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1651 and Ferdinand
* 1651Ferdinand Tobias Richter, Austrian composer and organist ( d. 1711 )
1623 edict by Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor ( 1578 – 1637 ) awarding Frederick's lands and titles to Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria ( 1573 – 1651 ).
Ferdinand Maria, Elector of Bavaria ( 31 October 1636 – 26 May 1679 ) was a Wittelsbach ruler of Bavaria and an elector ( Kurfürst ) of the Holy Roman Empire from 1651 to 1679.
Ferdinand Charles was an absolutist ruler, did not call any diet after 1648 and had his chancellor Wilhelm Biener executed illegally in 1651 after a secret trial.
Albert was 1651 – 1654 the regent for his young nephew Elector Ferdinand Maria.
* November 3 – Ferdinand Tobias Richter, organist and composer ( born 1651 )

1651 and III
* John Somers, 1st Baron Somers 1651 – 1716, Lord Chancellor of England under William III
The area was originally granted by William III to John Somers ( 1651 – 1716 ), Lord Chancellor and Baron Somers of Evesham.
Many family members are buried in the church's Derby Chapel, including Thomas Stanley, the first Earl, who caused Richard III to lose his crown by changing sides at the Battle of Bosworth in 1485, and the Royalist James Stanley, the seventh Earl, who was beheaded at Bolton in 1651 after the Civil War.
On the accession of Frederick III ( 1648 ) to the throne, Sehested strove hard to win his favor, but an investigation into his accounts as governor conducted by his enemies brought to light such wholesale embezzlement and peculation that he was summoned to appear before a herredag, or assembly of notables in May 1651 to give an account of his whole administration.
The manuscript first received special attention by the learnèd in 1651 when Bishop Brynjólfur Sveinsson of Skálholt, with the permission of King Frederick III of Denmark, requested all folk of Iceland who owned old manuscripts to turn them over to the Danish king, providing either the original or a copy, either as a gift or for a price.
I – III, 1651 ) ( Or: Volume 1: ; )
The town of Augustenborg grew up around Augustenborg Palace which was established in the years after 1651 by Ernst Günther, a member of the ducal House of Schleswig-Holstein ( its branch of Sønderborg ), great-grandson of King Christian III, and a cadet of the royal house of Denmark.

1651 and married
In 1670 he had married another Quaker, Christian Mollison ( c. 1651 – 1722 ), of Aberdeen.
# Henriette Marie of the Palatinate ( 7 July 1626 – 18 September 1651 ); married Prince Sigismund of Siebenbuergen on 16 June 1651
Lacking an heir, Philip married Mariana of Austria in 1649, and Margarita ( 1651 – 1673 ) was their first child, and their only one at the time of the painting.
Alexander Leslie was married in 1637 to Agnes Renton ( died 29 June 1651, daughter of David Renton of Billie ), and in due course his eldest son, Gustav Leslie became a colonel in the Swedish Army.
His great-great-grandson Thomas Stoner ( 18 December 1626 – 2 September 1683 ) married in 1651 Elizabeth Nevill ( b. 1641 ), daughter of Sir Henry Nevill, 9th Baron Bergavenny and his second wife Katherine Vaux, daughter of The Hon.
He was concerned in the Fronde of 1651, but soon afterwards became reconciled with Mazarin, and in 1654 married the cardinal's niece, Anne Marie Martinozzi ( 1639 – 1672 ), and secured the government of Guienne.
Thomas Osborne, the future Lord Treasurer, succeeded to the baronetcy and estates in Yorkshire on his father Edward's death in 1647, and, after unsuccessfully courting his cousin Dorothy Osborne, married Lady Bridget, daughter of Montagu Bertie, 2nd Earl of Lindsey, in 1651.
There is no conclusive evidence to support the story that Lucy Walter was secretly married to the king, but the intimacy between them lasted with intervals until at least the autumn of 1651, and perhaps for rather longer.
Mary Crofts married firstly William Sarsfield and had female issue, and married secondly William Fanshawe ( b. The Hague, May 1651 ), and had issue.
When Sanraku had no son he married Kano Sansetsu ( 1589 – 1651 ) to his daughter and adopted him.
In 1651 in England, with his father Edward present, Josiah married Penelope Pelham, daughter of Herbert Pelham.
Penelope Pelham, who married Josiah Winslow in 1651, was born about 1630 in England and died on December 7, 1703 in Marshfield, Massachusetts.
On 4 June 1651 he had married Maria Benigna Francisca of Saxe-Lauenburg, daughter of Duke Julius Henry of Saxe-Lauenburg.
He was married twice ( 1651 and 11 July 1703 ); by his first wife, Elizabeth Whittle ( died August, 1696 ), daughter of William Whittle and wife, he had seven sons, all of whom predeceased him, and three daughters ; by his second, Christiana Hope ( died 17 February 1718 ), daughter of Rev.
Her daughter, Dorothy ( born 1586-died 1615 in Gravesend, Kent, ENG ) married Sir Richard Devereaux Gilliam ( born 1583-died 1651 in Norfolk, Virginia, USA ), the elder son of Walter, Viscount Hereford of Herefordshire, England.
In 1651 she married Edward Conway, later 1st Earl of Conway, and in the following year More dedicated his book Antidote against Atheism to her.
* Eberhardine Katharine of Württemberg-Winnental ( 12 April 1651 – 19 August 1683 ); married on 30 April 1682 Count Albert Ernest I of Oettingen-Oettingen.
* Ercole Grimaldi, Marquis of Baux ( 1623 – 2 August 1651 ); married on 4 July 1641 to Aurelia Spinola ( d. 29 September 1670 )
* Anna Aleksandra Koniecpolska ( died in 1651 ), married to Kasper Doenhoff ( 1588 – 1645 ).
He married Marie Sibylle of Nassau-Saarbrücken on April 12, 1651 in Beck.
# Margaret Scott ( died 5 October 1651 ) married first James Ross, 6th Lord Ross ; married second Sir Alexander Seton of Foulstruther, later Montgomerie, 6th Earl of Eglinton

1651 and .
* 1651 – André Dacier, French scholar ( d. 1722 )
* 1651 – Jean-Baptiste de La Salle, French educational reformer and Catholic saint ( d. 1719 )
* 1604 – Tokugawa Iemitsu, Japanese 3rd shogun of the Tokugawa dynasty ( d. 1651 )
* 1573 – Maximilian I, Elector of Bavaria ( d. 1651 )
The English Civil War ( 1642 – 1651 ) provoked a number of examples of this genre, including works by Sir Edmund Ludlow and Sir John Reresby.
* 1702 – Jean Bart, French admiral ( b. 1651 )
* 1651 – Joseph Vaz, Indian priest, Apostle of Ceylon ( d. 1711 )
* 1651 – Lennart Torstenson, Swedish soldier and engineer ( b. 1603 )
* 1719 – Jean-Baptiste de La Salle, French saint ( b. 1651 )
Cuyp ( 1594 – 1651 / 52 ), he is especially known for his large views of the Dutch countryside in early morning or late afternoon light.
An early professed empiricist, Thomas Hobbes, known as an eccentric denizen of the court of Charles II of England ( an " old bear "), published in 1651 Leviathan, a political treatise written during the English civil war, containing an early manifesto in English of rationalism.
His father died in 1651.
Fought over three days from 28 to 30 June 1651, the battle took place in the Polish province of Volhynia.
On 19 June 1651, the Polish Army numbered 14, 844 Polish cavalry, 2, 250 German-style cavalry, 11, 900 German-style infantry and dragoons, 2, 950 Hungarian-style infantry ( haiduks ), 1, 550 Lithuanian volunteers, and 960 Lipka Tatars.
The Apothecary or The Chemist by Gabriël Metsu ( c. 1651 – 67 )
Finberg pointed out, however, that a document of 1651 refers to Tavistock's guildhall as Guilehall, so Guilebridge is more likely to be guild bridge, probably because it was built or maintained by one of the town guilds.
In 1651, the Dutch, reinvigorated by the leadership of Peter Stuyvesant, established a fort at present-day New Castle, and in 1655 they conquered the New Sweden colony, annexing it into the Dutch New Netherland.
In 1651, John French published The Art of Distillation the first major English compendium of practice, though it has been claimed that much of it derives from Braunschweig's work.
Published instructions for English Country Dance first appear in John Playford's The English Dancing Master of 1651.
By the early 18th century, other publishers began to issue collections of dances as well ; a conservative estimate of the number of dances in the English style published between 1651 and 1810 would run to around 20, 000.
The Civil War ended with the Parliamentary victory at the Battle of Worcester on 3 September 1651.
* 1694 – Nataliya Kyrillovna Naryshkina, Russian noble ( b. 1651 )
Even the mighty English was described as ' a delicate frigate ' after modifications in 1651.
His Brief Notes upon the Whole Book of Psalms ( 1651, quarto ) was published posthumously.
By 1651 he had gathered other talented preachers around him and continued to roam the country despite a harsh reception from some listeners, who would whip and beat them to drive them away.

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