June 16 –
Şehzade Mustafa, the son of the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, is appointed as the new Ottoman Governor of the
Amasya region of Turkey.
October 24 –
Algiers Expedition: One day after thousands of Spanish, German and Italian soldiers arrived on the North African coast and proceeded to surround the city of
Algiers, heavy storms begin and the Algerian defenders surround King Charles and the other commanders. Fifteen European ships are wrecked onshore, and 33 others sink. Over the next 30 days, the Europeans are forced to retreat.[19]
November 19 – (1st waxing of Tazaungmon 903 ME) King
Tabinshwehti of
Burma, having concluded the Buddhist Lent, leads the attack on the
Kingdom of Prome with 17,000 troops and 1,400 boats.[21]
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, who also serves as King Carlos I of Spain, is finally able to depart from Algiers and abandons his army.[22]
December 3 – The Holy Roman Emperor Charles V is finally able to return to Spain, arriving at
Cartagena[19]
December 10 –
Thomas Culpeper and
Francis Dereham are both executed at
Tyburn after being convicted of treason in committing adultery with Queen Catherine. Culpeper is beheaded, while Dereham is hanged, drawn and quartered. As a warning to the public, the severed heads of both men are placed on spikes on the London Bridge.[23]
^Lacey Baldwin Smith, A Tudor Tragedy (Pantheon Books, 1961)
^Price, Randall (August 3, 2021).
Rose Guide to the Temple. Rose Publishing.
ISBN978-1-59636-564-3. Retrieved September 14, 2023. But the present gate owes its form due to Ottoman Sultan Suleiman who sealed it in 1541.
^Kristjánsdóttir, Steinunn (December 30, 2022).
Monastic Iceland. Taylor & Francis.
ISBN978-1-000-83015-6. Retrieved September 14, 2023. In Iceland, the Reformation occurred in Skalholt diocese in 1541, when the Lutheran Church ordinance of King Christian III was passed by the country's general assembly, Alþingi.
^"Bauhin, Jean". www.deutsche-biographie.de (in German). Retrieved September 16, 2023.
^Charron, Pierre (1697).
Of wisdom : three books. London: Printed for M. Gillyflower, M. Bently, H. Bornwick, J. Tonson, W. Freeman, T. Goodwin, M. Wotton, J. Waltboe, S. Manship, and R. Parker. p. 1. Retrieved September 16, 2023.
June 16 –
Şehzade Mustafa, the son of the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, is appointed as the new Ottoman Governor of the
Amasya region of Turkey.
October 24 –
Algiers Expedition: One day after thousands of Spanish, German and Italian soldiers arrived on the North African coast and proceeded to surround the city of
Algiers, heavy storms begin and the Algerian defenders surround King Charles and the other commanders. Fifteen European ships are wrecked onshore, and 33 others sink. Over the next 30 days, the Europeans are forced to retreat.[19]
November 19 – (1st waxing of Tazaungmon 903 ME) King
Tabinshwehti of
Burma, having concluded the Buddhist Lent, leads the attack on the
Kingdom of Prome with 17,000 troops and 1,400 boats.[21]
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, who also serves as King Carlos I of Spain, is finally able to depart from Algiers and abandons his army.[22]
December 3 – The Holy Roman Emperor Charles V is finally able to return to Spain, arriving at
Cartagena[19]
December 10 –
Thomas Culpeper and
Francis Dereham are both executed at
Tyburn after being convicted of treason in committing adultery with Queen Catherine. Culpeper is beheaded, while Dereham is hanged, drawn and quartered. As a warning to the public, the severed heads of both men are placed on spikes on the London Bridge.[23]
^Lacey Baldwin Smith, A Tudor Tragedy (Pantheon Books, 1961)
^Price, Randall (August 3, 2021).
Rose Guide to the Temple. Rose Publishing.
ISBN978-1-59636-564-3. Retrieved September 14, 2023. But the present gate owes its form due to Ottoman Sultan Suleiman who sealed it in 1541.
^Kristjánsdóttir, Steinunn (December 30, 2022).
Monastic Iceland. Taylor & Francis.
ISBN978-1-000-83015-6. Retrieved September 14, 2023. In Iceland, the Reformation occurred in Skalholt diocese in 1541, when the Lutheran Church ordinance of King Christian III was passed by the country's general assembly, Alþingi.
^"Bauhin, Jean". www.deutsche-biographie.de (in German). Retrieved September 16, 2023.
^Charron, Pierre (1697).
Of wisdom : three books. London: Printed for M. Gillyflower, M. Bently, H. Bornwick, J. Tonson, W. Freeman, T. Goodwin, M. Wotton, J. Waltboe, S. Manship, and R. Parker. p. 1. Retrieved September 16, 2023.