1703 in literature
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The year 1703 in literature involved some significant events.
Events
- July 29-31 - Daniel Defoe is placed in a pillory in London as part of his punishment for the crime of seditious libel, after publishing his politically satirical pamphlet The Shortest Way with the Dissenters (1702) (he is released from Newgate Prison in mid-November).
New books
- Bernard de Mandeville - Some Fables After the Easie and Familiar Method of Monsieur de la Fontaine
- Leonty Magnitsky - Arithmetic (Арифметика)
- Benjamin Whichcote - Moral and Religious Aphorisms
New drama
- Thomas Baker - Tunbridge Walks
- William Burnaby - Love Betray'd
- Susanna Centlivre - The Stolen Heiress
- Chikamatsu Monzaemon - The Love Suicides at Sonezaki (曾根崎心中, Sonezaki Shinjū)
- Thomas d'Urfey - The Old Mode & the New
- Richard Estcourt - The Fair Example
- Charles Gildon - The Patriot (adapt. Nathaniel Lee)
- John Oldmixon - The Governour of Cyprus
- Mary Pix - The Different Widows
- Nicholas Rowe - The Fair Penitent
- Richard Steele - The Tender Husband
Poetry
- Lady Mary Chudleigh - Poems on Several Occasions
- William Congreve
- A Hymn to Harmony
- The Tears of Amaryllis for Amyntas
- Sarah Fyge Egerton - Poems on Several Occasions
- See also 1703 in poetry
Non-fiction
- Joseph Addison - A Letter from Italy
- Abel Boyer - The History of the Reign of Queen Anne
- Gilbert Burnet - A Third Collection of Several Tracts and Discourses
- Edmund Calamy - A Defence of Moderate Non-Conformity
- Jeremy Collier - Mr Collier's Dissuasive from the Play-House
- Thomas Hearne - Reliquiae Bodleianae
- Benjamin Hoadly - The Reasonableness of Conformity to the Church of England
- William Dampier - A Voyage to New Holland, &c. in the Year 1699
- Daniel Defoe
- A Brief Explanation of a Late Pamphlet, entitled, The Shortest Way with the Dissenters
- A Dialogue Between a Dissenter and the Observator
- A Hymn to the Funeral Sermon
- Hymn to the Pillory
- More Reformation: A satyr upon himself
- The Shortest Way to Peace and Union
- A True Collection of the Writings of the Author of the True-Born English-man
- John Dunton - The Shortest Way with Whores and Rogues (sat. of Defoe)
- Ned Ward - The Secret History of the Calves-head Clubb (vs. Republicanism)
Births
- March 23 - Cajsa Warg, Swedish cookbook author (died 1769)
- June 28 - John Wesley, writer of sermons and hymns (died 1791)
- October 5 - Jonathan Edwards, theologian (died 1758)
- November 26 - Theophilus Cibber, playwright (died 1758)
- date unknown
- Henry Brooke, novelist and dramatist (died 1783)
- Charles Clémencet, historian (died 1778)
- Thomas Cooke, translator of Hesiod (died 1756)
- İbrahim Hakkı Erzurumi, Sufi philosopher (died 1780)
- Ando Shoeki, philosopher (died 1762)
- Gilbert West, poet (died 1756)
Deaths
- January 11 - Johann Georg Graevius, critic (born 1632)
- February 17 - Philippe Goibaud-Dubois, translator (born 1626)
- March 3 - Robert Hooke, natural philosopher (born 1635)
- March 5 - Gabrielle Suchon, moral philosopher (born 1631)
- April 20 - Lancelot Addison, father of Joseph Addison (born 1632)
- May 8 - Vincent Alsop, religious writer and wit (born c.1630)
- May 16 - Charles Perrault, French writer of fairy tales (born 1628)
- May 26 - Samuel Pepys, diarist (born 1633)
- September 29 - Charles de Saint-Évremond, French essayist and literary critic (born 1613)
- November 19 - the original "Man in the Iron Mask" (true identity unknown)
- date unknown - Samuel Johnson, pamphleteer (born 1649)
- probable - John Crowne, dramatist
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