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1611 deaths

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Charles IX of Sweden
King of Sweden in 1604–1611
Tomás Luis de Victoria
Spanish composer (c. 1548 – 1611)
Margaret of Austria, Queen of Spain
queen consort of Spain (1584-1611)
Katō Kiyomasa
16th-century Japanese daimyo (1562-1611)
Antonio Possevino
Italian diplomat (1533–1611)
Eleanor de' Medici
Family member of the House of Medici (1567-1611)
Bartholomeus Spranger
Flemish painter (1546–1611)
Christian II
Elector of Saxony from 1591 to 1611
Sanada Masayuki
daimyo
Antonio Pérez
Spanish politician (1534-1611)
Jan Huyghen van Linschoten
Dutch Protestant merchant, traveller and historian (1563–1611)
Charles of Lorraine, duke of Mayenne
French noble (1554-1611)
Kuyucu Murad Paşa
Ottoman grand vizier (1530–1611)
Nicolas Henri, Duke of Orléans
French duke
Princess Sophia of Sweden
Swedish princess; daughter of Gustav I of Sweden and Margaret Leijonhufvud
Simon I of Kartli
Georgian king of Kartli from 1556 to 1569 and again from 1578 to 1599
Ernest II
duke of Brunswick-Lüneburg
Pedro de Ribadeneira
Spanish hagiologist
Jan Piotr Sapieha
Polish noble
Gioseffo Guami
Italian composer
Juan de Ribera
Roman Catholic archbishop and saint (1532-1611)
Johannes Eccard
German composer and conductor
Jean Bertaut
French Roman Catholic bishop and poet
Girolamo Bernerio
Italian cardinal
Pierre de L'Estoile
French diarist and writer (1546–1611)
Zhu Zaiyu, Prince of Zheng
Chinese mathematician, physicist and musician (1536–1611)
Domenico Pinelli
17th-century Catholic cardinal
Camillo Mariani
Italian artist (1567-1611)
Zymen Danseker
Dutch pirate
Shimazu Yoshihisa
daimyo of Satsuma province
John Augustus, Count Palatine of Lützelstein
German count (1575-1611)
Anton Möller
German artist (1563-1611)
Jean Papire Masson
French historian
Frederick IX, Margrave of Brandenburg
Margrave of Brandenburg (1588–1611)
Louis III, Count of Löwenstein
Count of Löwenstein (1530-1611)
Giles Fletcher
English poet, diplomat and politician 1549-1611
Manuchar I Dadiani
prince of Mingrelia
Anthonis van Obbergen
architect, engineer
Simon Forman
English astrologer, occultist and herbalist
Luca Grimaldi De Castro
politician
Horio Yoshiharu
Daimyo and first leader of the Matsue clan
Ottavio Paravicini
17th-century Catholic cardinal
Šurhaci
Šurhaci (; ; 1564 – 25 September 1611), was a Jurchen leader, a member of the Aisin Gioro clan, he was a younger brother of Nurhaci, the founder of the Later Jin dynasty, the predecessor of the Qing dynasty. Under the Ming dynasty government, he held the title of local chieftain (都指揮) in the Jianzhou district, and maintained relations with the Ming authorities up to the beginning of 1607. In that year, he joined Nurhaci in the campaign against Bujantai and the Ula tribe, receiving the title of darhan baturu. However, as a result of disagreements with his brother over the conquest of the Hoifa
Pietro De Franchi Sacco
politician
Ralph Fitch
English merchant and writer
Giovanni Antonio Dosio
Italian architect and sculptor (1533–1611)
Hiraiwa Chikayoshi
daimyo
Prokopy Petrovich Lyapunov
Russian voivode and political figure of Times of Troubles (17th century)
Tiryaki Hasan Pasha
General of the Ottoman army
Jana Ueekata
Sanshikan of Ryukyu; aristocrat of Ryukyu Kingdom (1549-1611)
Krzysztof Ostorodt
Polish missionary
Lanfranco Margotti
Italian cardinal
Karma Tensung
King of Tsang in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth century
Ichijō Uchimoto
Court noble
Niiro Tadamoto
Japanese samurai (1526-1611)
Gopaldev
Gopaldev (1540–1611) was an Indian poet, dramatist and chief preacher of the Vaishnava sect in eastern Assam. He was belonged from Bhabanipur, Assam so people called him as Bhabanipuria Gopal Ata. He is also a disciple of Mahapurush Shrimanta Sankardev.
Johann Georg Gödelmann
German jurist (1559-1611)
Louise de La Béraudière du Rouhet
French lady-in-waiting (1530–1586)
Ruprecht von Eggenberg
Austrian general (1545-1611)
Dionysius the Philosopher
Monk and rebellion leader