List: 1663 deaths

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  • Nathan (Nata) ben Moses Hannover was a Ruthenian historian, Talmudist, and kabbalist; he died, according to Zunz (Kalender, 5623, p. 18), at Ungarisch-Brod, Moravia, July 14, 1663. Jacob Aboab, however, in a letter to Unger (Wolf, Bibl. Hebr. iii. , No. 1728), gives Pieve di Sacco, Italy, as the place of Hannover's death, without indicating the date. The place of his birth is equally uncertain. According to Graziadio Nepi-Mordecai Ghirondi, (Toledot Gedole Yisrael, p.
  • Colonel George Fane DL, JP (c. 1616 - April 1663) was the fifth but fourth surviving son of Francis Fane, 1st Earl of Westmorland by his wife, Mary (d.1640), daughter and heir of Sir Anthony Mildmay of Apethorpe, co. Northampton. Know as Colonel the Hon. George Fane (ffane or Vane), he was educated at Eton College (1637-32). Matriculating at Emmanuel College, Cambridge in 1632), he travelled abroad from 1635 to 1638, visiting Italy.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:FrancisFaneofFulbeck.jpg
  • Jan Miel (1599–1663) was a Flemish painter, active in Italy, emerging from the circle of genre painters influenced by Pieter van Laer and the so-called Bamboccianti painters. He was born in Beveren-Waas near Antwerp, but had traveled to Rome by 1636. Surprisingly, he briefly collaborating with Andrea Sacchi, who disdained the low-life themes depicted by the Bamboccianti. In 1658 he was made Court Painter at Turin, where he died.
  • Elizabeth Egerton [née Cavendish], countess of Bridgewater (1626–1663), writer, was encouraged in her literary interests from a young age by her father, William Cavendish, Duke of Newcastle, himself an author and patron of the arts surrounded by a literary coterie which included Ben Jonson, Thomas Shadwell, and John Dryden. Her works consist of a series of manuscripts, some few of which have recently become available in modern editions.
  • Obata Kagenori (小幡景憲) (1572-1663), also known as Obata Dōgyū, was a Confucian scholar and samurai retainer of the Takeda clan during Japan's Sengoku period. He is perhaps most well-known for his completion of the Kōyō Gunkan, the chronicle of the Takeda clan's military campaigns begun by Kōsaka Masanobu, and for founding the Kōshū-ryū Gungaku, a school for studying the arts of war.
  • Hippolyte-Jules Pilet de La Mesnardière was a French physician, man of letters and dramatist. He was elected to the Académie française in 1655. He was a major figure in the next few years in the codification of the classical French drama, along with Jean Chapelain and François Hedelin d'Aubignac.
  • Thomas Sydserf [Sydserff] (1581 – 1663) was a 17th century Scottish prelate. The eldest son of an Edinburgh merchant, Sydserf graduated from the University of Edinburgh in 1602 before travelling to continental Europe to study at the University of Heidelberg. After returning to Scotland, he entered the ministry, beginning at St Giles' parish, Edinburgh in 1611.
  • Edmund Rice arrived in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in 1637 or 1638, first residing in the town of Watertown, Massachusetts. Shortly thereafter he was a founder of Sudbury in 1638, and later in life, was one of the thirteen petitioners for the founding of Marlborough in 1656. He was a Deacon in the Puritan Church, and served in local politics as a selectman and judge, as well as serving five years as a member of the Great and General Court, the combined colonial legislature and judicial court.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:EdmundRice1638.jpg
  • Deacon Edward Convers (1587 - 1663) was an early Puritan settler in the Massachusetts Bay Colony who founded Woburn and helped establish Charlestown. He was also a wealthy landowner in the colony. Convers was born February 23, 1587, in Navestock, England. After his first wife died, he married Sarah Smith in 1617. He and his family arrived in Salem, Massachusetts, with the Winthrop Fleet on June 12, 1630, in the early stages of the Great Migration.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Convers_House.gif
  • Theophilus Bird, or Bourne, (1608 – 1663) was a seventeenth-century English actor. Bird began his stage career in the Stuart era of English Renaissance theatre, and ended it in the Restoration period; he was one of the relatively few actors who managed to resume their careers after the eighteen-year enforced hiatus (1642–60) when the theatres were closed during the English Civil War and the Interregnum.
  • Henry Jessey or Jacie was one of many English Dissenters. He was a founding member of the Puritan religious sect, the Jacobites. Jessey was considered a Hebrew and a rabbinical scholar.
  • Nicolas Hotman (c. 1610-1663) was a Baroque composer, who spent most of his career in France. He is believed to have been from Germany, but was probably born in Brussels. He came with his family to Paris around 1626. He was known to be an expert player of both the lute, theorbo, and the viola da gamba, as well as the composer of a few surviving musical compositions. Hotman is sometimes referred to as the teacher of violist Monsieur de Sainte-Colombe.
  • Sir Cheney Culpeper (1601–1663) was an English landowner, a supporter of Samuel Hartlib, and a largely non-political figure of his troubled times, interested in technological progress and reform. His sister Judith was the second wife of John Colepeper, 1st Baron Colepeper.
  • Sir Robert Foster (1589–1663) was an English judge and Chief Justice of the King’s Bench.
  • Hendrickje Stoffels (1626 – July 1663) was a model and partner of Rembrandt.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Rembrandt_Bathsheba_in_het_bad%2C_1654..jpg
  • Teimuraz I (1589 – 1663), of the Bagrationi Dynasty, was a Georgian monarch who ruled, with intermissions, as King of Kakheti from 1605 to 1648 and also of Kartli from 1625 to 1633. The eldest son of David I and Ketevan, Teimuraz spent most of his childhood at the court of Shah of Iran and was made king of Kakheti following the nobles' revolt against his reigning uncle, Constantine I, in 1605.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:TeimurazIBagrationi_new.jpg
  • William VI, Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel (or Hesse-Cassel) (23 May 1629 – 16 July 1663), known as William the Just, was Landgrave of Hesse-Kassel from 1637 to 1663.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Wilhelm6-HK.jpg
  • Francis Bacon (30 September 1600 – c. September 1663) was M.P. for Ipswich, between April and October 1660, in the Convention Parliament which proclaimed the Restoration of Charles II. He served with his relation Nathaniel Bacon and later with Sir Frederick Cornwallis Bt.
  • Nicola Guidi di Bagno was a titular archbishop of Atenia, bishop of Senigallia, and a cardinal. He descended from a noble family. His brother Gianfrancesco Guidi di Bagno and his uncle Girolamo Colonna were also cardinals.
  • Gustav Adolf Skytte of Duderhoff (1637 – 21 April 1663) was a Swedish nobleman and pirate. Born as the child of Jacob Skytte and Anna Bjelkenstjerna, he became a pirate at the age of 20 and plundered ships in the Baltic Sea together with his noble accomplices.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Hookstub.png
  • Nicolas Cornet (born at Amiens, 1572; died at Paris, 1663) was a French Catholic theologian.
  • Sir William Compton (1625–1663) was an English royalist army officer. He earned the name of the "godly cavalier" in 1648, from Oliver Cromwell, for his conduct at the siege of Colchester.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:UK_mil_bio_stub_pic_%28Nelson%29.gif
  • John Norton was a Puritan divine, and one of the first authors in the United States of America.
  • Théophile Raynaud (b. at Sospello near Nice, 15 November 1583; d. at Lyon, 31 October 1663) was a French Jesuit theologian and writer. He entered the Society of Jesus, 21 November, 1602, taught grammar and humanities at Avignon, philosophy and theology at Lyon and for a time at Rome.
  • Susanna Margarete of Anhalt-Dessau (Dessau, 23 August 1610 - Babenhausen, 13 October 1663), was by birth a member of the House of Ascania and princess of Anhalt-Dessau. After her marriage she became Countess of Hanau-Lichtenberg. She was the eighth daughter of John George I, Prince of Anhalt-Dessau, but fifth-born daughter of his second wife Dorothea, daughter of John Casimir of Simmern.

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