This article presents lists of the literary events and publications in 1663.
February – The Académie des inscriptions et belles-lettres (the Academy of the Humanities) is founded in Paris.
February 24 – John Milton marries Elizabeth Minshull.
May 7 – The King's Company inaugurate their new theatre, the first Theatre Royal, Drury Lane, London, with a revival of Fletcher's The Humorous Lieutenant. The play is a hit, and runs for twelve straight nights — very unusual in the repertory system of the time.
August – The Playhouse to Be Let, an anthology of work by Sir William Davenant, is performed at Lincoln's Inn Fields in London.
December 1 – John Dryden marries Elizabeth, sister of Sir Robert Howard; Dryden and John Aubrey become Fellows of the Royal Society in the same year.
Katherine Philips' translation of Pierre Corneille's Pompée is successfully produced at the Theatre Royal, Dublin (Smock Alley Theatre) in Ireland, the first rhymed version of a French tragedy in English and the first English play written by a woman to be performed on the professional stage. It is published in Dublin and London later in the year.
In the Electorate of Bavaria, a legal deposit law mandates the deposit of copies of newly printed books in the Bavarian State Library in Munich.
In England, Roger L'Estrange is appointed Surveyor of the Imprimery and Printing Presses and licenser of the press.
Publication of the Third Folio of Shakespeare's works by Philip Chetwinde in London, adding Pericles and six plays of Shakespeare Apocrypha to the canon.
Publication at Cambridge in the Massachusetts Bay Colony of the "Eliot Indian Bible" (Mamusse Wunneetupanatamwe Up-Biblum God), the first complete Bible published in the Americas, a translation by English-born Puritan missionary John Eliot of the Geneva Bible from English into the Massachusett language (Natic or Wômpanâak) variety of the Algonquian languages, printed by Samuel Green.
Francisco Santos – Día y noche de Madrid, discursos de lo más notable que en él pasa
Molière – La Critique de l'école des femmes
Anonymous – The Wandering Whores' Complaint for Want of Trading (published)
Miguel de Barrios – El Espanjol de Oran
Roger Boyle, 1st Earl of Orrery – The General
Henry Cary – The Marriage Night
Abraham Cowley – The Cutter of Coleman Street
William Davenant
The Playhouse to Be Let (performed)
The Siege of Rhodes Part 2 (published)
John Dryden – The Wild Gallant
Andreas Gryphius
Absurda Comica, oder Herr Peter Squentz
Papinianus
Edward Howard – The Usurper (first performance; published 1667)
James Howard – The English Monsieur
Sir Robert Howard – The Committee
"T. P." – A Witty Combat, or the Female Victor (once attributed to Thomas Porter)
Thomas Porter – The Villain
Richard Rhodes – Flora's Vagaries
Sir Robert Stapylton
The Stepmother
The Slighted Maid
Sir Samuel Tuke – The Adventures of Five Hours (adapted from Antonio Coello's Los empeños de seis horas)
Pedro Calderon de la Barca
El divino Orfeo
El mágico prodigioso
Abraham Cowley – Verses Upon Several Occasions
Sir William Davenant – Poem, to the King’s most sacred Majesty
José Martinez Guindal – Poema sagrado de Christo paciente
Juan de Ovando Santarén – Ocios de Castalia
February 12 – Cotton Mather, New England Puritan author and minister (died 1728)
March 6 – Francis Atterbury, English man of letters and bishop (died 1732
March 22 – August Hermann Francke, German theologian (died 1727)
May 20 – William Bradford, American printer (died 1752)
Unknown dates
William King, English poet (died 1712)
George Stepney, English poet (died 1707)
Probable year of birth – Delarivier Manley, English novelist, playwright and pamphleteer (died 1724)
April 5 – John Norton, English religious writer (born 1606)
April 17 – David Questiers, Dutch poet (born 1623)
July 14 – Elizabeth Egerton, countess of Bridgwater, English essayist (childbirth, born 1626)
October 31 – Théophile Raynaud, French theologian (born 1583)
December 5 – Severo Bonini, Italian music writer (born 1582)
Unknown date – Claude de Bourdeille, comte de Montrésor, French memoirist (born c. 1606)
1663 in literature Wikipedia (Text) CC BY-SA