1638
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Millennium: | 2nd millennium |
---|---|
Centuries: | 16th century – 17th century – 18th century |
Decades: | 1600s 1610s 1620s – 1630s – 1640s 1650s 1660s |
Years: | 1635 1636 1637 – 1638 – 1639 1640 1641 |
1638 by topic: | |
Arts and Science | |
Architecture - Art - Literature - Music - Science | |
Lists of leaders | |
Colonial governors - State leaders | |
Birth and death categories | |
Births - Deaths | |
Establishments and disestablishments categories | |
Establishments - Disestablishments | |
Works category | |
Works | |
Gregorian calendar | 1638 MDCXXXVIII |
Ab urbe condita | 2391 |
Armenian calendar | 1087 ԹՎ ՌՁԷ |
Assyrian calendar | 6388 |
Bahá'í calendar | −206 – −205 |
Bengali calendar | 1045 |
Berber calendar | 2588 |
English Regnal year | 13 Cha. 1 – 14 Cha. 1 |
Buddhist calendar | 2182 |
Burmese calendar | 1000 |
Byzantine calendar | 7146–7147 |
Chinese calendar | 丁丑年 (Fire Ox) 4334 or 4274 — to — 戊寅年 (Earth Tiger) 4335 or 4275 |
Coptic calendar | 1354–1355 |
Discordian calendar | 2804 |
Ethiopian calendar | 1630–1631 |
Hebrew calendar | 5398–5399 |
Hindu calendars | |
- Vikram Samvat | 1694–1695 |
- Shaka Samvat | 1560–1561 |
- Kali Yuga | 4739–4740 |
Holocene calendar | 11638 |
Igbo calendar | 638–639 |
Iranian calendar | 1016–1017 |
Islamic calendar | 1047–1048 |
Japanese calendar | Kan'ei 15 (寛永15年) |
Juche calendar | N/A |
Julian calendar | Gregorian minus 10 days |
Korean calendar | 3971 |
Minguo calendar | 274 before ROC 民前274年 |
Thai solar calendar | 2181 |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 1638. |
Year 1638 (MDCXXXVIII) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar and a common year starting on Monday of the 10-day slower Julian calendar.
Events
January–June
- February 28 – The Scottish National Covenant is signed in Edinburgh.
- March 3 – A mercenary army under Bernard de Saxe-Weimar fighting for France defeats imperial forces at the Battle of Rheinfelden.
- March 5 – Thirty Years' War – The Treaty of Hamburg is signed by France and Sweden.
- March 29 – Settlers from Sweden arrive on the ships Kalmar Nyckel and Fogel Grip to establish the settlement of New Sweden in Delaware, beginning the Swedish colonization of the Americas.
- March – Anne Hutchinson is banished from the Massachusetts Bay Colony for heresy and goes to Rhode Island.
- April 3 – John Wheelwright is banished from Boston and founds Exeter, New Hampshire.
- April 15 – Shogunate forces defeat the last remnants of the Shimabara Rebellion in the fortress of Hara.
- May 23 – Signing of the Kandyan Treaty between the Singhala King Rajasimha II and the Dutch to rid Ceylon of the Portuguese.
- June 20 – Spanish troops under Ferdinand of Austria defeat a much larger Dutch force near Antwerp at the Battle of Kallo during the Eighty Years War.
- June 27 – Patriarch Cyril of Constantinople is deposed for high treason and strangled and thrown into the sea by Janissaries on Ottoman Sultan Murad IV's command.
July–December
- September 21 – The Treaty of Hartford is signed, ending the Pequot War between British American colonists and the Pequot.
- September – John Spofford arrives in Boston Harbor on the ship John of London and is one of the first people to establish Rowely, Essex County, Massachusetts.
- October 21 – The Great Thunderstorm breaks out in Widecombe-in-the-Moor, England.
- November – The General Assembly of the Church of Scotland is summoned to Glasgow by King Charles I of England.
- December 18 – Mazarin becomes first adviser to French potentate Richelieu on the death of Leclerc du Tremblay.
- December 21 – The full moon is in total eclipse from 1:12 to 2:47 UT and the solstice occurs later in the day at 16:05 UT.
Date unknown
- Covenanters meet at Muchalls Castle to compose responses to the Bishops of Aberdeen.
- The Dutch settle in Ceylon.
- Pedro Teixeira makes the first ascent of the Amazon River, from its mouth to Quito, Ecuador. The same trip had been made in the opposite direction in 1541.
- Dutch merchant Willem Kieft is appointed Director of New Amsterdam by the Dutch West India Company.
- The Netherlands colonizes Mauritius.
- Shipwrecked sailors from England found the first known European settlement in Belize.
- The Finnish postal service, Suomen Posti, is founded.
- New Haven, the first planned city in America, is founded.
- The Beijing Gazette makes an official switch in its production process of newspapers, from woodblock printing to movable type printing; private newspapers in Ming Dynasty China were first mentioned in 1582.
- Sultan Murad IV captures Baghdad.
- Shah Jahan transfers the capital of the Moghul Empire from Agra to Delhi.
- Buccaneer Peter Wallace called "Ballis" by the Spanish, settles near and perhaps gives his name to the Belize River.
Births
- January 1 – Emperor Go-Sai (d. 1685)
- January 1 – Nicolas Steno, Pioneer in anatomy and geology, bishop (d. 1686)
- January 1 – Antoinette du Ligier de la Garde Deshoulières, French poet born in Paris (d. 1694)
- January 8 – Elisabetta Sirani, Italian painter (d. 1665)
- January 12 – Ernst Rüdiger von Starhemberg, Austrian field marshal (d. 1701)
- January 20 – Sir William Glynne, 1st Baronet, English politician (d. 1690)
- January 21 – David Elias Heidenreich, Poet, dramatist, librettist and translator (d. 1688)
- January 24 – Charles Sackville, 6th Earl of Dorset, English poet and courtier (d. 1706)
- February 12 – Frederick, Duke of Mecklenburg-Grabow, German nobleman (d. 1688)
- February 18 – Ikeda Tsunamasa, daimyo who ruled the Okayama Domain (d. 1714)
- February 25 – Jørgen Iversen Dyppel, Governor of the Danish West Indies (d. 1683)
- February 28 – John Carmichael, 1st Earl of Hyndford (d. 1710)
- March 6 – Henry Capell, 1st Baron Capell of Tewkesbury, English politician (d. 1696)
- March 14 – Johann Georg Gichtel, German mystic (d. 1710)
- March 15 – Shunzhi Emperor of China (d. c. 1661)
- March 16 – François Crépieul, Jesuit missionary in Canada (d. 1702)
- March 28 – Frederik Ruysch, Dutch physician and anatomist (d. 1731)
- April 2 – Sir Henry Beaumont, 2nd Baronet, English politician (d. 1689)
- April 2 – John Covel, clergyman and scientist who became Master of Christ's College (d. 1722)
- May 6 – Henry Capell, 1st Baron Capell, First Lord of the British Admiralty (d. 1696)
- May 9 – Louis XIV of France, King of France and of Navarre (d. 1715)
- May 9 – Gregorio Vasquez de Arce y Ceballos, Colombian painter (d. 1711)
- May 11 – Guy-Crescent Fagon, physician and botanist (d. 1718)
- May 12 – Pedro Atanasio Bocanegra, Spanish artist (d. 1688)
- May 13 – Richard Simon, French Biblical critic (d. 1712)
- May 29 – John Manners, 1st Duke of Rutland, British nobleman and politician (d. 1711)
- June 2 – Henry Hyde, 2nd Earl of Clarendon (d. 1709)
- June 3 – Thomas Smith (scholar), English scholar (d. 1710)
- June 8 – Pierre Magnol (d. 1715)
- June 21 – Sir William Roberts, 1st Baronet, English politician (d. 1688)
- June 28 – Louise Marie de La Grange d'Arquien (d. 1728)
- June 29 – Heinrich Meibom (doctor), German physicist and scholar (d. 1700)
- July 10 – David Teniers III, Flemish painter (d. 1685)
- July 11 – Olympia Mancini (d. 1708)
- July 15 – Giovanni Buonaventura Viviani, Italian composer (d. 1693)
- July 20 – Ulrik Frederik Gyldenløve, General in Norway during the Scanian War (d. 1704)
- August 3 – William Louis, Prince of Anhalt-Köthen (d. 1665)
- August 6 – Nicolas Malebranche, French philosopher (d. 1715)
- August 7 – John Tufton, 4th Earl of Thanet, English politician (d. 1680)
- August 13 – Durgadas Rathore (d. 1718)
- August 15 – Pieter de Graeff, Dutch politician and noble (d. 1707)
- August 22 – Georg Christoph Eimmart, engraver (d. 1705)
- September 5 – King Louis XIV of France (d. 1715)
- September 10 – Maria Theresa of Spain, wife of Louis XIV of France (d. 1683)
- September 19 – Isaac Milles, English cleric (d. 1720)
- September 20 – Antonio Gherardi, Italian painter (d. 1702)
- September 21 – Philippe de Courcillon, French officer and author (d. 1720)
- September 30 – Maximilian Philipp Hieronymus, Duke of Bavaria-Leuchtenberg, German nobleman (d. 1705)
- October 14 – Bernhard II, Duke of Saxe-Jena (d. 1678)
- October 17 – John Charles, Count Palatine of Gelnhausen (d. 1704)
- October 21 – Lucia Wijbrants, Dutch artist (d. 1719)
- October 31 – Meindert Hobbema, Dutch painter (d. 1709)
- November 8 – Anton van Dale, Dutch minister (d. 1708)
- November 22 – Christoph Cellarius, German classical scholar (d. 1707)
- November 25 – Catherine of Braganza, wife of Charles II of England (d. 1705)
- November 30 – Joachim Feller, German professor at the University of Leipzig (d. 1691)
- December 17 – Anna Sophia II, Abbess of Quedlinburg, German noblewoman (d. 1683)
- December 24 – Tomás de la Cerda, 3rd Marquis of la Laguna (d. 1692)
- December 25 – Michel Bégon (1638–1710), French ancien regime official (d. 1710)
Deaths
- January 21 – Ignazio Donati, Italian composer (b. c. 1570)
- January 27 – Gonzalo de Céspedes y Meneses, Spanish novelist (b. c. 1585)
- February 26 – Claude Gaspard Bachet de Méziriac, French mathematician (b. 1581)
- April 7 – Shimazu Tadatsune, Japanese ruler of Satsuma (b. 1576)
- April 13 – Henri, duc de Rohan, French Huguenot leader (b. 1579)
- May 6 – Cornelius Jansen, French bishop and religious reformer (b. 1585)
- June 25 – Juan Pérez de Montalbán, Spanish writer (b. 1602)
- September - Christoph Besold, German jurist (b. 1577)
- September 14 – John Harvard, American clergyman (b. 1607)
- November 9 – Johann Heinrich Alsted, German theologian (b. 1588)
- November 11 – Cornelis Corneliszoon van Haarlem, Dutch painter (b. 1562)
- December 8 – Ivan Gundulić, Croatian poet (b. 1589)
- date unknown – Pietro Paolo Floriani, architect (b. 1585)
References
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