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1607 and Irish
In 1587 – 88 it was destroyed by Irish soldiers, reconstruction began in 1607.
Following the English victory in the Nine Years ' War ( 1594 – 1603 ), and particularly with the " Flight of the Earls " in 1607, the traditional Gaelic Irish nobility was displaced in Ireland.
The Flight of the Earls, one of the most celebrated-and lamented-episodes in Irish history, occurred on 14 September 1607, when O ' Neill and O ' Donnell embarked at midnight at Rathmullan on Lough Swilly on a voyage bound for Spain.
Irish historian Marc Caball on the other hand claims that " early modern Irish nationalism " began to be established after the Flight of the Earls ( 1607 ), based on the concepts of " the indivisibility of Gaelic cultural integrity, territorial sovereignty, and the interlinking of Gaelic identity with profession of the Roman Catholic faith ".
In September 1607, he delivered to Cecil his report of the Flight of the Earls, a seminal event in Irish history and, before long, had travelled into the absent earls ' territories to lay indictments against them there.
Following the end of the primary conflict between the Irish monarchy and the rebel chieftains of Ireland with the flight of the Earls in 1607, James I of Ireland set out to defend against a future attack from within or without.
Following the Flight of the Earls ( 1607 ) the Crown confiscated almost the entire county from its Irish aristocratic feudal owners.
On 10 May 1607, King James I granted the native Irish chief, Ruairí Óg MacQuillan the Ballymena Estate.
The main effect of this was the dispossession of formerly powerful Irish clan leaders, such as the O ' Neills and the O ' Donnells, who fled the country in the Flight of the Earls in 1607.
This represented a huge cull of the Ulster's, Gaelic Irish and Anglo-Irish elite, more significant than that which occurred in 1607 with the Flight of the Earls.

1607 and chieftains
After a failed general uprising, in September 1607, Hugh O ' Neill, 2nd Earl of Tyrone and Rory O ' Donnell, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell the last Gaelic chieftains and upholders of Brehon law in Ireland at that time, set sail from Rathmullan with ninety of their followers.

1607 and their
Before 1607, the Powhatan tribe had lived in the region with one of their capitals there, known as Powhatan, Shocquohocan, or Shockoe.
It was here at Scotia Creek, that the pilgrims made their first attempt to leave for Holland in 1607.
When Captain John Smith and the Jamestown colonists settled in Virginia in 1607, one of their assigned tasks was to locate the Roanoke colonists.
In 1607, after a voyage of 144 days, three ships headed by Captain Christopher Newport carrying 105 men and boys made their first landfall in the New World where the Atlantic Ocean meets the southern mouth of the Chesapeake Bay in the northeastern part of the city.
This land was confiscated by King James I after the Flight of the Earls of Tyrone and Tyrconnell in 1607 and a series of Rebellions in the area which saw the native landlords ousted from their holdings.
During the first half of the 17th century, the Confederacy and the English colonists who established their first permanent settlement at Jamestown in 1607 were frequently in conflict.
Arriving in August 1607, these Plymouth Company colonists established their settlement, known as the Popham Colony, in the present-day town of Phippsburg, Maine near the mouth of the Kennebec River.
A few, like Protestant Donauwörth, which was annexed to the Catholic Duchy Bavaria in 1607, were stripped of their status as Free City by the Emperor for genuine or trumped-up reasons.
The history of organized religion in the province of Nueva Vizcaya dates back to the year 1607 when the Dominican Order arrived at the hinterlands of the province to preach their beliefs.
He took part in the Flight of the Earls in 1607, when Hugh O ' Neill, Earl of Tyrone, and Rory O ' Donnell, 1st Earl of Tyrconnell, together with more than ninety of their family and followers, the chief of the Gaelic and Catholic resistance in Ireland, fled to Europe.
By 1607 O ' Neill's allies The Maguire and the Earl of Tyrconnell were finding it hard to maintain their prestige on lower incomes.
King James issued a " A Proclamation touching the Earles of Tyrone and Tyrconnell " on 15 November 1607, describing their action as treasonous, and therefore preparing the ground for the eventual forfeiture of their lands and titles.
As an ancient stronghold of the O ' Rourkes of Breifne and their ofttimes rivals, the O ' Raghnaills ( Reynolds ) of North Roscommon, the town was granted a royal charter and named a borough with its own seal in 1607.
Despite the Anglo-Spanish peace treaty of 1604, in 1607 O ' Neill, his brother-in-law the Earl of Tyrconnell, and several of their followers fled to Europe, expecting the Spanish to invade Ireland with an army.
1350 ); Guy of Warwick, a poem ( written in 1617 and licensed, but not printed ) by John Lane, the manuscript of which ( in the British Library ) contains a sonnet by John Milton, father of the poet ; The Famous Historie of Guy, Earl of Warwick ( c. 1607 ) by Samuel Rowlands ; The Booke of the moste Victoryous Prince Guy of Warwicke ( William Copland, London, n. d .); other editions by J. Cawood and C. Bates ; chapbooks and ballads of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries: The Tragical History, Admirable Atchievements and Curious Events of Guy, Earl of Warwick, a tragedy ( 1661 ) which may possibly be identical with a play on the subject written by John Day and Thomas Dekker, and entered at Stationers ' Hall on 15 January 1618 / 19 ; three verse fragments are printed by Hales and F. J. Furnivall in their edition of the Percy Folio MS. vol.
With their crews of 105 men and boys, only 104 made landfall at Cape Henry on April 26, 1607, at what is now First Landing State Park, before heading up to what is now Jamestown.
On 14 September 1607, with the discovery that he and Tyrone were to be arrested and imprisoned, both Earls set sail from Lough Swilly with their families and followers for eventual exile in Spanish Flanders and Rome ( see Flight of the Earls ).
Finally Paul V in 1607 recognized the liberty of Dominicans and Jesuits to defend their ideas, prohibiting that either side of this disagreement be characterized as heresy.
While the earlier attempt at colonization had failed on Roanoke Island, the English established their first permanent colony in America in Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607, at the mouth of the James River, which in turn empties into Chesapeake Bay.
:" Near this place in September 1607 those later known as " The Pilgrim Fathers " made their first attempt to find religious freedom across the seas.
Until their respective deaths in 1607 and 1619, her daughters Penelope and Dorothy were her closest companions.
In 1607, it is believed to have been the place where William Brewster, William Bradford and their followers ( the Separatists, later to be known as the Pilgrim Fathers ) were taken following their arrest after trying to flee England.

1607 and followers
The Flight of the Earls () took place on 14 September 1607, when Hugh Ó Neill of Tír Eóghain, Rory Ó Donnell of Tír Chonaill and about ninety followers left Ireland for mainland Europe.

1607 and including
In the first performance of Monteverdi's Orfeo ( 1607 ), for example, they played subsidiary roles, including Speranza and ( possibly ) that of Euridice.
The feasts covered include the major feasts of the Virgin Mary ( including the votive masses for the Virgin for the four seasons of the church year ), All Saints and Corpus Christi ( 1605 ) followed by the feasts of the Temporale ( Christmas, Epiphany, Easter, Ascension, Whitsun and Feast of Saints Peter and Paul ( with additional items for St Peter's Chains and the Votive Mass of the Blessed Sacrament ) in 1607.
British colonization of the Americas ( including colonization by both the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Scotland before the Acts of Union which created the Kingdom of Great Britain in 1707 ) began in 1607 in Jamestown, Virginia and reached its peak when colonies had been established throughout the Americas.
He also began adapting musical works of earlier eras for contemporary theatrical presentation, including Claudio Monteverdi's opera L ' Orfeo ( 1607 ).
When Henry Hudson sailed up what would become known as the Hudson River in 1607, he claimed the entirety of the watershed of the river, including Englewood, for the Netherlands, making the future region of Englewood a part of New Netherland.
In England Frisius's method was included in the growing number of books on surveying which appeared from the middle of the century onwards, including William Cunningham's Cosmographical Glasse ( 1559 ), Valentine Leigh's Treatise of Measuring All Kinds of Lands ( 1562 ), William Bourne's Rules of Navigation ( 1571 ), Thomas Digges's Geometrical Practise named Pantometria ( 1571 ), and John Norden's Surveyor's Dialogue ( 1607 ).
In 1606 or 1607 Salmasius had discovered in the library of the Counts Palatine in Heidelberg the only surviving copy of Cephalas's 10th-century unexpurgated copy of the Greek Anthology, including the 258-poem anthology of homoerotic poems by Straton of Sardis that would eventually become known as the notorious Book 12 of the Greek Anthology.
Nine performances at Court marked the winter of 1606 – 7, including a December 26 performance of King Lear ; the following winter, 1607 – 8, saw thirteen Court appearances.
Buildings of note include Donhwamun ( built in 1412, rebuilt in 1607, with a copper bell weighing 9 short tons or 8 metric tons ), Injeongjeon ( main hall ), Seongjeongjeon ( auxiliary office in the main hall ), Huijeongdang ( the king's private residence, later used as a conference hall ), Daejojeon ( living quarters ), and Nakseon-jae ( former residence of Korean imperial family including Princess Bangja.
In 1607 he went to Mantua, where he wrote music for the Gonzaga family, including his impressive operatic setting of Dafne, and in 1609 returned to Florence to become maestro di cappella at the Compagnia dell ' Arcangelo Raffaello, the organisation at which he had received his boyhood musical training.
Seeking revenge for this and similar acts of hostility, Membertou led some 500 warriors in a raid on the Armouchiquois town, Chouacoet, present-day Saco, Maine, in July, 1607, killing 20 of their braves, including two of their leaders, Onmechin and Marchin.
In the early 17th century, the area was the scene of a number of indigenous uprisings, including one by the Wixarika and Tepecan in 1607, resulting in its abandonment by the few Spanish settlers.

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