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Everything about 1637 totally explained

Year 1637 (MDCXXXVII) was a common year starting on Thursday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian calendar (or a common year starting on Sunday of the 10-day slower Julian calendar).

Events of 1637

January - June

July - December

  • October 13 - The launching ceremony is held for HMS Sovereign of the Seas, the gilded warship of the British Royal Navy.
  • December 17 - Shimabara Rebellion erupts in Japan.

    Undated

  • Pierre de Fermat makes a notation, in a document margin, claiming to have proof of what would become known as Fermat's last theorem.
  • France places a few missionaries in the Côte d'Ivoire, a country it would come to rule more than 200 years later.
  • The Kingdom of England wages war against the Mashantucket Pequots.
  • First opera house, Teatro San Cassiona, opens in Venice.
  • René Descartes writes Discours de la Méthode.
  • Elizabeth Poole becomes the first woman to have founded a town (Taunton, Massachusetts) in the Americas.
  • The Blessed Virgin is proclaimed Queen of Genoa.
  • Second Manchu invasion of Korea, the Joseon court reluctantly submits to the Manchu's demands of vassalhood while continuing to pledge loyalty to the Chinese Ming Dynasty.
  • Six European ships dock at a port in China, bringing 38,421 pairs of eyeglasses to China during the late Ming Dynasty, the first recorded European-made eyeglasses to enter China. Now the Daoist unconcern with sight would change, and so would their favorable attitude towards lack of intricate detail in painting (although those with good eyesight often favored intricate details in their painting). Refer to page 57 of Timothy Brook's book The Confusions of Pleasure: Culture and Commerce in Ming China. However, the historian Kaiming Chiu argues in his The Introduction of Spectacles Into China that spectacles were introduced into China as far back as the late 13th century.
  • 30,000 peasants in the heavily Catholic area of northern Kyushu revolt.

    Births

  • January 1 - Emperor Go-Sai of Japan (d. 1685)
  • February 12 - Jan Swammerdam, Dutch scientist (d. 1680)
  • June 10 - Jacques Marquette, French Jesuit missionary and explorer (d. 1675)
  • August 27 - Charles Calvert, 3rd Baron Baltimore, Governor of the Province of Maryland (d. 1715)
  • November 30 - Louis-Sébastien Le Nain de Tillemont, French historian (d. 1698)
  • December 6 - Edmund Andros, English governor in North America (d. 1714)
  • December 7 - Bernardo Pasquini, Italian composer (d. 1710)
  • December 24 - Pierre Jurieu, French Protestant leader (d. 1713) See also .

    Deaths

  • February 15 - Ferdinand II, Holy Roman Emperor (b. 1578)
  • March 19 - Péter Pázmány, Hungarian cardinal and statesman (b. 1570)
  • April 1 - Niwa Nagashige, Japanese warlord (b. 1571)
  • May 19 - Isaac Beeckman, Dutch scientist and philosopher (b. 1588)
  • June 24 - Nicolas-Claude Fabri de Peiresc, French astronomer (b. 1580)
  • August 6 - Ben Jonson, English writer (b. 1572)
  • August 10 - Johann Gerhard, German Lutheran leader (b. 1582)
  • August 14 - Gabriello Chiabrera, Italian poet (b. 1552)
  • September 8 - Robert Fludd, English mystic (b. 1574)
  • September 27 - Lorenzo Ruiz, Filipino saint (born c.1600)
  • December 4 - Nicholas Ferrar, English trader (b. 1592)
  • December 27 - Vincenzo Giustiniani, banker (b. 1564) See also .

    Further Information

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