that way too, though it would be... dangerous, inefficient, more expensive and less practical than cables, etc.
gollark: Just very short-range radio.
References
- Walford, Cornelius, ed. (1876). "Fires, Great". The Insurance Cyclopeadia: Being an Historical Treasury of Events and Circumstances Connected with the Origin and Progress of Insurance. C. and E. Layton. p. 29.
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