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Incumbents
Events

River Thames frost fair
- 9 January – Charles II gives orders establishing the dates on which he will perform the "Touching the King's Evil" ceremony.[1]
 - 22 March – great fire in Newmarket, Suffolk.
 - 24 May – the Ashmolean Museum, Oxford, opens as the world's first purpose-built university museum.[2]
 - 12 June – the Rye House Plot to assassinate Charles II is discovered;[3] at least 11 people will be executed for their connections with it.
 - 21 July – Lord Russell is beheaded by Jack Ketch at Lincoln's Inn Fields for his part in the Rye House Plot.[4][5]
 - 28 July – The Lady Anne, the King's niece and fourth in line of succession, marries Prince George of Denmark in the Chapel Royal at St James's Palace, London.
 - 12 December – start of exceptional cold spell. The River Thames freezes, allowing a frost fair to be held (pictured).
 
Undated
- Wild boars are hunted to extinction in Britain.[3]
 - The London Jilt; or, the Politick Whore, probably by Alexander Oldys, is published.
 
Births
- 1 March – Caroline of Ansbach, queen of George II of Great Britain (died 1737)
 - 3 April – Mark Catesby, naturalist (died 1749)
 - 25 October – Charles FitzRoy, 2nd Duke of Grafton, politician (died 1757)
 - 10 November – King George II of Great Britain (died 1760)
 - 27 December – Conyers Middleton, minister (died 1750)
 
Deaths
- 15 January – Philip Warwick, writer and politician (born 1609)
 - 21 January – Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury, politician (born 1621)
 - 19 March – Thomas Killigrew, dramatist (born 1612)
 - 13 July – Arthur Capell, 1st Earl of Essex, statesman, implicated in Rye House Plot, suicide (born 1631)
 - 18 August – Charles Hart, actor (born 1625)
 - 21 July – William Russell, Lord Russell, politician, executed (born 1639)
 - 24 August – John Owen, non-conformist theologian (born 1616)
 - 25 October – William Scroggs, lord chief justice of England (born c. 1623)
 - 7 December
- John Oldham, poet (born 1653)
 - Algernon Sidney, parliamentarian and republican, executed (born 1623)
 
 - 15 December – Izaak Walton, writer (born 1593)
 - John Hingston, court composer, viol player and organist (born 1612)
 
References
- ↑ ""January 9th", Chambers' Book of Days". Archived from the original on 12 January 2008. Retrieved 2007-12-13.
 - ↑ "Ashmolean Museum". The Invention of Museum Anthropology. Pitt Rivers. 2012. Retrieved 2019-05-25.
 - 1 2 Everett, Jason M., ed. (2006). "1683". The People's Chronology. Thomson Gale.
 - ↑ Fiorillo, Juré (2010-01-01). Great Bastards of History: True and Riveting Accounts of the Most Famous Illegitimate Children Who Went on to Achieve Greatness. Fair Winds. p. 82. ISBN 978-1-59233-401-8. Retrieved 2010-08-23.
 - ↑ Ketch, Jack. The Apologie of John Ketch, Esquire.
 
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