| SAMUELPEPYS | Diarist of 17th-Century London |
| DOILY | Name of an old woollen material introduced by a 17th-century London draper that later transferred to an ornamental mat of lace or lace-like paper (5) |
| GLOBESTAR | Standout at a 17th-century London theatre? |
| THEGLOBE | 17th-century London theatre |
| KIDD | Scottish captain of 17th-century seas |
| DIGGERS | Followers of 17th-century radical Gerrard Winstanley (7) |
| ELIZABETHAN | Period of 17th century English queen (11) |
| TULIP | Subject of 17th century Dutch mania |
| JACOBEAN | Style of 17th-century furniture in Britain (8) |
| WITCH | Target of 17th-century "hunts" in Catalonia |
| CHAMBER | Notorious court of 17th-century England (4,7) |
| STAR | Notorious court of 17th-century England (4,7) |
| WINSTANLEY | Gerrard ___, political activist; leader of 17th-century English group the True Levellers (10) |
| MIGUEL | Spanish author of 17th-century satire Don Quixote (6,2,9) |
| ELZEVIR | Family of 17th century Dutch printers or the type used on their editions (7) |
| BLACKMORE | Victorian poet, orchardist and scholar who penned 14 novels including his tale of 17th-century Exmoor titled Lorna Doone (9) |
| RIGADOON | Lively jig-like couples dance similar to the bourree, of 17th-century Provencal origin (8) |
| PEPYS | His diary contained detailed descriptions of 17th century disasters in England (5) |
| EXSCIND | Word of 17th century origin meaning to cut off or out |
| BRICK | An adobe or clinker of clay, such as any one of the flettons forming much of 20th-century London; or, a Delft vase, loaf of bread, old-fashioned mobile phone, piece of Lego or wooden toy block, thus s |