1694

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Featured events in 1694
1694·Europe·Politics

Bank of England Founded

A Scottish financier named William Paterson persuaded the cash-strapped English government to charter a joint-stock bank that would lend the king money in exchange for the right to issue banknotes. The Bank of England, with eight hundred shareholders, began operations in Mercers' Hall. Modern public debt was invented, and the financial architecture that would fund Britain's rise to global power was in place.

July 27, 1694Enlightenment
1694·East Asia·Culture

Matsuo Basho's Narrow Road Posthumously Published

Three years after the wandering poet's death, Matsuo Basho's masterwork Oku no Hosomichi - The Narrow Road to the Deep North - appeared in its final form. Part travelogue, part meditation on impermanence, its spare haiku and luminous prose elevated a walking tour through rural Japan into one of the great spiritual journeys in world literature.

1694Enlightenment
1694·Europe·Science

Huygens Publishes Treatise on Light

The Dutch physicist Christiaan Huygens published his Traite de la Lumiere, proposing that light traveled as waves through an invisible medium called the ether. His wave theory elegantly explained reflection and refraction but lost the century's argument to Newton's corpuscular model. Two hundred years later, Maxwell and Einstein would prove Huygens more right than wrong.

1694Enlightenment
1694·Europe·Culture

Voltaire Born

In Paris, a notary's son named Francois-Marie Arouet was baptized at the church of Saint-Andre-des-Arts. Clever, ambitious, and endlessly quarrelsome, he would adopt the pen name Voltaire, go to the Bastille twice, and become the presiding wit and propagandist of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment. His pen would prove sharper than most swords, and his influence would help topple the old regime.

1694Enlightenment
1694·Europe·Politics

Queen Mary Dies of Smallpox

Mary II, the half of the joint monarchy whom most English subjects actually liked, died of smallpox at thirty-two. Her grieving husband William III continued to rule alone. Their marriage, dynastic at its beginning, had become affectionate; Whitehall mourned more sincerely than anyone expected, and the king, never popular, became lonelier and more guarded in the years that remained.

December 28, 1694Enlightenment
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