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1691 and article
* ODNB article by Piers Wauchope, ‘ Kirke, Percy ( d. 1691 )’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 9 June 2008

1691 and London
Two days after preaching, as usual, at the Gracechurch Street Meeting House in London, George Fox died between 9 and 10 p. m. on 13 January 1691.
The London Gazette of 17 March 1691 published a patent in favour of John Lofting for a fire engine, but remarked upon and recommended another invention of his, for a beer pump:
Wollaston also published anonymously a small book, On the Design of the Book of Ecclesiastes, or the Unreasonableness of Men's Restless Contention for the Present Enjoyments, represented in an English Poem ( London, 1691 ).
Bailey was a Seventh Day Baptist, admitted 1691 to a congregation in Whitechapel, London.
Peter Scheemakers ( 16 January 1691 – 12 September 1781 ) was a Flemish Roman Catholic sculptor who worked for most of his life in London, Great Britain.
Arbuthnot went to London in 1691, where he is supposed to have supported himself by teaching mathematics ( which had been his formal course of study ).
London, 1691.
In an Account of several Gardens near London written by J. Gibson in 1691 ( Archæologia, 1794, xii.
* Baxter, R., The certainty the Worlds of Spirits, London 1691.
Sir Dudley North ( 16 May 1641, Westminster – 31 December 1691, London ) was an English merchant, politician and economist, a writer on free trade.
His tract entitled Discourses upon Trade, principally directed to the cases of the interest, coinage, clipping and increase of money, was published anonymously in 1691, and was edited in 1856 by J. R. McCulloch in the Select Collection of Early English Tracts on Commerce printed by the Political Economy Club of London.
Fox died in London in 1691, but Margaret died at the Hall in 1702.
Doggett was born in Dublin, and made his first stage appearance in London in 1691 as Nincompoop in Thomas D ' Urfey's Love for Money.
George Fox spent most of the rest of his life thereafter abroad or in London until his death in 1691, while Margaret Fell spent most of the rest of her life at Swarthmore.
He became Sheriff of the City of London in 1689, an Alderman from 1689 to 1712, and Master of the Grocer's Company from 1690 to 1691.
In 1691, during King William's Irish Campaign, the regiment distinguished itself, as a result of which it was posted to London and renamed The King's Carabiniers.
In 1691, The New State of England by Guy Miege said that " Bromichan drives a good trade in iron and steel wares, saddles and bridles, which find good vent at London, Ireland, and other parts.
He was admitted to the Company of Barber-Surgeons in 1691 and began practising in London the same year.
William Faithorne, often " the Elder ", ( 1616 – May 13, 1691 ), English painter and engraver, was born in London and was apprenticed to William Peake.
In the absence of Compton, bishop of London, Mews took the chief part at the consecration of Tillotson as archbishop of Canterbury in 1691.
It was first performed at the Queen's Theatre, Dorset Garden, London, in late May or early June 1691.
The exact date of the premiere is unknown but the wordbook was advertised in The London Gazette from 4 June to 8 June 1691, suggesting a recent staging.
In 1691 she moved to London, where she had a married sister.
Important titles are here his Religio bibliopolae in imitation of Dr. Browns Religio medici ( 1691 ), his The Dublin scuffle being a challenge sent by John Dunton, citizen of London ( 1699 ) and his Life and Errors of John Dunton ( 1705 ).

1691 and Gazette
Here, he founded in 1691 a new kind of journal, The Athenian Gazette / The Athenian Mercury, with anonymous questions-and-answers, powered by his Athenian Society.

1691 and mentioned
First mentioned during the 17th century, the Rodrigues Solitaire was described in detail by François Leguat ( leader of a group of French Huguenot refugees who were marooned on Rodrigues in 1691 – 1693 ).
* 1691-Oakworth Hall is mentioned in the Keighley Rolls in the entry for December 12, 1691.
The French missionaries, Récollets, visited Great Falls in 1691 and Antoine de Lamothe Cadillac mentioned the presence of a fort in 1693.
The first edition, printed at Paris in 20 volumes ( 4to ), 1691, was followed by many others, among which may be mentioned that of Brussels, in 32 vols ( 8vo ), 1692, and that of Nîmes, in 25 vols ( 8vo ), 1778 to 1780.
The regiment was authorised to wear deep yellow facings on its uniforms under the 1751 uniform standardisation, though the regiment is mentioned as originally having white facings in 1691, shortly after its formation.

1691 and John
John Locke's 1691 work Some Considerations on the Consequences of the Lowering of Interest and the Raising of the Value of Money.
* September 7 – Colonel John Birch, English soldier ( d. 1691 )
** Sir John Flavel, English dissenter ( d. 1691 )
* June 20John George III, Elector of Saxony ( d. 1691 )
The area that became Lancaster County was part of William Penn's 1681 charter, and John Kennerly received the first recorded deed from Penn in 1691.
However, examples of the city's architecture, spanning nearly four centuries, abound: from early colonial houses ( the White residence, the Duston Garrison House, the 1704 John Ward House, the 1691 Kimball Tavern, and the historic district of Rocks Village ) to the modernist 1960s architecture of the downtown Haverhill Bank.
The Township of Woodbridge is the oldest original township in the state of New Jersey and is named after Reverend John W. Woodbridge ( 1613 – 1691 ) of Newbury, Massachusetts.
As a non-conformist, he was removed from his church, and John was there to take care of affairs when, in 1691 his father died.
In 1689 Hody wrote the Prolegomena to the Greek chronicle of John Malalas, published at Oxford in 1691.
The most distinguished of these was John Moore, who became Bishop of Norwich in 1691, and Bishop of Ely in 1707 and also William Henry Bragg, Nobel Prize winner.
By his first wife he had ten children, of whom one son, Henry, survived him and became 2nd Duke of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, dying in 1691 without surviving male issue ; the title then became extinct and the estates passed to his third daughter Margaret, wife of John Holles, Earl of Clare, created Duke of Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1694.
Charles Maitland, 3rd Earl of Lauderdale ( b. c1620 Lethington-d. 9 June 1691, Haltoun House ), was the second son ( The Great Seal of Scotland gives him as third son ) of John Maitland, 1st Earl of Lauderdale ( died 1645 ).
** John Flavel, theologian ( died 1691 )
* John Thomas ( bishop of Salisbury ) ( 1691 – 1766 ), previously Bishop of St Asaph and Bishop of Lincoln
The chief authority for the bishop's life is William de Chambre, printed in Wharton's Anglia Sacra, 1691, and in Historiae conelmensis scriptores tres, Surtees Soc., 1839, who describes him as an amiable and excellent man, charitable in his diocese, and the liberal patron of many learned men, among these being Thomas Bradwardine, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury, Richard Fitzralph, afterwards Archbishop of Armagh, the enemy of the mendicant orders, Walter Burley, who translated Aristotle, John Mauduit the astronomer, Robert Holkot and Richard de Kilvington.
* John Stratford, 1st Earl of Aldborough ( c. 1691 – 1777 ), Irish MP for Baltinglass 1721 – 1763
< li > John Theed ( 1691 – 1734 )</ li >
* John Adams, Sr. ( 1691 – 1761 ), father and grandfather of two US presidents, whose home is a National Historic Site
She married Prince James Louis Henry Sobieski, son of King John III Sobieski of Poland, on 8 February 1691.
It first appeared in Wesley's Hymns for those that Seek, and those that Have Redemption ( Bristol, 1747 ), apparently intended as a Christianization of the song " Fairest Isle " sung by Venus in Act 5 of John Dryden's operatic play King Arthur ( 1691 ), on which Wesley's first stanza is modelled.
* John Dormer, 7th Baron Dormer ( 1691 – 1785 )
* Sir John Gage, 5th Baronet ( c. 1691 – 1700 )
* John Nairne, de jure 3rd Lord Nairne ( 1691 – 1770 )

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