1604

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File:The Somerset House Conference 19 August 1604.jpg
August 28: The Treaty of London concludes the Anglo-Spanish War

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Events

January–March

April–June

  • April 9 – On the first day of the new year 966 M.E. on the Burmese calendar, King Nyaungyan Min of Burma makes a triumphant return to his capital at Inwa after his victory in the war against the principality of Mongnai (Monē), one of the Shan States between Burma and Siam
  • April 17Tsar Dmitry of Russia makes a public conversion to Roman Catholicism in order to attract the aid of Jesuits in his attempt to rule all of Russia.
  • April 18Maurice of Nassau assembles a combined army of 7,000 Dutch and 4,000 English soldiers to make an attack on the Spanish Netherlands (now Belgium).
  • May 19 – Maurice of Nassau begins the Siege of Sluis, a port in the Spanish Netherlands, with 11,000 Dutch and English troops. Despite reinforcements from Spanish relief troops, the city surrenders after three months, with both sides having lost hundreds of casualties.
  • May 20
    • Five conspirators in England, led by Robert Catesby, who has invited Thomas Wintour, John Wright, Thomas Percy and Guy Fawkes, meet at the Duck and Drake Inn in London to make a plan for the assassination of King James.[5]
    • Peace discussions between England and Spain begin at Somerset House in London to end the Anglo-Spanish War after 19 years of fighting.
  • May 22 – English entrepreneur Charles Leigh and a crew of 46 arrive in South America at what is now the Oyapock River in French Guiana after traveling on the ship Olive Plant. The 35 men and boys who stay create a colonial settlement which they call Oliveleigh, and make a claim to all of the area.
  • June 9Thomas Percy, one of the English conspirators in the Gunpowder Plot to assassinate King James I, is appointed as one of the king's bodyguards by the Earl of Northumberland.
  • June 15Ottoman–Safavid War: General Cigalazade Yusuf Sinan Pasha, commander of the eastern Ottoman Army, leads troops on a march from Constantinople to fight the Persia's Safavid Army in Armenia, but arrives too late to save the city of Yerevan.
  • JuneOttoman–Safavid War (1603–18): Shāh Abbas I of Persia's Safavid army captures the city of Yerevan from the Ottoman Empire after a siege. At this time the Shāh begins the expulsion of Armenians from Jolfa to New Julfa in his capital of Isfahan; more than 25,000 die during the exodus.

July–September

October–December

Date unknown

Religion

Births

File:Johann Rudolf Glauber.jpg
Johann Rudolf Glauber
File:Iemitu.jpg
Tokugawa Iemitsu

January–March

April–June

July–September

October–December

Date unknown

Probable

Deaths

File:Catherinebourbon1.jpg
Catherine de Bourbon
File:John Whitgift from NPG.jpg
John Whitgift
File:GasparDeBono.jpg
Gaspar de Bono
File:Hamida Banu Begum, wife of Mughal Emperor Humayun.jpg
Hamida Banu Begum
File:HerculesMonaco.jpg
Ercole, Lord of Monaco

January–March

April–June

July–September

October–December

Date unknown

References

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  1. Leeds Barroll, Anna of Denmark, Queen of England: A Cultural Biography (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2001), p. 83
  2. Martin Butler, The Stuart Court Masque and Political Culture (Cambridge, 2008), p. 63.
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  4. Antonia Fraser, The Gunpowder Plot (Phoenix Press, 1996) pp. 41-42
  5. C. Northcote Parkinson, Gunpowder Treason and Plot (Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1976) p. 48
  6. "Toleration and Diplomacy: The Religious Issue in Anglo-Spanish Relations, 1603–1605", by Albert J. Loomie, Transactions of the American Philosophical Society ((1963), p. 31
  7. Pauline Croft, King James (Palgrave Macmillan, 2003) p. 62
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  12. The exact date is unknown, but a surviving account book for the year ended September 30 1604 proves it was built within the preceding 12 months.
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