1690 in literature
This article contains information about the literary events and publications of 1690.
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Events
    
- December 10 – Playwright Henry Nevil Payne is tortured for his role in the Montgomery Plot to restore James II to the throne — the last time a political prisoner is subjected to torture in Britain.
 - Colley Cibber becomes an actor with the Drury Lane company.
 
New books
    
    Prose
    
- Nicholas Barbon – A Discourse of Trade
 - Pierre Bayle (attributed) – Avis important aux réfugiés
 - Sir Thomas Browne (posthumously) – A Letter to a Friend
 - Antoine Furetière (posthumously) – Dictionnaire universel
 - John Locke
- An Essay Concerning Human Understanding (dated this year but published 1689)
 - Two Treatises of Government
 
 - Samuel Pepys – Memoires of the Navy
 - Baro Urbigerus – Aphorismi Urbigerani
 
Drama
    
- John Bancroft – King Edward III, with the Fall of Mortimer, Earl of March
 - Aphra Behn (posthumously) – The Widow Ranter
 - Thomas Betterton – The Prophetess, or The History of Dioclesian (adapted from Fletcher and Massinger's The Prophetess, with music by Henry Purcell)
 - Edmé Boursault – Esope à la ville
 - Roger Boyle, 1st Earl of Orrery – Mr. Anthony
 - John Crowne – The English Friar
 - John Dryden
 - William Mountfort – The Successful Strangers
 - George Powell
 - Elkanah Settle – Distress'd Innocence, or The Princess of Persia
 - Thomas Shadwell – The Scourers
 - Thomas Southerne – Sir Anthony Love
 - "W. C." – The Rape Reveng'd, or the Spanish Revolution (adapted from William Rowley's All's Lost by Lust)
 
Poetry
    
- Thomas D'Urfey:
- Collin's Walk Through London and Westminster[1]
 - New Poems
 
 - See also 1690 in poetry
 - Antonio Hurtado de Mendoza – Obras líricas y cómicas, divinas y humanas
 
Births
    
- February 3 – Richard Rawlinson, English antiquary and cleric (died 1755)
 - September 12 – Peter Dens, Netherlandish theologian (died 1775)
 - 1689/90 – Susanna Highmore, English poet (died 1750)
 
Deaths
    
- March 21 – Henry Teonge, English diarist and cleric (born 1621)
 - May 5 – Theodore Haak, German-born English translator and natural philosopher (born 1605)
 - May 12 – John Rushworth, English author of Historical Collections (born c. 1612)
 - October 3 – Robert Barclay, Scottish Quaker writer (born c. 1648)
 - October 25 – Cornelius Hazart, Dutch Jesuit controversialist (born 1617)
 - Unknown date – Franciscus Plante, Dutch poet (born 1613)[2]
 - Probable year of death – Jeremias Felbinger, German writer, teacher and lexicographer (born 1616)
 
References
    
    
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