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| 1664 |
| | Peter Stuyvesant accepts the reality of the military situation and yields New Amsterdam to the British without a shot being fired | |
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| 1666 |
| | New Amsterdam is renamed New York by the recently established English regime | |
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| 1668 |
| | England's East India Company is granted a lease on Bombay by Charles II, who has received it from his Portuguese bride | |
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| 1675 |
| | A sudden uprising by the Wampanoag Indians against the new England settlements begins the conflict known as King Philip's War | |
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| 1681 |
| | Charles II grants William Penn the charter for the region that becomes Pennsylvania, in settlement of a debt to Penn's father | |
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| 1682 |
| | William Penn approves the Great Law, allowing complete freedom of religious belief in Pennsylvania | |
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| 1682 |
| | William Penn achieves peace for Pennsylvania by negotiating a treaty with the local Lenape (or Delaware) tribes | |
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| 1683 |
| | Mennonites and other from Germany (later known as the Pennsylvania Dutch) begin to settle in Penn's liberal colony | |
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| 1690 |
| | John Strong, landing on some remote Atlantic islands, names them after Viscount Falkland, treasurer of the British navy | |
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| 1696 |
| | Fort St William is built by the East India Company in the Ganges delta, and subsequently develops into Calcutta | |
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