Category
page 11703 deaths
Charles Perrault
French author (1628-1703)
Robert Hooke
English natural philosopher, architect and polymath (1635 — 1703)
Mustafa II
22th Sultan of the Ottoman Empire (1695–1703)
Samuel Pepys
English diarist and administrator (1633–1703)
John Wallis
English mathematician (*1616 – †1703)
man in the Iron Mask
17th century prisoner, among the most famous in French history

Vincenzo Viviani
Italian scientist (1622-1703)

Charles de Saint-Évremond
French politician and writer (1613-1703)
Johann Christoph Bach I
German composer and organist (1642–1703)
Maria de Dominici
Maltese artist, sculptor (1645–1703)
Erik Dahlbergh
Swedish count, army officer, architect and official (1625-1703)
Ilona Zrínyi
Princess Consort of Transylvania and Croatian noblewoman (1643-1703)
Thomas Kingo
Danish bishop, poet, hymn-writer (1634–1703)
Nicolas de Grigny
French composer and organist
Lorenzo Gafà
Maltese architect and sculptor
Thomas Hyde
British orientalist (1636-1703)
George Frederick II, Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach
Margrave of Brandenburg-Ansbach
Eglon van der Neer
painter from the Northern Netherlands (1634-1703)
Johann Georg Graevius
German academic (1632–1703)

Phetracha
Phetracha (alternative spellings: Bedraja, ''P'etraja, Petraja, Petratcha; also called Phra Phetracha''; , ; 1632– 5 February 1703) was the king of the Ayutthaya Kingdom from 1688 to 1703 and the founder of the Ban Phlu Luang dynasty, the final ruling house of Ayutthaya. Originally a high-ranking official and Director-General of the Royal Department of Elephants under King Narai, he rose to power by orchestrating the Siamese revolution of 1688. Upon Narai's death, Phetracha seized the throne, executed the late king's heirs, and consolidated his legitimacy by marrying Narai's only daughter. His
Johannes Siberechts
Flemish painter, son of Jan Siberechts (1627-1703)
Anna Isabella Gonzaga
noble
Safa Giray de Crimea
Khan of Crimea from 1691 to 1692
Ursula Micaela Morata
Spanish writer (1628-1703)
Archibald Campbell, 1st Duke of Argyll
British Army general
Charlotte Marie of Saxe-Jena
German noblewoman
Ōishi Yoshio
Samurai; the leader of the Forty-seven Ronin
Rafał Leszczyński
Polish nobleman (1650-1703)
Kira Yoshinaka
Samurai; famous for 47 Ronin stories
Gérard Audran
French engraver (1640-1703)
Charles Gustav of Baden-Durlach
German general

Matthias Withoos
painter from the Northern Netherlands (1627-1703)
Aubrey de Vere, 20th Earl of Oxford
Royalist during the English Civil War

Songgotu
Songgotu (Manchu: 14px; ; 1636 – 1703) was a minister during the reign of the Kangxi Emperor of the Qing dynasty. He was an uncle of the emperor's primary spouse, Empress Xiaochengren of the Hešeri clan, who died during childbirth. He was also the son of Sonin, one of the four regents appointed to assist the young Kangxi Emperor during his minority. As Empress Xiaochengren's paternal uncle, he was also therefore, the grand-uncle of Yinreng, who was crown prince throughout most of the Kangxi Emperor's reign. Songgotu did not inherit the noble title First-class Duke or First-class Earl fro
Demian Mnohohrishny
Hetman of Ukrainian Cossacks

Godert de Ginkell, 1st Earl of Athlone
Dutch general in the service of England (1644-1703)
Johann von Löwenstern-Kunckel
Swedish noble and chemist
Samuel Oppenheimer
German-Jewish financier
Johann Sturm
Neuburger philosopher (1635–1703)
Amangkurat II of Mataram
susuhunan of Mataram, 1677-1703
Ivan Antun Zrinski
Count of Croatia
Francesco Eschinardi
Italian mathematician
Daniel Denton
early American colonist of English descent
Piero de Bonzi
Catholic cardinal
Philip Florinus of Sulzbach
Austrian field marshal (1630-1703)
Christian Gyldenløve
Danish noble (1674-1703)
Daltaban Mustafa Paşa
Ottoman statesman (1650–1703)
Mitrofan of Voronezh
Russian orthodox bishop (1623-1703)
Gabrielle Suchon
French philosopher

Archduchess Maria Josepha of Austria
daughter of Leopold I, Holy Roman Emperor and his third wife Eleonore Magdalene of the Palatinate (1687-1703)

Domenico Piola
Italian painter (1627-1703)
John Murray, 1st Marquess of Atholl
Scottish judge (1631–1703)
Ádám Batthyány
Chief Justice (1662–1703)

Alessandro Melani
Italian composer
Louis de Béchamel
French businessman
Ferdinand of Schwarzenberg
Czech marshall and nobleman (1652-1703)
Francesco Marucelli
Italian abbot and bibliographer (1625-1703)

Louis-Hector de Callière
Governor of New France (1648-1703)
Umaru Pulavar
Indian writer
François Barrême
French mathematician