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1625 and plague
Some other previous outbreaks of the plague in England were the 1603 plague, which killed 30, 000 Londoners ; the 1625 plague, when some 35, 000 died, and the 1636 plague, when some 10, 000 died.
Outbreaks of plague were not particularly unusual events in London: major epidemics had occurred in 1592, 1603, 1625, and 1636.
In 1574, 1625, 1636, and 1673, Gouda suffered from deadly plague epidemics, of which the last one was the most severe: 2995 persons died, constituting 20 % of its population.
In 1625 Charles I brought his court to Richmond Palace to escape the plague in London and turned the area on the hill above Richmond into a park for red and fallow deer.
In 1625 Farnham was again subject to an outbreak of the plague which, together with a severe decline in the local woollen industry ( the local downland wool being unsuitable for the newly fashionable worsted ) led by the 1640s to a serious economic depression in the area.
He was continued in office by Charles I, and in the following autumn it fell to him, as junior judge in his court, to discharge the hazardous duty of adjourning term during the plague outbreak of 1625.
The Jacobean era ended with a severe economic depression in 1620 – 1626, complicated by a serious outbreak of bubonic plague in London in 1625.
Massinger most likely wrote the play in 1625, though its debut on stage was delayed a year as the theatres were closed due to bubonic plague.
Fletcher was born in December 1579 ( baptised 20 December ) in Rye, Sussex, and died of the plague in August 1625 ( buried 29 August in St. Saviour's, Southwark ).
He died in 1625, apparently of the plague.
In 1625 Charles I brought his court here to escape the plague in London and by the early 18th century these had become the homes of " minor nobility, diplomats, and court hangers-on ".

1625 and says
Alatriste finally returns to the Netherlands in 1624 ( although the movie says it's 1625 ) and participates in the final battles leading to Breda's surrender.

1625 and was
The list was headed by ( Henry ) Hutton of St. John's who was matriculated from St. John's at Easter, 1625.
The second name was ( Edward ) Kempe, matriculated from Queens' College at Easter, 1625.
( John ) Boutflower of Christ's was twelfth in the list, coming from Perse School under Mr. Lovering as pensioner 20 April 1625 under Mr. Alsop.
The fourteenth name was ( Richard ) Buckenham, written Buckman, admitted to Christ's College under Scott 2 July 1625.
The fifteenth name was ( Thomas ) Baldwin, admitted to Christ's 4 March 1625 under Alsop.
The accession of Charles I ( 1625 – 1649 ) brought about a complete change in the religious scene in that the new king used his supremacy over the established, state Church " to promote his own idiosyncratic style of sacramental Kingship " which was " a very weird aberration from the first hundred years of the early reformed Church of England ".
Charles I ( 19 November 1600 – 30 January 1649 ) was King of England, King of Scotland, and King of Ireland from 27 March 1625 until his execution in 1649.
While the transcription of the Chinese words used by Ricci was not very consistent, he systematically used Latin p and t for unaspirated Chinese sounds that Pinyin renders as b and d. Accordingly, Ricci called the adherents of Laozi, Tausu (, Pinyin: Daoshi ), which was rendered as Tausa in an early English translation published by Samuel Purchas ( 1625 ).
In a round of this dynastic dispute, Gustavus invaded Livonia when he was, beginning the Polish-Swedish War ( 1625 – 1629 ).
The immediate occasion for the war was the uprising of the Protestant nobility of Bohemia against the emperor, but the conflict was widened into a European War by the intervention of King Christian IV of Denmark ( 1625 – 29 ), Gustavus Adolphus of Sweden ( 1630 – 48 ) and France under Cardinal Richelieu.
Avercamp was born in Amsterdam, where he studied with the Danish-born portrait painter Pieter Isaacks ( 1569 – 1625 ), and perhaps also with David Vinckboons.
Johann Bayer ( 1572 – March 7, 1625 ) was a German lawyer and uranographer ( celestial cartographer ).
In May 1625 she was in good spirits and insisted on accompanying her husband on the royal yacht to review the fleet.
Fort Amsterdam was designated the capital of the province in 1625.
The first actual usage of the term prime minister or Premier Ministre was used by Cardinal Richelieu when in 1625 he was named to head the royal council as prime minister of France.
In 1611 and again in 1625 a decree prohibited any discussion of the matter, although it was often informally avoided by the publication of commentaries on Thomas Aquinas.
The first English colony was established in 1623, followed by a French colony in 1625.
His great uncle Talbot Pepys was recorder and briefly MP for Cambridge in 1625.
Sofonisba Anguissola ( also spelled Anguisciola ) ( c. 1532 – 16 November 1625 ) was an Italian Renaissance painter born in Cremona.
A derivative, Daoshi (, " Daoist priest "), was used already by the Jesuits Matteo Ricci and Nicolas Trigault in their De Christiana expeditione apud Sinas, rendered as Tausu in the original Latin edition ( 1615 ), and Tausa in an early English translation published by Samuel Purchas ( 1625 ).
Between 1549 and 1625 it was the tallest building in the world.

1625 and .
* 1625 – Rasmus Bartholin, Danish physician, mathematician, and physicist ( d. 1698 )
* 1682 – Franz Egon of Fürstenberg, Bavarian Catholic archbishop ( b. 1625 )
* 1625 – François de Harlay de Champvallon, French archbishop ( d. 1695 )
After a short residence in Venice, he went to Rome in 1625 with an introduction from the Duke of Mantua to the late pope's nephew, Cardinal Ludovico Ludovisi, who employed him for a time in the restoration of ancient statues.
* Rerum Patriae, seu Historiae Mediolanensis, Libri IV ( Milan, 1625 ) a history of Milan, written in 1504-05.
* 1625 – Mori Terumoto, Japanese warrior ( b. 1553 )
The Feast of Esther ( Feest van Esther ) by Jan Lievens, 1625, North Carolina Museum of Art.
These reformed French Breviaries — e. g. the Paris Breviary of 1680 by Archbishop François de Harlay ( 1625 – 1695 ) and that of 1736 by Archbishop Charles Gaspard Guillaume de Vintimille ( 1655 – 1746 )— show a deep knowledge of Holy Scripture, and much careful adaptation of different texts.
With the defeat of Charles I ( 1625 – 1649 ) in the Civil War the Puritan pressure, exercised through a much-changed Parliament, had increased.
Famous casuistic authors include Antonio Escobar y Mendoza, whose Summula casuum conscientiae ( 1627 ) enjoyed a great success, Thomas Sanchez, Vincenzo Filliucci ( Jesuit and penitentiary at St Peter's ), Antonino Diana, Paul Laymann ( Theologia Moralis, 1625 ), John Azor ( Institutiones Morales, 1600 ), Etienne Bauny, Louis Cellot, Valerius Reginaldus, Hermann Busembaum ( d. 1668 ), etc.
* 1547 – Ubbo Emmius, Dutch historian and geographer ( d. 1625 )
* 1625 – Johann Rudolph Ahle, German composer, organist, theorist, and Protestant church musician ( d. 1673 )
* 1579 – ( baptized ) John Fletcher, English playwright ( d. 1625 )
* 1625 – Barthélemy d ' Herbelot de Molainville, French orientalist ( d. 1695 )
At the accession of Charles I in 1625, England and Scotland had both experienced relative peace, both internally and in their relations with each other, for as long as anyone could remember.

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