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1675 deaths

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António Luís de Meneses, 1st Marquis of Marialva
Portuguese general and noble
Anna Francisca de Bruyns
Flemish Baroque painter
Anthoni van Noordt
Dutch composer and organist
Lothar Friedrich von Metternich-Burscheid
Prince-Bishop of Speyer
Pope Matthew IV of Alexandria
Pope of the Coptic Orthodox Church
Carlos Patiño
Spanish composer
Reyer van Blommendael
Dutch Golden Age painter (1628–1675)
Pietro Ricchi
Italian painter (1606-1675)
Francis Line
English cleric-scientist
Marie Madeleine de Vignerot, Duchess of Aiguillon
Duchesse of Aiguillon (1604-1675)
Murad II Bey
Bey of Tunis
Vincent Adriaenssen
Flemish painter (1595–1675)
Piotr Baryka
Baroque writer
Jan Pauwel Gillemans the Elder
Flemish painter (1618-1675)
Armand-Nompar de Caumont, duc de la Force
Marshal of France
Gertrud Svensdotter
initiator of the Swedish witch hysteria
Bhai Dayala
Indian Sikh Martyr
Mulla Salih Mazandarani
Safavid era Persian scholar and jurist
Jacob Levecq
painter from the Northern Netherlands (1634-1675)
Edward Cocker
British engraver
Bulstrode Whitelocke
English politician (1605-1675)
Ivan Belostenec
Croatian linguist and lexicographer
Lê Gia Tông
King of Vietnam
John Seymour, 4th Duke of Somerset
Duke of Somerset
Abdallah
Johann Glaser
Swiss physician (1629-1675)
Ercole Procaccini the Younger
Italian painter (1605–1675)
Marco Giuseppe Peranda
Italian musician and composer (1626-1675)
Jonathan Goddard
English politician
Filadelfo Mugnos
Italian historian, genealogist and poet
Abunai
Abunai (阿布奈; 1635 – May 5, 1675), known as Prince Chahar of the First Rank (察哈尔亲王), was a Mongol prince of clan Borjigin, second son of Ligden Khan. He opposed Qing influence in his domain and was subsequently placed into house arrest in Shenyang and his son given his title. In 1675 he led the Chahar Mongols joining in the Revolt of the Three Feudatories, but were defeated in battle in April and subsequently killed. Abunai was a direct male-line descendant of Tolui Khan, the youngest of the four sons of Genghis Khan.
Epiphanius Slavinetsky
Soviet linguist
Giuseppe Battista
Italian poet
Joachim Irgens von Westervick
Dano–Norwegian nobleman, large landowner (1611-1675)
Vitus Bering
Danish writer and poet (1617-1675)
Aleksander Michał Lubomirski
Polish noble (1642-1675)
Richard Norwood
English mathematician and surveyor
Francesco Ravizza
Apostolic Nuncio to Portugal
Johann Hartmann von Rosenbach
Prince bishop of Wurzburg
Josef Tukalski-Neljubowitsch
Ukrainian bishop
Francesc Mulet
writer
Bataha Santiago
third king of Manganitu Kingdom in Sangihe Islands who reigned between 1670 until 1675
Jean Ballesdens
French lawyer and bibliophile
Giovanni Battista Caccioli
Italian painter (1623-1675)
Pieter Goos
Dutch cartographer and publisher (ca. 1616-1675)
Sun Ch'i-feng
native of Jung-ch'eng in Chihli
Juan Vélez de Guevara
Spanish playwright
William Ker, 2nd Earl of Roxburghe
Scottish Earl
Felix Kadlinský
Czech baroque writer, poet, religion writer and translator
Bhai Mati Das
Indian Sikh martyr
Francesco Boschi
Italian painter (1619-1675)
Jean-Baptiste Geoffroy
French composer
Carl von Rabenhaupt
bohemian nobleman (1602-1675)
Lodowick Carlell
English playwright
Hendrick Bogaert
Dutch Golden Age painter (1630-1675)
Andrea di Leone
Italian painter (1596-1675)
Vincenzo Dandini
Italian painter
Wilhelm Gumppenberg
German religious servant and theologian
Jean-Guillaume Carlier
painter from the Prince-Bishopric of Liège (1638-1675)
Luigi Mattei
Italian noble