1684 in literature

Overview of the events of 1684 in literature
List of years in literature (table)
  • … 1674
  • 1675
  • 1676
  • 1677
  • 1678
  • 1679
  • 1680
  • 1681
  • 1682
  • 1683
  • 1684
  • 1685
  • 1686
  • 1687
  • 1688
  • 1689
  • 1690
  • 1691
  • 1692
  • 1693
  • 1694
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This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1684.

Events

  • June 25 – The death of Robert Leighton, Archbishop of Glasgow, gives rise to establishment of the Leighton Library at Dunblane, the oldest surviving public subscription (lending) library in Scotland.
  • July 25 – The English novelist and dramatist Mary Griffith marries merchant George Pix.
  • November 11 – The English dramatist Nathaniel Lee is admitted to Bedlam Hospital for the insane.[1]
  • unknown dates
    • The Protestant Academy of Saumur is closed down by King Louis XIV of France.[2]
    • John Banks' historical play The Island Queens, or the Death of Mary Queen of Scotland is banned from the stage; it is produced as The Albion Queens twenty years later (1704).
    • Pierre Bayle begins his journal of literary criticism, Nouvelles de la république des lettres.

New books

Fiction

Drama

Poetry

Non-fiction

Births

Deaths

References

  1. ^ Arnold, Catharine (2009). Bedlam: London and Its Mad. Simon and Schuster. p. 110. ISBN 9781847390004.
  2. ^ Bernard Bolingbroke Woodward; William Leist Readwin Cates (1872). Encyclopaedia of Chronology: Historical and Biographical. Lee and Shepard. pp. 1250–.
  3. ^ a b c Sylvia Stoler Wagonheim (21 August 2013). The Annals of English Drama 975-1700. Routledge. p. 188. ISBN 978-1-134-67634-7.
  4. ^ Wright, Gillian (2013). Producing Women's Poetry, 1600–1730: Text and Paratext, Manuscript and Print. Cambridge University Press. p. 247. ISBN 9781107355668.
  5. ^ John Flower (17 January 2013). Historical Dictionary of French Literature. Scarecrow Press. p. 150. ISBN 978-0-8108-7945-4.