The 17th century.
The Farewell Speech, 1601
Cheney Culpeper was born in 1601.
In 1601
Alonzo Cano was born in 1601.
Richard Barwis was born in 1601.
From 1601 to 1700.From 1601 to 1700.From 1601 to 1700.From 1601 to 1700.From 1601 to 1700.From 1601 to 1700.From 1601 to 1700.From 1601 to 1700.From 1601 to 1700.From 1601 to 1700.From 1601 to 1700.
No - the years from 1601 to 1700 fall in the seventeenth century.
The 17th century (1601-1700).
1601 to 1700.
1601 to 1700.
The 17th century began in 1601 and ended in 1700.
No, but almost. The Seventeenth century is 1601 to 1700. The 1600s are 1600 to 1699.
The year 1700, as with all years from 1601 to 1700, was in the seventeenth century.
Any century has one hundred years - the seventeenth century, in this case, ran from 1601 to 1700.
HMMMM I THINK NOT TOO LONG AGO
From the END of the 14th century to the START of the 17th century = from end of 1400 to start of 1601 = day before start of 1401 to start of 1601 = 200 years plus 1 day. The adoption of the Gregorian Calendar during the late 16th century probably negates the accuracy of the above answer. So 200 years would be the correct answer.
1 january, 1601 a.d. - 31 December, 1700 a.d.