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{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2024}} {{About year|1591}} {{Year nav|1591}} [[File:Capture of Zutphen by Maurice of Orange in 1591 - Verovering van Zutphen door Prins Maurits in 1591 (Johannes Janssonius, 1663).jpg|thumbnail|right|[[May 19]]–[[May 30]]: [[Siege of Zutphen (1591)|Capture of Zutphen]]]] {{Year article header|1591}} {{C16 year in topic}} == Events == [[File:Het beleg van Deventer (1591) door Prins Maurits - The siege of Deventer in 1591 by Prince Maurice (Bartholomeus Willemsz. Dolendo).jpg|thumbnail|right|[[June 1]]–[[June 10]]: [[Siege of Deventer (1591)|Siege of Deventer]]]]<onlyinclude> === January–March === * [[January 27]] – Scottish schoolmaster [[John Fian]] becomes the first person to be executed after the [[North Berwick witch trials]], following his conviction for the crime of witchcraft. Fian is taken to the Castlehill outside of Edinburgh and strangled after which his body is burned. [[Agnes Sampson]] is [[garotte|garroted]] the next day at Castehill and then burned.<ref>Robert Pitcairn, ''Ancient Criminal Trials in Scotland'', volume 2 (Bannatyne Club 1833) pp. 241, 348</ref> * [[February 7]] – [[Pope Gregory XIV]], who had succeeded [[Pope Urban VII]] in December, appoints Cardinal [[Marco Antonio Colonna]] and six other cardinals to a commission to revise the [[Sixtine Vulgate]] Latin translation of the Bible, published in 1590 under the editorship of [[Pope Sixtus V]], to which the [[College of Cardinals]] has taken exception. The revision of the revision, dubbed the [[Sixto-Clementine Vulgate]], will be completed in 1592 and be the official version used by the Catholic Church until 1979. * [[February 25]] – Poet [[Edmund Spenser]] is granted an annual pension of 50 [[pounds sterling]] by Queen [[Elizabeth I]] of England in recognition of his publication of ''[[The Faerie Queen]]''. The pension is paid in quarterly installments of 12s. 10d. on March 25, June 24, September 29 and December 25.<ref>Richard A. McCabe, ''The Oxford Handbook of Edmund Spenser'' (Oxford University Press, 2010) p. 112</ref> * [[March 1]] – [[Pope Gregory XIV]] [[excommunication|excommunicates]] King [[Henry IV of France]] and orders the clergy, nobles, judicial functionaries and the Third Estate of France to renounce the nation's king.<ref name=Ott>Michael Ott, "Pope Gregory XIV", in ''The Catholic Encyclopedia'', Volume 7 (Robert Appleton Company, 1910)</ref> * [[March 13]] – [[Battle of Tondibi]]: In [[Mali]], forces sent by the [[Saadi dynasty]] ruler of [[Morocco]], [[Ahmad al-Mansur]], and led by [[Judar Pasha]], defeat the [[Songhai Empire]], despite being outnumbered by at least five to one.<ref>{{cite book|author=ʿAbd al-Raḥmān ibn ʿAbd Allāh al-Saʿdī|title=Timbuktu and the Songhay Empire: Al-Saʻdī's Taʼrīkh Al-Sūdān Down to 1613 and Other Contemporary Documents|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=7L4TVckuppUC&pg=PA259|date=January 1, 1999|publisher=Brill|isbn=90-04-11207-3|pages=259|language=en}}</ref> * [[March 21]] – Pope Gregory XIV issues the [[papal bull]] ''Cogit nos'', prohibiting the placing of bets on the outcome of papal elections, the length of time that a pope will reign, or who will be appointed as a cardinal.<ref name=Ott/> === April–June === * [[April 10]] **The emancipation of Filipino slaves in the Spanish Philippines along with reparations to former slaves, with the threat of excommunication of any Spanish slaveholder who refuses to comply, is ordered by Pope Gregory XIV in the [[papal bull]] ''Cum Sicuti''.<ref name=Ott/> **[[English people|English]] merchant [[James Lancaster]] sets off on a voyage to the [[East Indies]].<ref name="Cassell's Chronology">{{cite book|last=Williams|first=Hywel|title=Cassell's Chronology of World History|url=https://archive.org/details/cassellschronolo0000will/page/233|url-access=registration|location=London|publisher=Weidenfeld & Nicolson|year=2005|isbn=0-304-35730-8|pages=[https://archive.org/details/cassellschronolo0000will/page/233 233–238]}}</ref> * [[April 21]] – Japanese [[Japanese tea ceremony|tea-master]] [[Sen no Rikyū]] commits [[seppuku]], on the order of [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]]. * [[May 15]] – In [[Tsardom of Russia|Russia]], [[Tsarevich Dmitry Ivanovich of Russia (born 1582)|Tsarevich Dimitri]], son of [[Ivan the Terrible]], is found dead in mysterious circumstances, at the palace in [[Uglich]]. The official explanation is that he has cut his own throat during an epileptic seizure. Many believe he has been murdered by his rival, [[Boris Godunov]], who becomes tsar. * [[May 24]] – Sir [[John Norris (soldier)|John Norreys]], with an expeditionary force sent by Queen [[Elizabeth I]] of England, takes the town of [[Guingamp]] in Brittany after a brief siege, on behalf of [[Henry IV of France|Henry of Navarre]]. * [[May 30]] ** [[Timbuktu]] is captured by an expedition of [[Arma people]] sent by the [[Saadi dynasty|Saadi]] ruler of [[Morocco]] and led by [[Judar Pasha]]. ** [[Zutphen]] is [[Siege of Zutphen (1591)|captured]] by the Dutch and English, under [[Maurice of Nassau]]. * [[June 10]] – [[Deventer]] is [[Siege of Deventer (1591)|captured]] by the Dutch, under Maurice of Nassau. * [[June 26]] – The [[Capture of Delfzijl|siege of the Spanish Netherlands city]] of [[Delfzijl]] is started by [[Maurice, Prince of Orange]], stadtholder of the [[Dutch Republic]], who leads a Dutch and English Army against the Spanish defenders. Delfzijl falls after six days, and is surrendered on July 2. === July–September === * [[July 13]] – A Crimean army, led by the Tatar Khan [[Ğazı II Giray]], begins a siege of [[Moscow]]. * [[July 15]] – The [[Battle of the Berlengas (1591)|Battle of the Berlengas]] takes place off of the coast of [[Portugal]] as the [[George Clifford, 3rd Earl of Cumberland|Earl of Cumberland]]'s five English [[privateer]]s are surprised by five Spanish galleys commanded by General [[Francisco Coloma]], commander of the Armada de Guarda Costa. Cumberland's ship, the ''Golden Noble'', is captured. * [[July 18]] (6 Shawal 999 AH) – In India, the four-day [[Battle of Bhuchar Mori]] ends in the [[Gujarat]] state, as General [[Mirza Aziz Koka]] leads the [[Mughal Empire]] gains a decisive victory over [[Nawanagar State|Nawanagar]], led by the Sultan [[Muzaffar Shah III]].<ref>Abu Fazl (translated by Henry Beveridge), ''Victory of the K. Azim M. Koka and the Disgrace of Mozaffar Gujrati in The Akbarnama'' (Packard Humanities Institute, 1862).</ref> * [[July 22]] – The [[R. Durtnell & Sons|Durtnell]] (Dartnell) family of [[Brasted]], [[Kent]], England, begin to work as building contractors. The business continues under thirteen generations of the family until ceasing to trade in [[2019]].<ref>{{cite news|title=Britain's oldest building firm collapses|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-48868113|publisher=BBC News|date=July 4, 2019|access-date=2019-07-04}}</ref> * [[July 25]] – [[Siege of Knodsenburg]]: Dutch Republic staatholder [[Maurice of Nassau]] and English General [[Francis Vere]] defeat the [[Alessandro Farnese, Duke of Parma and Piacenza|Duke of Parma]] outside [[Nijmegen]] after a four-day siege. * [[August 1]] – [[Serdar Ferhad Pasha]] is appointed the new [[Grand Vizier of the Ottoman Empire]] by Sultan [[Murad III]], replacing [[Koca Sinan Pasha]] following a revolt of the [[Janissaries]]. * [[August 9]] – The Khan of the Crimean Tatara, [[Ğazı II Giray]], is wounded by the defenders against his siege of [[Moscow]]. Gazi's brother, [[Fetih I Giray]], continues the siege, which is finally settled with a peace agreement and payment of 10,000 rubles in 1594.<ref>Ahmet Türk, ''The Crimean Khanate Under the Reign of Ğazı II Giray'' (Bilkent University, 2006)</ref> * [[August 29]] – [[Peter the Lame]], ruler of the [[Principality of Moldavia]] (part of modern-day Romania and of Moldova) abdicates in [[Iași]] after having reigned for most of the previous 17 years. Peter's downfall comes after he is unable to raise the money paid as tribute to the Ottoman Empire. He is replaced by [[Aaron the Tyrant]] (''Aron Vodă'').<ref>Constantin Rezachevici, ''Cronologia critică a domnilor din Țara Românească și Moldova a. 1324–1881'' (Editura Enciclopedică, 2001) p. 432 ("A Criticism and Chronology of the Lords of Wallachia and Moldova, 1324–1881")</ref> * [[August 30]] – The [[Battle of Flores (1591)|Battle of Flores]] begins off [[Flores Island (Azores)]]. By September 1, the Spanish fleet is victorious over the English and captures the [[English ship Revenge (1577)|English ship ''Revenge'']], fatally wounding [[Richard Grenville]].<ref name=Colledge>J. J. Colledge and Ben Warlow, ''Ships of the Royal Navy: The Complete Record of All Fighting Ships of the Royal Navy from the 15th Century to the Present'' (Pen & Sword Books Limited, 2021)</ref> * [[September 4]] – The [[Kunohe rebellion]], which was started by Kunohe Masazane on March 13 on northern Honshu island in Japan's [[Mutsu Province]] (in the modern-day [[Iwate Prefecture]]), is suppressed by the samurai [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]], Chancellor of the Realm. The victory completes the unification of Japan.<ref>Stephen Turnbull, ''The Samurai Sourcebook'' (Cassell & Company, 1998) p. 241</ref> * [[September 5]] – A storm near the [[Azores]] in the North Atlantic begins, sinking a large number of the Spanish ships, including the recently-captured HMS ''Revenge''.<ref name=Colledge/> During August and September, at least eight intense hurricanes occur in the most severe of the [[Pre-1600 Atlantic hurricane seasons|pre-1600 seasons]] on record. * [[September 14]] – [[Siege of Hulst (1591)|Siege of Hulst]]: [[Hulst]] is captured by [[Maurice of Orange]], the staatholder of the Dutch Republic. === October–December === * [[October 8]] – The [[Separation Edict]], a law imposing an immobile social class structure in Japan, is promulgated by [[Toyotomi Hideyoshi]]. * [[October 16]] – [[Pope Gregory XIV]] dies from an attack of gallstones and leaves the Papacy of the Roman Catholic Church vacant for the third time in 14 months. The Pope, formerly Cardinal Niccolò Sfondrati, had served for only 10 months after being elected on December 5, 1590. * [[October 19]] – The Islamic calendar year 1000 A.H. begins with the first day of the month of [[Muharram]], with concerns that the new year will herald the end of the world. When the year ends on October 7, 1592, without an apocalypse, the official interpretation among Ottoman Muslims is that the Ottoman Empire "had come closer to perfection than any other Muslim state.<ref>"Gareth Jenkins, ''Political Islam in Turkey: Running West, Heading East?'' (Palgrave Macmillan, 2008) p.44</ref> * [[October 21]] – [[Siege of Nijmegen (1591)|The city of Nijmegen is captured]] from Spanish occupiers by [[Maurice of Orange]], the staatholder of the Dutch Republic. * [[October 26]] – The [[Portuguese invasion of Jaffna kingdom (1591)|Portuguese invasion of the Jaffna Kingdom]] begins on the north side of the island of [[Sri Lanka]]. * [[October 29]] – [[1591 papal conclave|Giovanni Antonio Facchinetti is elected]] on the third ballot to succeed the late [[Pope Gregory XIV]], after Cardinal Ludovico Madruzzo withdraws his candidacy.<ref>[https://web.archive.org/web/20110927171014/http://www.vaticanhistory.de/vh/html/innozenz_ix_.html "Konklave vom 27.-29.10.1591 zur Wahl von Papst Innozenz IX"], VaticanHistory.de, or Archive.org</ref> and takes the name [[Pope Innocent IX]].<ref name="Grove1997">{{cite book|author=Noel Grove|title=National Geographic Atlas of World History|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=-OoZAQAAMAAJ|year=1997|publisher=National Geographic Society|isbn=978-0-7922-7023-2|page=385|language=en}}</ref> * [[November 3]] – The coronation of [[Pope Innocent IX]] takes place in [[Rome]] as Cardinal [[Margrave Andrew of Burgau|Andreas von Österreich]] places the crown on the head of Giovanni Facchinetti. * [[November 6]] – [[Hundred Years' Croatian–Ottoman War]]: The Ottoman Empire successfully captures the Croatian rebel fort of Ripač. * [[November 11]] – King [[Henry IV of France]] begins the [[Siege of Rouen (1591–1592)|siege of Rouen]], the Spanish-held capital of [[Normandy]].<ref>Philip Benedict, ''Rouen During the Wars of Religion'' (Cambridge University Press, 2004) p.218</ref> The Spanish Navy arrives after five months and King Henry abandons the siege on April 20. * [[November 27]] – In [[Italy]], [[Giovanni Agostino Giustiniani Campi|Giovanni Giustiniani Campi]] is elected as the new [[Doge of Genoa|Doge]] of the [[Republic of Genoa]] after a 12-day search for a successor to [[Battista Negrone]].<ref>Sergio Buonadonna and Mario Marcenaro, ''Rosso doge: I dogi della Repubblica di Genova dal 1339 al 1797'' (De Ferrari Editore, 2000)</ref> * [[December 10]] – Four Roman Catholic priests and three laymen are [[List of Catholic martyrs of the English Reformation|executed in England in a campaign against the Roman Catholic Church]]. * [[December 18]] – Pope Innocent IX begins a tour of the seven pilgrimage churches around Rome, despite being unwell, and his illness worsens. He dies 12 days later. * [[December 27]] – [[Francis Stewart, 5th Earl of Bothwell|Francis Stewart, Earl of Bothwell]] leads the [[Raid of Holyrood|attack on the Holyrood Palace]] in [[Edinburgh]]. Having been alerted by a premature attack on the palace's prison, [[James VI and I|King James VI of Scotland]] and [[Anne of Denmark|Queen Anne]] are able to take refuge within the castle, and the raid fails. Seven of Bothwell's men are subsequently captured and hanged.<ref>[https://archive.org/details/blackwoodsmagazi02edinuoft/page/30/mode/2up "Account of the attempt upon Holyroodhouse, 1591"], by J. R., in ''Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine'' (October 1817), p.31</ref> * [[December 30]] – [[Pope Innocent IX]] dies only two months after having been elected as the Pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church, leaving the Papacy vacant for the 4th time in 16 months. === Date unknown === * The city of [[Hyderabad]], India, is founded by [[Muhammad Quli Qutb Shah]].<ref>{{cite book|title=The Book Review|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=ziDhAAAAMAAJ|year=1996|publisher=C. Chari for Perspective Publications|page=38|language=en}}</ref> * The [[Rialto Bridge]] in [[Venice]], designed by [[Antonio da Ponte]], is completed. * The first of the ''[[Conimbricenses]]'' commentaries on [[Aristotle]], by the [[Jesuits]] of the [[University of Coimbra]], is published.<ref>''Commentarii Collegii Conimbricensis Societatis Jesu in octo libros physicorum Aristotelis Stagyritæ''.</ref> * The [[Siamese–Cambodian War (1591–1594)|Siamese-Cambodian War]] begins. * The defeated [[Askia dynasty]] move to the [[Dendi Kingdom|Dendi province]] in modern-day [[Niger]].</onlyinclude> == Births == [[File:Self-portrait by Guercino.jpg|thumb|right|110px|[[Guercino]]]] ===January–June=== * [[January 3]] – [[Valentin de Boulogne]], French painter (d. [[1632]]) * [[January 4]] – [[William Spencer, 2nd Baron Spencer of Wormleighton]], British baron (d. [[1636]]) * [[January 7]] – Princess [[Dorothea, Abbess of Quedlinburg]] (d. [[1617]]) * [[January 11]] – [[Robert Devereux, 3rd Earl of Essex]], English Civil War general (d. [[1646]]) * [[January 12]] – [[Jusepe de Ribera]], Spanish Tenebrist painter and printmaker (d. [[1652]]) * [[January 15]] – [[David van Goorle]], Dutch theologian and theoretical scientist (d. [[1612]]) * [[January 26]] – [[Matthew Boynton]], English politician (d. [[1647]]) * [[January 29]] – [[Franciscus Junius (the younger)|Franciscus Junius]], pioneer of Germanic philology (d. [[1677]]) * [[February 8]] ** [[Hervey Bagot]], English politician (d. [[1660]]) ** [[Guercino]], Italian painter (d. [[1666]]) * [[February 13]] – [[Antonio Sabino]], Italian composer (d. [[1650]]) * [[February 21]] (or March 2) – [[Girard Desargues]], French mathematician (d. [[1661]]) * [[February 25]] – [[Friedrich von Spee]], German Jesuit and poet (d. [[1635]]) * [[February 28]] – [[Henry Clifford, 5th Earl of Cumberland]], English politician (d. [[1643]]) * [[March 2]] – [[Willem Boreel]], Dutch diplomat (d. [[1668]]) * [[March 3]] – [[Lucas de Wael]], Flemish painter (d. [[1661]]) * [[March 6]] – [[Tommaso Tamburini]], Italian theologian (d. [[1675]]) * [[March 9]] – [[Johannes Chrysostomus vander Sterre]], Dutch abbot, ecclesiastical writer (d. [[1652]]) * [[March 11]] – [[Isabella of Savoy]], Italian noble (d. [[1626]]) * [[March 15]] or [[1593]] – [[Alexandre de Rhodes]], French Jesuit missionary (d. [[1660]]) * [[March 19]] – [[Dirck Hals]], Dutch painter (d. [[1656]]) * [[March 28]] – [[William Cecil, 2nd Earl of Salisbury]], English earl (d. [[1668]]) * [[April 5]] – Prince [[Frederick Ulrich, Duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg]] (d. [[1634]]) * [[April 11]] – [[Bartholomeus Strobel]], Silezian painter (d. [[1650]]) * [[April 25]] – [[Marcos de Torres y Rueda]], interim viceroy of [[New Spain]] (d. [[1649]]) * [[May 2]] – Prince [[Francis Charles of Saxe-Lauenburg]] (d. [[1660]]) * [[May 5]] – [[Frederick Achilles, Duke of Württemberg-Neuenstadt]] (d. [[1631]]) * [[May 26]] – [[Olimpia Maidalchini]], Italian noblewoman (d. [[1657]]) * [[June 16]] – [[Joseph Solomon Delmedigo]], Italian physician, mathematician, and music theorist (d. [[1655]]) * [[June 24]] – [[Mustafa I]], sultan of the [[Ottoman empire]] (d. [[1639]]) ===July–December=== * [[July 4]] – [[Jonathan Rashleigh (1591–1675)|Jonathan Rashleigh]], English politician (d. [[1675]]) * [[July 9]] – [[Jean Bagot]], French theologian (d. [[1664]]) * [[July 20]] – [[Anne Hutchinson]], English Puritan preacher (d. [[1643]]) * [[August 6]] – [[George William, Count Palatine of Zweibrücken-Birkenfeld]] (d. [[1669]]) * [[August 12]] – [[Louise de Marillac]], French co-founder of the [[Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul|Daughters of Charity]] (d. [[1660]]) * [[August 24]] – [[Robert Herrick (poet)|Robert Herrick]], English poet (d. [[1674]])<ref>{{cite book|author=Elizabeth Story Donno|title=The Renaissance: Excluding Drama|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=mEBdDwAAQBAJ&pg=PA104|date=April 1, 1983|publisher=Macmillan International Higher Education|isbn=978-1-349-17058-6|pages=104|language=en}}{{Dead link|date=June 2023 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}</ref> * [[August 28]] – [[John Christian of Brieg]], Duke of Brzeg (1602–1639) (d. [[1639]]) * [[September 8]] – [[Marie Angélique Arnauld]], French abbess of the [[Abbey of Port-Royal]] (d. [[1661]]) [[File:091015-Ausa 021.JPG|thumb|110px|[[Michael de Sanctis]]]] * [[September 29]] – [[Michael de Sanctis]], Spanish saint (d. [[1625]]) * [[October 2]] – [[Margherita Gonzaga, Duchess of Lorraine]] (1608–1624) (d. [[1632]]) * [[October 7]] – [[Pierre Le Muet]], French architect (d. [[1669]]) * [[October 22]] – [[Alfonso III d'Este, Duke of Modena]], Italian noble (d. [[1644]]) * [[November 20]] – [[George Albert II, Margrave of Brandenburg]] (d. [[1615]]) * [[November 29]] – [[Bernhard von Mallinckrodt]], German bibliophile (d. [[1664]]) * [[December 22]] – [[Tommaso Dingli]], Maltese architect and sculptor (d. [[1666]]) * [[December 30]] – [[Joseph Furttenbach]], German architect (d. [[1667]]) ===Date unknown=== * [[David Blondel]], French Protestant clergyman (d. [[1655]]) * [[Andrew Bobola]], Polish Jesuit missionary and martyr (d. [[1657]]) * [[Thomas Goffe]], English dramatist (d. [[1629]]) * [[William Lenthall]], English politician of the Civil War period (d. [[1662]]) == Deaths == [[File:Roman School – Portrait of Pope Gregory XIV (16th Century).jpg|thumb|right|110px|[[Pope Gregory XIV]]]] [[File:Zurbarán (atribuido)-John of the Cross-1656.jpg|thumb|right|110px|[[St. John of the Cross|John of the Cross]]]] [[File:Portrait of Pope Innocent IX (Fidenza Cathedral Museum - Museo del Duomo di Fidenza, Fidenza) – edited.jpg|thumb|right|110px|[[Pope Innocent IX]]]] * [[February 6]] – [[Anna Sophia of Prussia]], Duchess of Prussia and Duchess of Mecklenburg (b. [[1527]]) * [[February 15]] – [[Toyotomi Hidenaga]], Japanese warlord (b. [[1540]]) * [[February 26]] – [[Vespasiano I Gonzaga]], Italian noble and diplomat (b. [[1531]]) * [[March 17]] – [[Jost Amman]], Swiss printmaker (b. [[1539]]) * [[April 9]] – [[Emilie of Saxony]], German noble (b. [[1516]]) * [[April 21]] – [[Sen no Rikyū]], Japanese exponent of the tea ceremony (b. [[1522]]) * [[May 19]] – [[Elizabeth Cecil, 16th Baroness de Ros]], English noblewoman (b. c. [[1574]]) * [[May 15]] – [[Tsarevich Dmitry Ivanovich of Russia (born 1582)|Tsarevich Dimitri]], of Russia (b. [[1582]]) * [[June 21]] – [[Aloysius Gonzaga]], Italian Jesuit and saint (b. [[1568]]) * [[July 2]] – [[Vincenzo Galilei]], Italian composer (b. [[1520]]) * [[July 10]] – [[Anna of Hesse]], Countess Palatine of Zweibrücken (b. [[1529]]) * [[July 18]] – [[Jacobus Gallus|Jacobus Gallus Carniolus]], Slovenian composer (b. [[1550]]) * [[August 23]] – [[Luis Ponce de León]], Spanish lyric poet (b. [[1527]]) * [[August 27]] – [[Katheryn of Berain]], Welsh noblewoman (b. [[1534]])<ref>{{cite book|title=Y Cymmrodor: The Magazine of the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion ...|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YFMrAAAAIAAJ|year=1929|publisher=Cymmrodorion Society|page=32|language=en}}</ref> * [[September 7]] – [[Heinrich Sudermann]], German politician (b. [[1520]]) * [[September 10]] – [[Richard Grenville]], English soldier and explorer (b. [[1542]]) * [[September 19]] – [[Alonso de Orozco Mena]], Spanish Catholic priest (b. [[1500]]) * [[September 25]] – [[Christian I, Elector of Saxony]] (b. [[1560]]) * [[September 29]] – Count [[Johan II of East Frisia]] (b. [[1538]]) * [[October 15]] – [[Duke Otto Henry of Brunswick-Harburg]], Hereditary Prince of Brunswick-Lüneburg-Harburg (b. [[1555]]) * [[October 16]] – [[Pope Gregory XIV]] (b. [[1535]])<ref>{{cite web |title=Gregory XIV {{!}} pope |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Gregory-XIV |website=Encyclopædia Britannica |access-date=May 6, 2019 |language=en}}</ref> * [[November 20]] – [[Christopher Hatton]], English politician (b. [[1540]]) * [[December 14]] – [[John of the Cross|Saint John of the Cross]], Spanish Carmelite friar and poet (b. [[1542]]) * [[December 18]] – [[Marigje Arriens]], Dutch woman executed for witchcraft (b. c. [[1520]]) * [[December 30]] – [[Pope Innocent IX]] (b. [[1519]])<ref>{{cite web |title=Innocent IX {{!}} pope |url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Innocent-IX |website=Encyclopædia Britannica |access-date=January 24, 2021 |language=en}}</ref> === Date unknown === *[[Ananias Dare]], father of [[Virginia Dare]], (b. circa 1560) *[[Virginia Dare]], first English child born in America, (b. [[1587]]) (Unverified) * (by February 6) – [[Crispin van den Broeck]], Flemish painter (b. [[1523]]) *[[John Erskine of Dun]], Scottish religious reformer (b. [[1509]]) *[[Veronica Franco]], Italian poet and courtesan (b. [[1546]]) == References == {{Reflist}} {{DEFAULTSORT:1591}} [[Category:1591| ]]
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