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1653 and ruler
He was made King of Bohemia in 1646, King of Hungary in 1647 ( coronation took place on June 16 in Pressburg ) and was elected King of the Romans ( future ruler of the Holy Roman Empire ) on 31 May 1653, and crowned at Ratisbon ( Regensburg ) on 18 June of the same year.
Upon the death of Elizabeth Lucretia, its last ruler from the Polish Piast dynasty in 1653, it passed directly to the Czech kings from the Habsburg dynasty together with the remainder of the Duchy of Cieszyn.
Early in 1625 he became ruler of all West Pomerania on the death of the last Duke of Wolgast, Philipp Julius, and on the 19 February he was married to Elisabeth ( 24 September 1580-21 December 1653 ), fifth daughter of John II, Duke of Schleswig-Holstein-Sonderburg, by his first wife, Elisabeth of Brunswick-Grubenhagen.

1653 and George
* 1653 – Prince George of Denmark, prince consort of Anne of England ( d. 1708 )
* October 28 – Prince George of Denmark, consort of Anne of Great Britain ( b. 1653 )
Prince George's County was named after Prince George of Denmark ( 1653 – 1708 ), husband of Queen Anne of Great Britain and brother of King Christian V of Denmark and Norway.
Blake, recovering from an injury, rethought, together with George Monck, the whole system of naval tactics, and after the winter of 1653 used the line of battle, first to drive the Dutch navy out of the English Channel in the Battle of Portland and then out of the North Sea in the Battle of the Gabbard.
John and Mary Evelyn had eight children: Richard ( 1652 – 1658 ), John Standsfield ( 1653 – 1654 ), John ( the younger ) ( 1655 – 1699 ), George ( 1657 – 1658 ), Richard ii ( 1664 ), Mary ( 1665 – 1685 ), Elizabeth ( 1667 – 1685 ) and Susanna ( 1669 – 1754 ).
After their victory at the Battle of the Gabbard in June 1653, the English fleet of 120 ships under General at Sea George Monck blockaded the Dutch coast, capturing many merchant vessels.
* Prince George of Denmark ( 1653 – 1708 )
* Prince George of Denmark, Duke of Cumberland ( 1653 – 1708 ), husband of Queen Anne, died without surviving issue.
Prince George of Denmark and Norway, Duke of Cumberland (, 2 April 1653 – 28 October 1708 ) was the husband of Anne, Queen of Great Britain.
# George, born between 1653 and 1662, died as infant
* George of Denmark, 1st Earl of Kendal and Duke of Cumberland ( 1653 – 1708 )
The play Revenge for Honour, first printed in 1654 and misattributed to George Chapman, may be another work by Glapthorne ; it was entered into the Stationers ' Register on 29 November 1653, as a Glapthorne work, under the title The Parricide, or Revenge for Honour.
At the end of Greenhill's term in 1653, Fort St George was elevated to a Presidency, independent of Bantam and under the leadership of first President Aaron Baker.
* Lawrence Washington ( 1602 – 1653 ), great-great-grandfather of George Washington
The house was built in 1625 by George Sitwell ( 1601 – 67 ) who, in 1653, was High Sheriff of Derbyshire.
George Booth was nominated to the Barebones Parliament for Cheshire in 1653 and was elected MP for Cheshire in the First Protectorate Parliament in 1654 and in the Second Protectorate Parliament in 1656.
The tragic fate of Biron was staged by George Chapman ( 1559 ?- 1634 ) in The Conspiracy and Tragedy of Charles, Duke of Byron ( 1608, republished in 1625 and 1653 ).
He invited George Fox to preach from the pulpit after one Sunday service, and subsequently became a Quaker himself in 1653.

1653 and II
The English Civil War led to the trial and execution of Charles I, the exile of his son, Charles II, and replacement of English monarchy with, first, the Commonwealth of England ( 1649 – 53 ), and then with a Protectorate ( 1653 – 59 ), under Oliver Cromwell's personal rule.
* April 24 – Gustav, Count of Vasaborg, illegitimate son of King Gustavus Adolphus ( Gustav II Adolf ) and his mistress Margareta Slots ( d. 1653 )
A king in exile: Charles II painted by Philippe de Champaigne, c. 1653
Charles II of England, circa 1653.
* John Hampden ( 1653-1696 ) ( 1653 – 1696 ), English politician, pamphleteer, and opponent of Charles II and James II, convicted of treason after the Monmouth Rebellion
Robert II is said to have built a castle on the island which was demolished by Cromwell's soldiers in 1653.
Later in life, he lived in exile with the royal family in Holland and in France, becoming Lord Keeper of the Great Seal to Charles II in April 1653, an office which he had refused in 1645.
Count Gustav Gustavsson of Vasaborg, 1st Count of Nystad ( April 24, 1616 – October 25, 1653 ) was an illegitimate son of King Gustavus Adolphus ( Gustav II Adolf ) and his mistress Margareta Slots.
In 1653 the Earl of Glencairn was in Rannoch looking for support for Charles II.
His compositions, predominantly motets, collected under the titled Cultus harmonicus, were published by him in Vienna, Opus I in 1649, Opus Minus ( II ) in 1650 and Opus Maius ( III ) in 1653.
; The Works of Rabelais ( Books I and II, 1653 ; Book III, 1693 ): This is the work for which Urquhart is best known.
** Louis II ( 1653 – 1654 )
The Civil War led to the trial and execution of Charles I, the exile of his son Charles II, and the replacement of the English monarchy with first the Commonwealth of England ( 1649 – 1653 ) and then with a Protectorate ( 1653 – 1659 ), under the personal rule of Oliver Cromwell, followed by
In 1653, when the stationer Humphrey Moseley registered Cardenio as the work of Shakespeare and John Fletcher, he simultaneously registered a Henry I and a Henry II as the works of " Shakespeare, & Dauenport.
Glencairn then led an insurrection in the Highlands in 1653 ( See: Royalist rising of 1651 to 1654 ) in favour of King Charles II, when General Monk had possession of Scotland.

1653 and signed
The First Anglo-Dutch War was concluded with an English victory in the Battle of Scheveningen in August 1653, although a peace treaty was not signed for another eight months.
In 1653 Ossamequin and his son Wamsetto, also known as Alexander to the English, signed a deed granting the land that is now Seekonk and the surrounding communities to Thomas Willitt, Myles Standish and Josiah Winslow.
In November 1652 Monck became a general at sea in the First Anglo-Dutch War, which was concluded with an English victory in the Battle of Scheveningen in August 1653, although a peace treaty was not signed for another eight months.
The earliest signed and dated fore-edge painting dates to 1653: a family coat of arms painted on a 1651 Bible.
In February of 1653, Marguerite left her native France along with approximately 103 other French men that had been recruited and signed to working contracts.

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