1681 in literature
This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1681.
Events
- Nahum Tate's play The History of King Lear, adapted from Shakespeare's King Lear with a happy ending is first published and first performed at the Duke's Theatre, London, with Thomas Betterton as Lear and Elizabeth Barry as Cordelia. It is so well received that it supplants Shakespeare's original in every performance given until 1838.
- The Impartial Protestant Mercury is launched in London, one of several periodicals of the century with similar names.
New books
Prose
- Thomas Burnet – Telluris Theoria Sacra, or Sacred Theory of the Earth
- Chikkupadhyaya – Kamalachala Mahatmya
- Robert Knox – An Historical Relation of the Island Ceylon
- Anne Lefèvre – Anacreon and Sappho
- Hiob Ludolf – Historia Aethiopica
- William Penn – True Spiritual Liberty
- John Pordage – ''Treatise of Eternal Nature with Her Seven Essential Forms''
Drama
- Aphra Behn
- *The False Count
- *The Roundheads
- John Crowne – Thyestes
- Thomas d'Urfey – Sir Barnaby Whigg
- Edward Ravenscroft – The London Cuckolds
- Thomas Shadwell – The Lancashire Witches
- Nahum Tate – adaptations from Shakespeare
- *The History of King Lear
- *The Ingratitude of a Common-Wealth
- *The Sicilian Usurper
- Agustín Moreto – Parte III de comedias
- Antonio de Solís y Rivadeneyra – ''El amor al uso''
Poetry
- Roger Boyle, 1st Earl of Orrery – Poems on Most of the Festivals of the Church
- John Dryden – Absalom and Achitophel
- Andrew Marvell – ''Miscellaneous Poems''
Births
- March 18 – Esther Johnson, the "Stella" of Jonathan Swift
- July 12 – Abigail Williams, central character in Arthur Miller's 1953 play, The Crucible
- November 17 – Pierre François le Courayer, Roman Catholic theologian
Deaths
- January 16 – Olivier Patru, French legal historian and translator
- January 28 – Richard Allestree, English scholar and cleric
- May 25 – Pedro Calderón de la Barca, Spanish dramatist and poet
- July 8 – Georg Neumark, German poet and hymn-writer
- September 17 – John Lacy, English playwright
- September 27 – Jacob Masen, German Jesuit writer