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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1618.
Events
- January – Lady Hay and eight other Court ladies plan and rehearse a Ladies' Masque or Masque for Ladies, intended for a Twelfth Night performance, but it is cancelled a few days before, either by King James or Queen Anne.
 - January 4 – Sir Francis Bacon is appointed Lord Chancellor by King James I of England.[1]
 - April 6 (Easter Monday) – The King's Men perform Twelfth Night at Court.
 - April 7 – The King's Men perform The Winter's Tale at Court.
 - July – Ben Jonson sets out to walk to Scotland.[2]
 - Catherine de Vivonne, marquise de Rambouillet, begins remodelling the Paris residence which becomes the Hôtel de Rambouillet to form a literary salon.
 
New books
Prose
- William Cecil, 1st Baron Burghley – Certain Precepts or Directions, For the Well-ordering and Carriage of a Man's Life
 - Renold Elstracke – Braziliologia
 - Vicente Espinel – Relaciones de la vida del escudero Marcos de Obregón
 - Robert Fludd – De Musica Mundana
 - Michael Maier – Atalanta Fugiens
- Themis aurea
 
 - Daniel Mögling – Speculum Sophicum Rhodo-Stauroticum
 - John Selden – History of Tythes
 
Drama
- Anonymous – The Tragedy of Amurath
 - Jakob Ayrer (died 1605) – Opus Theatricum published
 - Guillén de Castro y Bellvis – Comedias, part 1
 - Lope de Vega
- La moza de cántaro (The Pitcher Girls)
 - El rey don Pedro en Madrid
 
 - Nathan Field – Amends for Ladies published
 - John Fletcher – The Loyal Subject
 - Peter Heylin – Theomachia (in Latin)
 - Barten Holyday – Technogamia
 - Ben Jonson – masques
- Pleasure Reconciled to Virtue
 - For the Honour of Wales
 
 
Poetry
- Jacob Cats – Emblemata
 - Juan Martínez de Jáuregui y Aguilar – Rimas
 - John Taylor – The Pennylesse Pilgrimage
 
Births
- March 23 – Ferrante Pallavicino, Italian satirist (died 1644)
 - April – Agustín Moreto y Cavana, Spanish dramatist and priest (died 1661)
 - Unknown dates
- Thomas Blount, English antiquary and lexicographer, (died 1679)
 - Abraham Cowley, English poet (died 1667)
 - Raffaello Fabretti, Italian antiquary (died 1700)
 - Isaac Vossius, Dutch scholar and librarian (died 1689)
 
 - Probable year of birth – Jacques Chausson, French writer and criminal (died 1661)
 
Deaths
- July – John Davies of Hereford, Anglo-Welsh poet (born c. 1565)
 - July 26 – Martinus Smiglecius, Polish Jesuit philosopher (born 1563)
 - August 23 – Gerbrand Adriaenszoon Bredero, Dutch poet (born 1585)
 - September 22 – Jacobus Taurinus, Dutch theologian (born 1576)[3]
 - September 28 – Joshua Sylvester, English poet (born 1563)
 - October 29 – Sir Walter Ralegh, English adventurer and author (executed, born c. 1554)
 - Unknown dates
- François de Boivin, French chronicler
 - Richard Stanihurst, Irish translator of Virgil (born 1547)
 
 - Probable year – Bento Teixeira, Portuguese poet (born c. 1561)
 
References
- ↑ "Francis Bacon Research Trust". Archived from the original on 2005-09-30. Retrieved 2012-06-25.
 - ↑ "University of Edinburgh: Ben Jonson's walk to Scotland". Archived from the original on 2012-03-09. Retrieved 2012-06-25.
 - ↑ Lutzen H. Wagenaar (1909). Van strijd en overwinning: de groote Synode van 1618 op '19, en wat aan haar voorafging (in Dutch). Ruys. p. 203.
 
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