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1673 and
* 1630 Thomas Clifford, 1st Baron Clifford of Chudleigh, English politician ( d. 1673 )
* 1673 John Ker, Scottish spy ( d. 1726 )
Ahmed III ( Ottoman Turkish: احمد ثالث Aḥmed-i < u > s </ u > āli < u > s </ u >) < span dir =" ltr ">( December 30 / 31, 1673 July 1, 1736 )</ span > was Sultan of the Ottoman Empire and a son of Sultan Mehmed IV ( 1648 87 ).
* 1673 Richard Mead, English physician ( d. 1754 )
* 1673 Wilhelmina Amalia of Brunswick, Holy Roman Empire Empress ( d. 1742 )
* 1722 Robert Beverley, Jr., American historian ( b. 1673 )
* 1673 Margaret Cavendish, English writer ( b. 1623 )
* 1625 Johann Rudolph Ahle, German composer, organist, theorist, and Protestant church musician ( d. 1673 )
* 1673 Ahmed III, Ottoman Sultan ( d. 1736 )
* 1616 Kaspar Förster, German singer and composer ( d. 1673 )
* John Gordon ( 1673 1675 )
Further imprisonments came at London in 1654, Launceston in 1656, Lancaster in 1660, Leicester in 1662, Lancaster again and Scarborough in 1664 66 and Worcester in 1673 75.
The second Khoikoi-Dutch war ( 1673 1677 ) was a cattle raid.
* 1622 Molière, French playwright ( d. 1673 )
* 1673 French explorers Jacques Marquette and Louis Jolliet reach the Mississippi River and become the first Europeans to make a detailed account of its course.
* 1673 Antonio de Literes, Spanish composer ( d. 1747 )
* 1641 Regnier de Graaf, Dutch physician and anatomist ( d. 1673 )
* 1617 Kristoffer Gabel, Danish statesman ( d. 1673 )
* 1673 James Brydges, 1st Duke of Chandos, English noble ( d. 1744 )
* 1673 John Berkeley, 1st Baron Berkeley of Stratton sells his part of New Jersey to the Religious Society of Friends, commonly known as Quakers.
* 1673 Second Battle of Khotyn in Ukraine: Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth forces under the command of Jan Sobieski defeat the Ottoman army.
* 1606 Jeanne Mance, French settler of New France ( d. 1673 )

1673 and Louis
In June 1673, Louis XIV laid siege to the city because French battle supply lines were being threatened.
As early as 1673, Louis had by his own power extended the right of the régale over the provinces of Languedoc, Guyenne, Provence, and Dauphiné, where it had previously not been exercised.
* June 16 Louise-Françoise de Bourbon, eldest daughter of Louis XIV and Madame de Montespan ; she built the Paris Palais Bourbon where she died ( b. 1673 )
In 1673, an expedition headed by Louis Jolliet and Jacques Marquette, though possibly not the first Europeans to visit the area, was the first recorded to have crossed the Chicago Portage and travelled along the Chicago River.
Although Louis took Maastricht and William's attack against Charleroi failed, Lieutenant-Admiral Michiel de Ruyter defeated the Anglo-French fleet three times, forcing Charles to end England's involvement by the Treaty of Westminster ; after 1673, France slowly withdrew from Dutch territory ( with the exception of Maastricht ), while making gains elsewhere.
On March 25, 1691, James Louis married Hedwig Elisabeth Amelia of Neuburg ( 1673 1722 ), the daughter of the Palatine elector Philip William.
The new Duchess of Orléans, who had converted from Protestantism to Catholicism just before entering France, was popular at court upon her arrival in 1671 and quickly became the mother of Alexandre Louis d ' Orléans in 1673, another short-lived Duke of Valois.
The first European explorers to visit the area, Father Marquette and Louis Jolliet, arrived in 1673, where they encountered the fearsome painting of the Piasa bird.
In 1673, the governor of New France ( Quebec, the French settlement started by Samuel de Champlain ), sent Jacques Marquette, a Catholic priest and missionary, and Louis Jolliet, a French Canadian fur trader, along with seven other explorers, on a mission to find the Northwest Passage.
The first visitors to present-day Hodgkins, explorers Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet, paddled down the Des Plaines River in 1673, passing through the area, making their camp in present-day Summit.
The origin of the name, which was what it would be called or referred to in popular vernacular, was most likely a corruption of the name of French Canadian explorer Louis Jolliet, who in 1673, along with Father Jacques Marquette, paddled up the Des Plaines River and camped on a huge mound, a few miles ( a unit of distance ) south of present-day Joliet.
The city, which is located on the Mississippi River, is named after Jesuit missionary Jacques Marquette, who along with Louis Joliet discovered the Mississippi River just southeast of the city on June 17, 1673.
Since Tipton County is one of the five counties of the State of Tennessee that is located along the Mississippi River, this area was first explored by white people during the noted expedition of the French Canadians Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet in 1673.
Portage was named for the Fox-Wisconsin Waterway, a portage between the Fox River and the Wisconsin River, which was recognized by Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet during their discovery of a route to the Mississippi River in 1673.
Explorers Father Jacques Marquette and Louis Joliet passed through the area in 1673, following the canoe route to the Mississippi.
In 1673, Rupert was urged by Charles Louis to return home, marry and establish an heir to the Palatinate, as it appeared likely that Charles Louis's own son would not survive infancy.
Her parents were James Louis Sobieski ( 1667 1737 ), the eldest son of King John III, and Countess Palatine Hedwig Elisabeth of Neuburg ( 1673 1722 ).
* Louise-Françoise de Bourbon ( 1673 1743 ) illegitimate daughter of Louis XIV of France and his most famous mistress Madame de Montespan.
In May 1673, Jesuit priest Jacques Marquette and French trader Louis Jolliet sailed down the Mississippi River in canoes along the area that would later become the state of Missouri.
It was not until 1673 that Louis Jolliet and Père ( Father ) Jacques Marquette explored the upper Mississippi Valley, including the area where it was joined by the Ohio River.
On July 12, 1673, the Governor of New France, Louis de Buade de Frontenac, arrived at the mouth of the Cataraqui River to meet with leaders of the Five Nations of the Iroquois to encourage them to trade with the French.
The King's Daughters () is a term used to refer to the approximately 800 young French women who immigrated to New France between 1663 and 1673 as part of a program sponsored by Louis XIV.
The city was finally conquered by France under King Louis XIV in 1673 and officially ceded by the 1679 Treaties of Nijmegen.

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