1623
Events
January–March
- January 21
- *Viscount Falkland, England's Lord Deputy of Ireland, issues a proclamation ordering all Roman Catholic priests to leave Ireland, affecting negotiations over the "Spanish match".
- *Voyage of the Pera and Arnhem to Australia: Captains Jan Carstenszoon of the Arnhem and Willem Joosten van Coolsteerdt of the Pera depart on an expedition for the Dutch East India Company from Ambon, Maluku to explore the Australian coast.
- January - Battle of Mbanda Kasi: Forces from the Kingdom of Kongo defeat the Portuguese.
- February 7 - France, Savoy and Venice sign the Treaty of Paris, agreeing to cooperate in removing Spanish forces from the strategic Alpine pass of Valtelline.
- February 25 - Thirty Years' War: Duke Maximilian I of Bavaria becomes Elector of the Electorate of the Palatinate.
- March 5 - The first American temperance law is enacted, in Virginia.
- March 7 - Charles, Prince of Wales, the future King Charles I of England, travelling incognito with royal favourite George Villiers, arrives in Madrid to pursue negotiations over the "Spanish match", the Protestant Charles's proposed marriage with the Catholic Habsburg Infanta Maria Anna of Spain.
- March 9 - Amboyna massacre: Ten English merchants in the service of the British East India Company, together with nine Japanese and one Portuguese, are executed by agents of the Dutch East India Company in Ambon, Maluku.
- March 14 - In the Korean kingdom of Joseon, Crown Prince Yi Ji is deposed and exiled to Ganghwa Island, where he dies soon after.
- March 20 - Richard Frethorne begins writing a letter to his parents from Jamestown, Virginia.
April–June
- April 11 - King Gwanghaegun of Joseon is deposed in the Injo coup and succeeded by King Injo.
- April 29 - A fleet of 11 Dutch ships depart for the coast of Peru, seeking to seize Spanish treasure.
- May 5 - Raja Gaj Singh of Marwar, along with Mahabat Khan and Parviz Mirza, is deputized by the Mughal Emperor Jahangir in India to hunt down Jahangir's rebel son, Shihab-ud-Din Muhammad Khurram. The search fails, and Khurram will become the Mughal Emperor Shah Jahan after Jahangir's death in 1627.
- May 8 - A Dutch East India Company party, led by explorer Jan Carstenszoon, fights a skirmish with 200 indigenous Australian Wik peoples.
- May 22 - After negotiations for the release of English women taken from Jamestown in the British North American colony of Virginia, conducted between Captain William Tucker of the English settlers and Chief Opchanacanough of the Powhatan Confederacy, the English arrange a banquet with the Powhatan, and the drinking of wine. The wine is poisoned and many of the Powhatan Indians die, while 50 more are killed while ill. This follows the massacre of 347 English colonists of March 22, 1622, in the Powhatan uprising. Opchanacanough escapes, and the 20 women never return home.
- June 14 - The first breach-of-promise lawsuit: Rev. Gerville Pooley, in Virginia, files against Cicely Jordan, but loses.
- June 29 - Première of Pedro Calderón de la Barca's first play, Amor, honor y poder, at the Court of Habsburg Spain.
July–September
- July 8 - Pope Gregory XV dies from a kidney ailment after a reign of a little more than two years.
- July 10 - The English ship Anne becomes the third vessel to bring settlers to Plymouth Colony, the Puritan settlement in modern-day Massachusetts, carrying more settlers, after the Mayflower on November 21, 1620, and the Fortune on November 9, 1621.
- July 15 - Trịnh Tùng is deposed as ruler of the kingdom of Đại Việt in northern Vietnam after more than 50 years. His son, Trịnh Xuan, burns the palace. Trinh Tung is carried away by his servants in a sedan chair and abandoned in the road to die. Another son, Trịnh Tráng, succeeds to the throne of Đại Việt.
- July 16 - A great conjunction of Jupiter and Saturn, with the planets only 5 arc minutes apart, the closest between 1226 and 2874. This conjunction likely goes unobserved, as it occurs near the Sun and the telescope has been invented only recently.
- July 30 - The second Thanksgiving is celebrated in Plymouth Colony.
- August 5 - The English ship Little James arrives at Plymouth Colony, 26 days after the Anne.
- August 6
- * 1623 papal conclave: Pope Urban VIII succeeds Pope Gregory XV, as the 235th pope.
- * Thirty Years' War: Pursued by the army of the Catholic League led by Johann Tserclaes, Count of Tilly, the army of the Protestant Electoral Palatinate led by Christian the Younger of Brunswick attempts to flee to the Dutch Republic. Tilly's army catches Brunswick five miles from the border. In the resulting Battle of Stadtlohn, Christian's army is destroyed. This brings the Palatinate campaign to an end.
- August 30 - Negotiations, resumed in March, of the planned "Spanish match" break down. On October 5, Prince Charles returns to England from Spain without a bride.
- September 10 - Murat IV, age 11, succeeds his deposed uncle Mustafa I as Ottoman Emperor. Because Murat is a minor, his mother, Kösem Sultan, serves as regent until 1632.
October–December
- October 9 - Kara Mustafa Pasha is replaced as the Ottoman Governor of Egypt on orders of Sultan Murad IV.
- October 20 - Cardinal Antonio Marcello Barberini informs Galileo Galilei that his brother, the newly-enthroned Pope Urban VIII, wishes to receive a visit from Galileo.
- October 26 - "Fatal Vespers": 95 people are killed when an upper floor of the French ambassador's house in London collapses under the weight of a congregation attending a mass.
- November 1
- *The Battle of Anjar is fought in modern-day Lebanon as the Druze emir Fakhr al-Din II defeats an invasion by Mustafa Pasha al-Hannaq, the Ottoman Governor of Damascus, and takes him prisoner.
- *Fire at Plymouth Colony destroys several buildings.
- November 8–December 5 - Publication between these dates in London of the "First Folio", a collection of 36 of the plays of Shakespeare, half of which have not previously been printed.
- December 4 - 50 Christians are executed in Edo, Japan, during the Great Martyrdom of Edo.
Date unknown
- In British America:
- * On the coast of Massachusetts Bay, the settlement that will become the City of Gloucester, Massachusetts, is first inhabited by men from Dorchester, Dorset, England.
- * On the coast of New Hampshire, the settlement of Hilton's Point, which will become Dover, New Hampshire, is established by men from London, England, the first European settlers in the state.
- The 1623 Malta plague outbreak is contained after killing around 40 people on the island of Malta.
- Erotomania, a delusional disorder, is first mentioned, in a psychiatric treatise.
- Johannes Rudbeck founds Rudbeckianska gymnasiet, the first gymnasium in Sweden.
- Gabriel Bethlen, Prince of Transylvania, issues an order, dated at Kolozsvár/Klausenburg/Cluj, that allows Jews to settle, trade freely and practice religion in Transylvania, and exempts them from wearing the usual Jewish sign.
- Procopius' long-lost Secret History is rediscovered, in the Vatican Library.
- Italian poet Giambattista Marini's epic L'Adone is published in Paris.
- Imprisoned Italian Dominican philosopher Tommaso Campanella's utopian The City of the Sun is published in Latin in Frankfurt.
- Wilhelm Schickard devizes a Calculating Clock, an early mechanical calculator.
- Zildjian begins the commercial manufacture of cymbals in Turkey. The company will still be operating, from Massachusetts, in the 21st century.
Births
January–March
- January 1 - Marie Eleonore of Dietrichstein, German noblewoman, by birth member of the House of Dietrichstein, and by her two marriages Countess of Kaunitz and Oppersdorf
- January 15 - Algernon Sidney, British philosopher
- March 4 - Jacob van der Does, Dutch landscape painter
- March 5 - Henri Sauval, French historian
- March 23 - Deane Winthrop, English-born colonist of British America, 6th son of Governor John Winthrop
- March 24 - Sir Ralph Hare, 1st Baronet, English politician
April–June
- April 7 - Thomas Mainwaring, English politician
- April 11 - Decio Azzolino, Italian Catholic cardinal
- April 20 - Olimpia Aldobrandini, Italian Aldobrandini family member, heiress
- April 23 - Sir John Chichester, 1st Baronet, English politician
- April 27 - Gryzelda Konstancja Zamoyska, Polish noble
- April 28 - Wilhelmus Beekman, Dutch politician
- April 30 - François de Laval, French-born priest, first Catholic bishop of Quebec
- May 26 - William Petty, English scientist, philosopher and economist
- May 29 - David Schirmer, German lyric poet and librarian
- May 30
- * John Egerton, 2nd Earl of Bridgewater, English politician
- * Wallerant Vaillant, painter of the Dutch Golden Age
- June 8 - Paluzzo Paluzzi Altieri degli Albertoni, Italian Catholic cardinal
- June 15 - Cornelis de Witt, Dutch politician
- June 19 - Blaise Pascal, French mathematician, physicist and philosopher
- June 29 - Inaba Masanori, Japanese daimyō
July–September
- July 1 - William Owfield, English landowner and politician
- July 6 - Jacopo Melani, Italian composer and violinist
- July 12 - Elizabeth Walker, English pharmacist
- July 28 - Allen Brodrick, English politician
- August 4 - Friedrich Casimir, Count of Hanau-Lichtenberg and Hanau-Münzenberg
- August 5 - Antonio Cesti, Italian composer
- August 13 - Sir John Morden, 1st Baronet, English politician
- August 14 - Sir John Fowell, 2nd Baronet, English politician
- August 23 - Stanisław Lubieniecki, Polish Socinian theologist
- August 25 - Filippo Lauri, Italian painter
- August 26 - Johann Sigismund Elsholtz, German naturalist and physician
- September 1 - Caspar Schamberger, German surgeon and merchant
- September 8 - James Bellingham, English politician
- September 10 - Carpoforo Tencalla, Swiss-Italian Baroque painter of canvases and frescoes
- September 13 - Pieter Wouwerman, Dutch painter
- September 21 - Sir John Bowyer, 1st Baronet, English soldier and politician
- September 23 - Georg Balthasar Metzger, German physician and scientist