January 7 – The
Republic of Genoa forbids the unauthorized printing of newspapers and all handwritten newssheets; the ban is lifted after three months.
January 12 – Scottish minister
James Renwick, one of the
Covenanters resisting the Scottish government's suppression of alternate religious views, publishes the Declaration of
Lanark.
January 21 – The Ottoman Empire army is mobilized in preparation for a war against Austria that culminates with the 1683
Battle of Vienna.
March 22 – A fire breaks out in
Newmarket, Suffolk, consuming half the town and spreading into sections of surrounding
Cambridgeshire. Historian
Laurence Echard describes it later as "A Providential Fire", noting that King Charles II "by the approach of the fury of the flames was immediately driven out of his own palace", and, after moving to safety in another section of town, was forced to flee again "when the wind, as conducted by an invisible power, suddenly changed about, and blew the smoke and cinders directly on his new lodgings, and in a moment made them as untenable as the other."[2]
May 7 (April 27 O.S.) – Upon the death of the Tsar
Feodor III of Russia, Feodor's younger brother, 15-year-old
Ivan is passed over in favor of a half-brother, 10-year-old
Peter.
May 11 – The
Moscow Uprising of 1682 occurs when a mob, outraged by the rejection of Prince Ivan and upset over rumors that Ivan has been strangled, invades the
Kremlin and lynches the leading boyars and military commanders. Ivan V and Peter I are named co-rulers of Russia as a result of a compromise between Peter's mother
Natalya Naryshkina and Ivan's mother
Maria Miloslavskaya and both are crowned a month later.
June 8 – The English trading freighter Johanna is wrecked off of the coast of South Africa with the loss of 10 of her 114 crew, becoming the first of Britain's
East India Company fleet to be lost.
August 6 – The Ottoman Empire declares war on the Holy Roman Empire and makes plans to attack
Vienna.
August 12 –
Vesuvius begins a period of volcanic activity lasting for 10 days.
August 23 – A
comet that will later become known as
Comet Halley, is observed from several locations on Earth after reaching magnitude 2 and becoming visible to the naked eye.
Arthur Storer sees it from the North American colony of Maryland, while German astronomer
Johannes Hevelius measures it from
Danzig (now Gdansk in Poland). [3]Edmond Halley successfully predicts that it will return in
1758.
August 25 – Following the
Bideford witch trial, three women (probably) become the penultimate known to be hanged for witchcraft in England, at
Exeter.[4]
December 11 –
William Penn meets with
Charles Calvert, 3rd Baron Baltimore for the first discussion of the boundary between the colonies of Pennsylvania and Maryland, fixed at
40 degrees north. Recognizing that 40° north would remove Pennsylvania's access to the sea, Penn proposes a purchase of some of Maryland's territory.
December 27 – Colonists from the German electorate of Brandenburg arrive at
Akwidaa on the Brandenburger Gold Coast at what is now
Ghana and, five days later, begin building a fort at what is now Princes Town.
Date unknown
Celia Fiennes, noblewoman and traveller, begins her journeys across Britain, in a venture that will prove to be her life's work. Her aim is to chronicle the towns, cities and great houses of the country. Her travels continue until at least
1712, and will take her to every county in England, though the main body of her journal is not written until the year
1702.
The
Richard Wall House, believed to be the longest continuously inhabited residence in the US, is built in
Pennsylvania.
^Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006.
ISBN0-14-102715-0.
^
abWalford, Cornelius, ed. (1876). "Fires, Great". The Insurance Cyclopeadia: Being an Historical Treasury of Events and Circumstances Connected with the Origin and Progress of Insurance. C. & E. Layton. p. 44.
^"Comet Halley 1682", in Atlas of Great Comets, by Ronald Stoyan (Cambridge University Press, 2015) p. 90
^Gent, Frank J. (1982). The Trial of the Bideford Witches. Bideford.{{
cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (
link) Another woman was sentenced to be hanged for witchcraft in Exeter in 1685 although there is no surviving confirmation that the sentence was carried out.
"The Devon "Witches"". Exeter Civic Society. Retrieved July 27, 2022.