February 7 – After a
10-week conclave in
Rome to elect a new Pope, Giovanni Maria Ciocchi del Monte, Bishop of Palestrina, is selected on the 61st ballot after
Reginald Pole of England falls two votes short of winning. Ciocchi del Monte takes the name
Pope Julius III and is crowned the next day, succeeding the late
Pope Paul III.[2]
February 25 – (10th day of 2nd month of Tenbun 19) In
Oita,
Ōita Prefecture, an attack within the
Ōtomo clan of Japanese samurais takes place after clan leader Ōtomo Yoshikazu seeks to disinherit his oldest son and to make his third son, Ōtomo Shioichimaru, as his designated successor. Supporters of the oldest son,
Ōtomo Yoshishige, invade Yoshikazu's home and kill Shioichimaru and four other family members.[3]
March 24 – "
Rough Wooing": England and France sign the Treaty of Boulogne, by which England withdraws from
Boulogne in France and returns territorial gains in Scotland.[5]
April 30 –
KingTabinshwehti of Burma is assassinated by two of his bodyguards while he is on a hunting trip. The two swordsmen, sent by
Smim Sawhtut, Governor of Sittaung, behead the King, and a civil war begins as major governors rebel against the new Burmese King
Bayinnaung.[10]
May 6 – Italian Protestant
Michelangelo Florio, jailed since 1548 before being brought to trial for and sentenced to death for heresy, escapes from prison and is able flee to France.[11]
May 15 – The
vestments controversy is resolved in the Church of England with a compromise on the style of clothing worn by Anglican priests.
John Hopper is allowed ordination as the Bishop of Gloucester without being required to wear Anglican vestments, but must not forbid anyone in his bishoporic from wearing the vestments if they wish.[12]
May 20 – The Spanish Catalan city of
Cullera is plundered by the Ottoman Empire General
Dragut Reis,[13] and most of its inhabitants are sold into slavery in
Algeria.
July 25 –
Capture of Mahdia (1550): Troops commanded by Ottoman General Turgut Reis make a counterattack on the Spanish invaders, led by General Andrea Doria. Both sides sustain heavy losses, and the Spanish succeed in forcing the Ottomans to retreat back inside Mahdia.[15]
September 2 (5th waning of Tawthalin 912 ME) – King
Bayinnaung of
Burma begins a four-month siege of the former Burmese capital,
Toungoo, occupied by the king's rebellious brother
Minkhaung.
January 11 (5th waxing of Tabodwe 912 ME) – King
Bayinnaung of Burma is successful in capturing his ancestral city of
Toungoo from his rebellious half-brother
Minkhaung II, and sets about to make Toungoo the capital for the first time since 1539.[27] Minkhaung is forgiven by King Bayinnaung rather than being executed, and assists in the King's campaign to capture the neighboring
Kingdom of Prome.
February 14 –
Alice Arden and her lover, Richard Mosbey, carry out the murder-for-hire of her husband,
Thomas Arden of Faversham with the assistance of a
highwayman known as "Black Will", two of Arden’s domestic servants (Michael Saunderson and Elizabeth Stafford) and Mosbye's sister (Cicely Pounder). The body is carried outside, and Thomas is reported as missing, but a discovery is made that the murder was committed inside the house. The conspirators are later executed. [29]
March 27 – French mechanical engineer
Aubin Olivier becomes the director of the new Royal Mint, the Moulin des Etuves on the
Île de la Cité in Paris after having learned the technique of producing uniform
milled coinage during a sabbatical in Germany.[31]
April–June
April 4 –
Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor, issues an edict to reduce tensions among the three major ethnic groups in the Kingdom of Hungary, with an administration to have equal representation of for ethnic Hungarians, Slovaks and Germans.[32]
June 27 – The
Edict of Châteaubriant is promulgated in France by King Henri II, providing for an increasingly severe series of measures in the Roman Catholic Kingdom to be taken against Protestants, considered to be
heretics.[36]
July–September
July 7 – The fifth, and final outbreak of
sweating sickness in
England reaches
London, as documented by
Henry Machyn in his diary, and continues until July 19. Machyn notes that "ther ded from the vii day of July unto the xix ded of the swett in London of all dyssesus viij/c, iij/xx and xij and no more in alle, and so the chanseller is sertefiyd." ("There died from the 7th day of July unto the 19th dead of the sweat in London of all diseases 8 hundred, 3 score and 12 [i.e., 872], and no more in all, and so the Chancellor is certified.") [37]John Caius of
Shrewsbury writes the first full contemporary account of the symptoms of the disease.
July 30 – With the surrender of the island of Gozo, the Ottoman place 6,000 survivors on ships and transporting them to
Tarhuna Wa Msalata (in modern-day
Libya), where they are sold into slavery. The only natives left on the island are 300 persons who escaped the citadel and 41 elderly residents.[39]
November 20 – The Office of
Cardinal Secretary of State, the second highest position in the Roman Catholic Church after the Pope, is created to temporarily fill the vacancy between the death of one Pontiff and the election of another. Cardinal
Girolamo Dandini is appointed by
Pope Julius III to serve as the first Secretary of State.
December 16 –
George Martinuzzi, the Hungarian Archbishop of Esztergom and the Governor of Transylvania, is assassinated by Marco Aurelio Ferrari on orders of Ferdinand, King of Hungary. Martinuzzi had been suspected of treason after attempting to negotiate a separate peace treaty with the Ottoman Empire.[44]
Date unknown
Qizilbash forces under the command of
Tahmasp I raid and destroy the cave monastery of
Vardzia in
Georgia.
In
Henan province,
China, during the
Ming dynasty, a severe frost in the spring destroys the winter wheat crop. Torrential rains in mid summer cause massive flooding of farmland and villages (by some accounts submerged in a metre of water). In the fall, a large
tornado demolishes houses and flattens much of the buckwheat in the fields. Famine victims either flee, starve, or resort to
cannibalism. This follows a series of natural disasters in Henan in the years
1528,
1531,
1539, and
1545.
The new edition of the
Genevan psalter, Pseaumes octantetrois de David, is published, with
Louis Bourgeois as supervising composer, including the first publication of the
hymn tune known as the Old 100th.
April 28 – The delegates to the
Council of Trent adjourn for two years after learning that the Holy Roman Emperor is fleeing from Maurice of Saxony.[48]
May 20 – Learning of the rapid approach of the Elector Maurice, the Emperor Charles V flees from
Innsbruck ahead of being captured.[49]
June 24 – The
Portuguese ship São João is wrecked off of the coast of South Africa.[51] While 480 people survive initially, all but 25 of them die during the next 165 days while trying to reach the mouth of the Maputo River in what is now
Mozambique.
September 24 – The
Debatable Lands on the border of
England and
Scotland are divided between the two kingdoms by a commission creating the
Scots' Dike in an unsuccessful attempt to halt lawlessness here, but giving both countries their modern borders.
Miguel de Buría leads the first African rebellion in South America's history. This may be because Buría has more slaves than other regions in
Venezuela, of which most join Miguel, and is still being contested between the Europeans and the natives, who also join his side. During this insurrection he takes over the Gold mines de San Felipe de Buría, established within the area with the consent of the Spanish Crown, to pull out the ore that was discovered in the Buria river, a task that heavily depends on slave work.
March 1 – The second (and last) session of the Parliament of England during the reign of King Edward VI is opened by the King at Westminster and lasts until March 31. Sir
James Dyer serves during the session as Speaker of the House of Commons.[58]
June 15 – On his deathbed, King Edward summons prominent English judges and signs his devise of the throne to Lady Jane Grey.
June 21 – Under threats from the Duke of Northumberland, the devise by King Edward to make Jane Grey the heir to the throne is signed by over 100 prominent persons.
November 13 –
Lady Jane Grey, who had claimed the title of Queen of England for nine days, is convicted of
high treason, along with her husband Lord Guilford Dudley, two of Dudley's brothers, and
Thomas Cranmer, the former
Archbishop of Canterbury, after trial conducted by a special commission at
Guildhall in the
City of London.[74] Referred to by the court as "Jane Dudley, wife of Guildford", Lady Jane is found to have treacherously assumed the title and the power of the monarch of England, as evidenced by a number of documents she had signed as "Jane the Quene". All five defendants are sentenced to death. Beheading is the sentence for the men, while Lady Jane is to either be "burned alive on
Tower Hill or beheaded as the Queen pleases", with the decision (for a private decapitation) to be made by Queen Mary.[75]
November 16 – A delegation from the English Parliament formally asks the new queen, Mary I, to choose an English husband rather than to marry Spain's
Prince Philip, and suggests
Edward Courtenay, 1st Earl of Devon.[76] Queen Mary's choice to marry Philip, in the interests of protecting England from an invasion, will ultimately lead to
Wyatt's rebellion.
November 17 (13th waxing of Natdaw 915 ME) –
Bayinnaung, King of Burma, commissions the building of the
Kanbawzathadi Palace in his capital,
Pegu (modern-day Bago in Myanmar).[77] The palace is completed in 1556 but is burned down in 1599.
November 25 –
Second Margrave War: The city of
Kulmbach, near Brandenburg in Bavaria in Germany, is sacked and burned to the ground after its margrave,
Albert Alcibiades, makes an unsuccessful attempt to bring all of the Duchy of Franconia under his control.[79]
January 12 (10th waxing of Tabodwe 915 ME) –
Bayinnaung is crowned king of the Burmese
Taungoo Dynasty at his new capital at
Pegu, after a previous coronation on January 11, 1551, and takes the regnal name of Thiri Thudhamma Yaza.[84]
January 27 –
Wyatt's rebellion begins in England at
Maidstone as
Sir Thomas Wyatt reads a proclamation that Queen Mary of England’s marriage to King Philip of Spain will "bring upon this realm most miserable servitude, and establish popish religion". Within two days, Wyatt has raised 2,000 soldiers to join his plan to overthrow Queen Mary.[87]
January 30 –
Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk, one of the English conspirators in Wyatt's rebellion, leads troops from
Leicester to
Coventry, but the group finds that the gates of the city are closed because the rebellion has been exposed.[88]
May 9 –
Elizabeth is released from the Tower of London, although she continues to be confined at home after she is cleared of suspicion of conspiracy to overthrow the government.
November 1 – English captain
John Lok, commanding three ships (the Trinitie, the Bartholomew and the John Evangelist), departs from Dartmouth in England to voyage to the
Guinea Coast at West Africa.[97][98][99]
April 9 – Marcello Cervini degli Spannocchi is unanimously chosen as the successor to
Pope Julius III, who died on March 23, and takes the name of
Pope Marcellus II as the 222nd Pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church. He will reign for 22 days.[103]
May 15 – The
conclave opens with 42 of the 56 Roman Catholic cardinals to choose a successor to Pope Marcellus II, who had died on May 1.[104]
May 23 – Giovanni Pietro Carafa, Cardinal of Naples, is elected as the new Pope after Giacomo del Pozzo fails to obtain the necessary two-thirds approval.[105] Carafa, the 223rd Pope, takes the name
Pope Paul IV.[106]
August 24 – England's
Thomas Thirlby, the first and only Roman Catholic Archbishop of Norwich and Queen Mary's envoy to
Pope Paul IV, returns to London from bearing a papal bull that confirms Queen Mary's jurisdiction over Ireland.[108]
December 11 – Cardinal
Reginald Pole is made a cardinal-priest in the Roman Catholic Church and made the administrator of the
See of Canterbury in England,[113] though he will not become the new Archbishop of Canterbury until the following March 20.
Date unknown
Russia breaks a 60-year-old truce with
Sweden by attacking Finland.
January 4 – In Japan,
Saitō Yoshitatsu, the eldest son of
Saitō Dōsan, arranges the murders of his two younger brothers, Magoshiro and Kiheiji, and forces his father to flee from the Sagiyama Castle.
January 24 – In India, at the
Sher Mandal in
Delhi, the Mughal Emperor
Humayun trips while descending the stairs from his library and strikes the side of his head against a stone step, sustaining a fatal injury. He never regains consciousness and dies seven days later.[119]
April 24 –
Pál Márkházy surrenders the Hungarian fortress at
Ajnácskő (now Hajnáčka in
Slovakia) to the Ottoman Empire. Márkházy, accused of treachery, is stripped of his estates and title by the King of Hungary, and forced to flee to the Principality of Transylvania.[125]
November 10 – The English ship Edward Bonadventure, commanded by
Richard Chancellor is wrecked on the coast of
Scotland at
Pitsligo, killing most of its crew, including Chancellor. The few survivors include the first Russian ambassador to England, Osip Nepeya.[135]
November 17 – In the Holy Roman Empire, the Steter Kriegsrat is founded as a War Council with five generals and five civil servants to advise the Habsburg rulers.[136]
February 4 –
Pope Paul IV creates the metropolitan archdiocese of Portuguese India (based in Goa) separating the Goan diocese from the ecclesiastical province of
Lisbon.
March 11 – The Burmese conquest of the Shan States continues as the capital of the
Mongkawng state,
Mong Kawng, falls to the
Toungoo dynasty invaders, five days after the March 6 surrender of the town of
Mong Yang. The event is later commemorated on the Shwezigon Pagoda Bell.
April 25 – English aristocrat
Thomas Stafford attempts a rebellion against
Queen Mary, landing at
Scarborough, North Yorkshire with two ships and 32 followers after crossing the English Channel from
Dieppe in
France. Upon landing, he captures Scarborough Castle and proclaims himself "Protector of the Realm".[150]
May 4 – The
Stationers' Company, officially the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers, is granted a royal charter and a monopoly on the English publishing industry.[151] For the next 150 years, the Stationers will regulate and censor the printing industry until the passage of the
Copyright Act 1710 on April 10, 1710.
May 23 – The
Shwezigon Pagoda Bell, weighing 7,560 pounds (3,430 kg), is dedicated. The Bell, commissioned by King Bayinnaung and located in the Myanmar city of
Bagan, bears a detailed inscription of the 16th century Burmese conquest of the Shan States.
May 28 – English rebel Thomas Stafford and 32 of his followers are beheaded at the
Tower of London after being convicted of treason.[150]
May 29 – King Philip II of Spain signs a treaty in London with Iacopo VI being restored to rule of the Principality of Piombino a bargain with Cosimo I de' Medici.[152][153]
July 24 – The
Edict of Compiègne is issued by
King Henri II of France, providing for the death penalty to be applied to Protestants for a variety of crimes, including a relapse after having renounced Protestantism; unauthorized travel to
Geneva; publication of Protestant books; possessing graven images; and unauthorized participation in Protestant religious gatherings, whether public or private.[159]
September 11– The
Colloquy of Worms convenes in Germany as a dialog on religious issues between clerics of the German Catholic Church and the Lutheran Church.[162][163]
September 12– The Spanish occupation of the Papal States is confirmed as
Pope Paul IV signs a separate peace treaty, the Peace of Cave-Palestrina, with Spain's
Duke of Alba, who has massed troops outside of Rome in preparationfor an attack.[164][165]
October 23 –
Mohammed al-Shaykh, Sultan of Morocco since 1549, is assassinated by Ottoman soldiers who had infiltrated the Moroccan army. The assassination comes on orders of the Ottoman sultan after Mohammed makes plans for an alliance with Spain against the Ottoman Empire.[166] Mohammed is succeeded by his son,
Abdallah al-Ghalib.
With the permission of the
Ming dynasty government of
China, and for the benefit of both Western and Eastern merchants, the
Portuguese settle in
Macau (retroceded in
1999).[171] Direct Sino-Portuguese trade has existed since
1513, but this is the first official legal treaty port on traditional Chinese soil, that will form a long-term Western settlement.
Spain becomes
bankrupt, throwing the German banking houses into chaos.[172]
German adventurer
Hans Staden publishes a widely translated account of his detention by the
Tupí people of
Brazil, Warhaftige Historia und beschreibung eyner Landtschafft der Wilden Nacketen, Grimmigen Menschfresser-Leuthen in der Newenwelt America gelegen ("True Story and Description of a Country of Wild, Naked, Grim, Man-eating People in the New World, America").[179]
June 23 – France is successful in the
siege of Thionville in the Duchy of Luxembourg and recovers the fortress from the Spanish Empire after an operation that began on April 17 and lasted more than two months.
July–September
July 9 – The Ottoman Empire, with 15,000 troops and 150 warships, besieges the Spanish garrison at
Ciutadella de Menorca at Spain's Balearic Islands. When the town falls on July 17, the 3,099 surviving inhabitants are sold into slavery.[183]
November 15 – The five
Canterbury Martyrs, three men and two women, are burned at the stake, becoming the last of 312 Protestants put to death for
heresy during the reign of England's last Roman Catholic ruler,
Queen Mary.[187] Queen Mary dies two days later, bringing an end to her campaign. During the final year of Mary's reign, 49 Protestants are burned at the stake and three others die in prison while awaiting execution.
November 17 – Queen Mary, a devout Roman
Catholic dies of uterine cancer at the age of 42, and is succeeded by her younger half-sister
Elizabeth, an adherent to the Protestant
Church of England, beginning the
Elizabethan era in British history.
December 5 – Less than three weeks of becoming Queen of England, Elizabeth summons the members of the
English Parliament with orders to assemble at Westminster on January 23. Under Elizabeth's agenda, the Parliament is charged with restoring the laws passed at the beginning of the
English Reformation, and repealing the reforms made during the reign of Queen Mary.
June 30 –
King Henry of France participates in a
jousting tournament at the
Place des Vosges in Paris, where French nobles are celebrating the marriage of Princess Elisabeth to King Philip of Spain. During competition against
Gabriel de Lorges, Count of Montgomery, commander of King Henry's bodyguards, the
Garde Écossaise, King Henry is struck in the eye by a splinter from Montgomery's lance and fatally injured.[194] Henry survives for 10 days without treatment until dying from
sepsis.
July 25 – The
Articles of Leith are signed in
Edinburgh between the Protestant
Lords of the Congregation and the Roman Catholic representatives the Scottish regent,
Mary of Guise, the widow of
King James V, who is ruling on behalf of her daughter, the 17-year-old
Mary, Queen of Scots. The Lords, who have occupied Edinburgh since June, withdraw their troops in return for the Scottish crown's agreement to not interfere with the practice of Protestantism in Scotland.[197]
August 18 –
Pope Paul IV, leader of the Roman Catholic Church since 1555, dies at the age of 83 after a reign of four years. The office of the Pope remains vacant until almost the end of the year before a successor is chosen.
September 4 –
Gorkha state is established by
Dravya Shah, beating local Khadka kings, which is the origin of the current country of
Nepal.
September 19 – Just weeks after arrival at
Pensacola, the Spanish missionary colony is decimated by a
hurricane that kills hundreds, sinks five ships, with a
galleon, and grounds a
caravel; the 1,000 survivors divide to relocate/resupply the settlement, but suffer famine & attacks, and abandon the effort in
1561.
September 25 – At the age of 12,
Petru cel Tânăr (Peter the Younger) is named as the new
Prince of Wallachia at the capital,
Târgoviște (now in Romania) after the death of his father,
Mircea the Shepherd. In response, members of Wallachian nobility (
boyars) opposed to Mircea's rule launch the first of three attempts to take the throne, fighting battles at Românești, Șerpătești and Boiani.
October–December
October 24 – Backed by Ottoman Empire troops, the army of Wallachia defeats the boyars at the battle of Boiani. The
Ottoman central government at Constantinople confirms Petru as the rightful ruler of the principality within the Empire.
November 6 – The Ottoman Empire ends its attempt to wrest control of the island of
Bahrain from Portuguese control, after a siege of Manama Castle that began on July 2.[202]
Jean Nicot, French ambassador to Portugal, introduces
tobacco to the French court in the form of
snuff, and describes its medicinal properties. The active ingredient in tobacco is later named "
nicotine" in his honor.[205]
December 7 – Lithuanian noble
Barbara Radziwiłł, wife of
Sigismund II Augustus, King of Poland and Duke of Lithuania since 1547, has an elaborate coronation in
Kraków as Queen consort and Grand Duchess, five months before her death at the age of 30.[234]
^
abcFernández Duro, Cesáreo (1895). Armada Española desde la unión de los reinos de Castilla y Aragón (in Spanish). Vol. I. Madrid, Spain: Sucesores de Rivadeneyra. pp. 282–284.
^John S. C. Abbott, The Empire of Russia from the Remotest Period to the Present Time (Mason Brothers, 1859, reprinted 2020)("On the 23rd of February, 1551, a larger convention of the clergy...")
^Porteous, John (1969). Coins In History. New York: Putnam. pp. 178–180..
^Ernst Wilhelm Möller, History of the Christian Church: A.D. 1517-1648, Reformation and Counter-reformation (S. Sonnenschein & Company, 1900) p.240
^John S. C. Abbott, Austria : Its Rise and Present Power (P. F. Collier and Son, 1902) p.132
^Kala, U (1724). Maha Yazawin (in Burmese). Vol. 2 (2006, 4th printing ed.). Yangon: Ya-Pyei Publishing. p. 210.
^Further Selections from the Tragic History of the Sea, 1559-1565: Narratives of the Shipwrecks of the Portuguese East Indiamen (Taylor & Francis, 2017)
^Hardwick, Charles (1851). A History of the Articles of Religion. Cambridge: John Deighton. pp. 74–79.
^War and Peace in the Religious Conflicts of the Long Sixteenth Century (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2022) pp.47-48
^Fierro, Maribel, ed. (2010). "Chronology". The New Cambridge History of Islam, Volume 2: The Western Islamic World, Eleventh to Eighteenth Centuries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. xxxiii.
ISBN978-0-521-83957-0. Failed Ottoman attempt to conquer Hormuz.
^Victor Duruy, A Short History of France (J. M. Dent & sons, Ltd. 1918) p.501
^Robert Knecht, The Valois Kings of France 1328-1589 (Bloomsbury Academic, 2007) p.149 ("By the time Charles V lifted the siege, on 2 January 1553, his army had dwindled to a third of its original size.")
^Encyclopedia of Tudor England, ed. by John A. Wagner, et al. (ABC-CLIO, 2011) p.12
^David Wilmshurst, The Ecclesiastical Organisation of the Church of the East, 1318–1913 (Peeters Publishers, 2000) pp.21–22
^Ives, Eric (2009). Lady Jane Grey: A Tudor Mystery. Malden MA; Oxford UK: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 251–252, 334.
ISBN978-1-4051-9413-6.; Bellamy, John (1979). The Tudor Law of Treason. Toronto: Routlegde, Kegan & Paul. p. 54.
ISBN0-7100-8729-2.
^Weikel, Ann (1980). Tittler, Robert; Loach, Jennifer (eds.).
The Mid-Tudor Polity c.1540-1560. The Marian Council Revisited: Rowman and Littlefield. p. 53.
ISBN9780333245286. Retrieved 2 October 2021.
^Barros Arana, Diego. "Capítulo XIV".
Historia general de Chile (in Spanish). Vol. 4 (Digital edition based on the second edition of 2000 ed.). Alicante: Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes. pp. 346–347.
^
ab Richard Hakluyt, The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques & Discoveries of the English Nation Made by Sea Or Overland to the Remote and Farthest Distant Quarters of the Earth at Any Time Within the Compass of These 1600 Years (1597, reprinted by J. M. Dent and Sons, Ltd., 1927) pp.47-50 ("The first day of November at nine of the clocke at night, departing from the coast of England, se set off...")
^p.50 ("The two and twentieth of December we came to the river of Sesto & remained there until the nine and twentieth day of said moneth.")
^Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
ISBN0-304-35730-8.
^Goldsmid, E. (ed.) (1886). The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation, collected by
Richard Hakluyt, Preacher, Vol. III: North-Eastern Europe and Adjacent Countries, Part II: The Muscovy Company and the North-Eastern Passage. Edinburgh: E. & G. Goldsmid.
pp. 101-112.
^Pattenden, Miles (2013). Pius IV and the Fall of The Carafa: Nepotism and Papal Authority in Counter-Reformation Rome. OUP Oxford. pp. 21–22.
ISBN978-0191649615.
^Haan, Bertrand (2010). Une paix pour l'éternité: La négociation du traité du Cateau-Cambrésis. Madrid: Casa de Velázquez. pp. 37–60.
^Tagliacozzo, Eric; Siu, Helen F.; Perdue, Peter C. (5 January 2015).
Asia Inside Out. Harvard University Press. p. 90.
ISBN978-0-674-59850-8. Retrieved 16 October 2023.
^J. W. Ruuth (1958). "Kaupungin perustamiskirje". Porin kaupungin historia II (in Finnish). City of Pori. p. 269.
^Lucinda H. S. Dean, 'In the Absence of an Adult Monarch', Medieval and Early Modern Representations of Authority in Scotland and the British Isles (Routledge, 2016), p. 155.
^Svat Soucek (2008):"The Portuguese and Turks in the Persian Gulf", in Revisiting Hormuz: Portuguese Interactions in the Persian Gulf Region in the Early Modern Period, p.37 copies archived on January 2, 2021 on the Wayback Machine website
^Derek W. H. Thomas; John W. Tweeddale, eds. (2019). John Calvin : for a new reformation. Wheaton, Illinois: Crossway.
ISBN978-1-4335-1281-0.
OCLC1091236732.
^Lipsius, Justus (1978).
Iusti Lipsi epistolae (in Dutch). Koninklijke Academie voor Wetenschappen, Letteren en Schone Kunsten van België. p. 378.
ISBN978-90-6569-655-7. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
^Ahlqvist, Alfred Gustaf (1874).
Karin Månsdotter (in Swedish). Central-tryckeriets förlag. p. 2. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
^Orazio Vecchi (in Italian). Modena: Accademia di scienze, lettere e arti. 1950. p. 9. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
^Frost, Robert (2015). The Oxford History of Poland-Lithuania. Volume I: The Making of the Polish-Lithuanian Union, 1385-1569. Oxford University Press.
ISBN978-0-19-820869-3.
^Miscellanea di storia italiana (in Italian). R. Deputazione sovra gli studi di storia patria per le antiche provincie e la Lombardia. 1871. p. 170. Retrieved 4 October 2023.
^"Ernst". www.deutsche-biographie.de (in German). Retrieved 9 October 2023.
^Morton, Edward John Chalmers (1882).
Heroes of Science: Astronomers. Society for Promoting Christian Knowledge. p. 63. Retrieved 9 October 2023.
^Rankin, Andrew (20 November 2012).
Seppuku: A History of Samurai Suicide. Kodansha USA.
ISBN978-1-56836-448-3. Retrieved 9 October 2023. An early instance of a remonstrative seppuku, recorded by Ōta Gyuichi in his biography of Oda Nobunaga, was the death of Hirate Masahide on February 25, 1553. A former general, in his sixties Masahide served as personal tutor to the young Nobunaga, whose teenage bad-boy antics are legendary in Japan.
February 7 – After a
10-week conclave in
Rome to elect a new Pope, Giovanni Maria Ciocchi del Monte, Bishop of Palestrina, is selected on the 61st ballot after
Reginald Pole of England falls two votes short of winning. Ciocchi del Monte takes the name
Pope Julius III and is crowned the next day, succeeding the late
Pope Paul III.[2]
February 25 – (10th day of 2nd month of Tenbun 19) In
Oita,
Ōita Prefecture, an attack within the
Ōtomo clan of Japanese samurais takes place after clan leader Ōtomo Yoshikazu seeks to disinherit his oldest son and to make his third son, Ōtomo Shioichimaru, as his designated successor. Supporters of the oldest son,
Ōtomo Yoshishige, invade Yoshikazu's home and kill Shioichimaru and four other family members.[3]
March 24 – "
Rough Wooing": England and France sign the Treaty of Boulogne, by which England withdraws from
Boulogne in France and returns territorial gains in Scotland.[5]
April 30 –
KingTabinshwehti of Burma is assassinated by two of his bodyguards while he is on a hunting trip. The two swordsmen, sent by
Smim Sawhtut, Governor of Sittaung, behead the King, and a civil war begins as major governors rebel against the new Burmese King
Bayinnaung.[10]
May 6 – Italian Protestant
Michelangelo Florio, jailed since 1548 before being brought to trial for and sentenced to death for heresy, escapes from prison and is able flee to France.[11]
May 15 – The
vestments controversy is resolved in the Church of England with a compromise on the style of clothing worn by Anglican priests.
John Hopper is allowed ordination as the Bishop of Gloucester without being required to wear Anglican vestments, but must not forbid anyone in his bishoporic from wearing the vestments if they wish.[12]
May 20 – The Spanish Catalan city of
Cullera is plundered by the Ottoman Empire General
Dragut Reis,[13] and most of its inhabitants are sold into slavery in
Algeria.
July 25 –
Capture of Mahdia (1550): Troops commanded by Ottoman General Turgut Reis make a counterattack on the Spanish invaders, led by General Andrea Doria. Both sides sustain heavy losses, and the Spanish succeed in forcing the Ottomans to retreat back inside Mahdia.[15]
September 2 (5th waning of Tawthalin 912 ME) – King
Bayinnaung of
Burma begins a four-month siege of the former Burmese capital,
Toungoo, occupied by the king's rebellious brother
Minkhaung.
January 11 (5th waxing of Tabodwe 912 ME) – King
Bayinnaung of Burma is successful in capturing his ancestral city of
Toungoo from his rebellious half-brother
Minkhaung II, and sets about to make Toungoo the capital for the first time since 1539.[27] Minkhaung is forgiven by King Bayinnaung rather than being executed, and assists in the King's campaign to capture the neighboring
Kingdom of Prome.
February 14 –
Alice Arden and her lover, Richard Mosbey, carry out the murder-for-hire of her husband,
Thomas Arden of Faversham with the assistance of a
highwayman known as "Black Will", two of Arden’s domestic servants (Michael Saunderson and Elizabeth Stafford) and Mosbye's sister (Cicely Pounder). The body is carried outside, and Thomas is reported as missing, but a discovery is made that the murder was committed inside the house. The conspirators are later executed. [29]
March 27 – French mechanical engineer
Aubin Olivier becomes the director of the new Royal Mint, the Moulin des Etuves on the
Île de la Cité in Paris after having learned the technique of producing uniform
milled coinage during a sabbatical in Germany.[31]
April–June
April 4 –
Ferdinand I, Holy Roman Emperor, issues an edict to reduce tensions among the three major ethnic groups in the Kingdom of Hungary, with an administration to have equal representation of for ethnic Hungarians, Slovaks and Germans.[32]
June 27 – The
Edict of Châteaubriant is promulgated in France by King Henri II, providing for an increasingly severe series of measures in the Roman Catholic Kingdom to be taken against Protestants, considered to be
heretics.[36]
July–September
July 7 – The fifth, and final outbreak of
sweating sickness in
England reaches
London, as documented by
Henry Machyn in his diary, and continues until July 19. Machyn notes that "ther ded from the vii day of July unto the xix ded of the swett in London of all dyssesus viij/c, iij/xx and xij and no more in alle, and so the chanseller is sertefiyd." ("There died from the 7th day of July unto the 19th dead of the sweat in London of all diseases 8 hundred, 3 score and 12 [i.e., 872], and no more in all, and so the Chancellor is certified.") [37]John Caius of
Shrewsbury writes the first full contemporary account of the symptoms of the disease.
July 30 – With the surrender of the island of Gozo, the Ottoman place 6,000 survivors on ships and transporting them to
Tarhuna Wa Msalata (in modern-day
Libya), where they are sold into slavery. The only natives left on the island are 300 persons who escaped the citadel and 41 elderly residents.[39]
November 20 – The Office of
Cardinal Secretary of State, the second highest position in the Roman Catholic Church after the Pope, is created to temporarily fill the vacancy between the death of one Pontiff and the election of another. Cardinal
Girolamo Dandini is appointed by
Pope Julius III to serve as the first Secretary of State.
December 16 –
George Martinuzzi, the Hungarian Archbishop of Esztergom and the Governor of Transylvania, is assassinated by Marco Aurelio Ferrari on orders of Ferdinand, King of Hungary. Martinuzzi had been suspected of treason after attempting to negotiate a separate peace treaty with the Ottoman Empire.[44]
Date unknown
Qizilbash forces under the command of
Tahmasp I raid and destroy the cave monastery of
Vardzia in
Georgia.
In
Henan province,
China, during the
Ming dynasty, a severe frost in the spring destroys the winter wheat crop. Torrential rains in mid summer cause massive flooding of farmland and villages (by some accounts submerged in a metre of water). In the fall, a large
tornado demolishes houses and flattens much of the buckwheat in the fields. Famine victims either flee, starve, or resort to
cannibalism. This follows a series of natural disasters in Henan in the years
1528,
1531,
1539, and
1545.
The new edition of the
Genevan psalter, Pseaumes octantetrois de David, is published, with
Louis Bourgeois as supervising composer, including the first publication of the
hymn tune known as the Old 100th.
April 28 – The delegates to the
Council of Trent adjourn for two years after learning that the Holy Roman Emperor is fleeing from Maurice of Saxony.[48]
May 20 – Learning of the rapid approach of the Elector Maurice, the Emperor Charles V flees from
Innsbruck ahead of being captured.[49]
June 24 – The
Portuguese ship São João is wrecked off of the coast of South Africa.[51] While 480 people survive initially, all but 25 of them die during the next 165 days while trying to reach the mouth of the Maputo River in what is now
Mozambique.
September 24 – The
Debatable Lands on the border of
England and
Scotland are divided between the two kingdoms by a commission creating the
Scots' Dike in an unsuccessful attempt to halt lawlessness here, but giving both countries their modern borders.
Miguel de Buría leads the first African rebellion in South America's history. This may be because Buría has more slaves than other regions in
Venezuela, of which most join Miguel, and is still being contested between the Europeans and the natives, who also join his side. During this insurrection he takes over the Gold mines de San Felipe de Buría, established within the area with the consent of the Spanish Crown, to pull out the ore that was discovered in the Buria river, a task that heavily depends on slave work.
March 1 – The second (and last) session of the Parliament of England during the reign of King Edward VI is opened by the King at Westminster and lasts until March 31. Sir
James Dyer serves during the session as Speaker of the House of Commons.[58]
June 15 – On his deathbed, King Edward summons prominent English judges and signs his devise of the throne to Lady Jane Grey.
June 21 – Under threats from the Duke of Northumberland, the devise by King Edward to make Jane Grey the heir to the throne is signed by over 100 prominent persons.
November 13 –
Lady Jane Grey, who had claimed the title of Queen of England for nine days, is convicted of
high treason, along with her husband Lord Guilford Dudley, two of Dudley's brothers, and
Thomas Cranmer, the former
Archbishop of Canterbury, after trial conducted by a special commission at
Guildhall in the
City of London.[74] Referred to by the court as "Jane Dudley, wife of Guildford", Lady Jane is found to have treacherously assumed the title and the power of the monarch of England, as evidenced by a number of documents she had signed as "Jane the Quene". All five defendants are sentenced to death. Beheading is the sentence for the men, while Lady Jane is to either be "burned alive on
Tower Hill or beheaded as the Queen pleases", with the decision (for a private decapitation) to be made by Queen Mary.[75]
November 16 – A delegation from the English Parliament formally asks the new queen, Mary I, to choose an English husband rather than to marry Spain's
Prince Philip, and suggests
Edward Courtenay, 1st Earl of Devon.[76] Queen Mary's choice to marry Philip, in the interests of protecting England from an invasion, will ultimately lead to
Wyatt's rebellion.
November 17 (13th waxing of Natdaw 915 ME) –
Bayinnaung, King of Burma, commissions the building of the
Kanbawzathadi Palace in his capital,
Pegu (modern-day Bago in Myanmar).[77] The palace is completed in 1556 but is burned down in 1599.
November 25 –
Second Margrave War: The city of
Kulmbach, near Brandenburg in Bavaria in Germany, is sacked and burned to the ground after its margrave,
Albert Alcibiades, makes an unsuccessful attempt to bring all of the Duchy of Franconia under his control.[79]
January 12 (10th waxing of Tabodwe 915 ME) –
Bayinnaung is crowned king of the Burmese
Taungoo Dynasty at his new capital at
Pegu, after a previous coronation on January 11, 1551, and takes the regnal name of Thiri Thudhamma Yaza.[84]
January 27 –
Wyatt's rebellion begins in England at
Maidstone as
Sir Thomas Wyatt reads a proclamation that Queen Mary of England’s marriage to King Philip of Spain will "bring upon this realm most miserable servitude, and establish popish religion". Within two days, Wyatt has raised 2,000 soldiers to join his plan to overthrow Queen Mary.[87]
January 30 –
Henry Grey, Duke of Suffolk, one of the English conspirators in Wyatt's rebellion, leads troops from
Leicester to
Coventry, but the group finds that the gates of the city are closed because the rebellion has been exposed.[88]
May 9 –
Elizabeth is released from the Tower of London, although she continues to be confined at home after she is cleared of suspicion of conspiracy to overthrow the government.
November 1 – English captain
John Lok, commanding three ships (the Trinitie, the Bartholomew and the John Evangelist), departs from Dartmouth in England to voyage to the
Guinea Coast at West Africa.[97][98][99]
April 9 – Marcello Cervini degli Spannocchi is unanimously chosen as the successor to
Pope Julius III, who died on March 23, and takes the name of
Pope Marcellus II as the 222nd Pontiff of the Roman Catholic Church. He will reign for 22 days.[103]
May 15 – The
conclave opens with 42 of the 56 Roman Catholic cardinals to choose a successor to Pope Marcellus II, who had died on May 1.[104]
May 23 – Giovanni Pietro Carafa, Cardinal of Naples, is elected as the new Pope after Giacomo del Pozzo fails to obtain the necessary two-thirds approval.[105] Carafa, the 223rd Pope, takes the name
Pope Paul IV.[106]
August 24 – England's
Thomas Thirlby, the first and only Roman Catholic Archbishop of Norwich and Queen Mary's envoy to
Pope Paul IV, returns to London from bearing a papal bull that confirms Queen Mary's jurisdiction over Ireland.[108]
December 11 – Cardinal
Reginald Pole is made a cardinal-priest in the Roman Catholic Church and made the administrator of the
See of Canterbury in England,[113] though he will not become the new Archbishop of Canterbury until the following March 20.
Date unknown
Russia breaks a 60-year-old truce with
Sweden by attacking Finland.
January 4 – In Japan,
Saitō Yoshitatsu, the eldest son of
Saitō Dōsan, arranges the murders of his two younger brothers, Magoshiro and Kiheiji, and forces his father to flee from the Sagiyama Castle.
January 24 – In India, at the
Sher Mandal in
Delhi, the Mughal Emperor
Humayun trips while descending the stairs from his library and strikes the side of his head against a stone step, sustaining a fatal injury. He never regains consciousness and dies seven days later.[119]
April 24 –
Pál Márkházy surrenders the Hungarian fortress at
Ajnácskő (now Hajnáčka in
Slovakia) to the Ottoman Empire. Márkházy, accused of treachery, is stripped of his estates and title by the King of Hungary, and forced to flee to the Principality of Transylvania.[125]
November 10 – The English ship Edward Bonadventure, commanded by
Richard Chancellor is wrecked on the coast of
Scotland at
Pitsligo, killing most of its crew, including Chancellor. The few survivors include the first Russian ambassador to England, Osip Nepeya.[135]
November 17 – In the Holy Roman Empire, the Steter Kriegsrat is founded as a War Council with five generals and five civil servants to advise the Habsburg rulers.[136]
February 4 –
Pope Paul IV creates the metropolitan archdiocese of Portuguese India (based in Goa) separating the Goan diocese from the ecclesiastical province of
Lisbon.
March 11 – The Burmese conquest of the Shan States continues as the capital of the
Mongkawng state,
Mong Kawng, falls to the
Toungoo dynasty invaders, five days after the March 6 surrender of the town of
Mong Yang. The event is later commemorated on the Shwezigon Pagoda Bell.
April 25 – English aristocrat
Thomas Stafford attempts a rebellion against
Queen Mary, landing at
Scarborough, North Yorkshire with two ships and 32 followers after crossing the English Channel from
Dieppe in
France. Upon landing, he captures Scarborough Castle and proclaims himself "Protector of the Realm".[150]
May 4 – The
Stationers' Company, officially the Worshipful Company of Stationers and Newspaper Makers, is granted a royal charter and a monopoly on the English publishing industry.[151] For the next 150 years, the Stationers will regulate and censor the printing industry until the passage of the
Copyright Act 1710 on April 10, 1710.
May 23 – The
Shwezigon Pagoda Bell, weighing 7,560 pounds (3,430 kg), is dedicated. The Bell, commissioned by King Bayinnaung and located in the Myanmar city of
Bagan, bears a detailed inscription of the 16th century Burmese conquest of the Shan States.
May 28 – English rebel Thomas Stafford and 32 of his followers are beheaded at the
Tower of London after being convicted of treason.[150]
May 29 – King Philip II of Spain signs a treaty in London with Iacopo VI being restored to rule of the Principality of Piombino a bargain with Cosimo I de' Medici.[152][153]
July 24 – The
Edict of Compiègne is issued by
King Henri II of France, providing for the death penalty to be applied to Protestants for a variety of crimes, including a relapse after having renounced Protestantism; unauthorized travel to
Geneva; publication of Protestant books; possessing graven images; and unauthorized participation in Protestant religious gatherings, whether public or private.[159]
September 11– The
Colloquy of Worms convenes in Germany as a dialog on religious issues between clerics of the German Catholic Church and the Lutheran Church.[162][163]
September 12– The Spanish occupation of the Papal States is confirmed as
Pope Paul IV signs a separate peace treaty, the Peace of Cave-Palestrina, with Spain's
Duke of Alba, who has massed troops outside of Rome in preparationfor an attack.[164][165]
October 23 –
Mohammed al-Shaykh, Sultan of Morocco since 1549, is assassinated by Ottoman soldiers who had infiltrated the Moroccan army. The assassination comes on orders of the Ottoman sultan after Mohammed makes plans for an alliance with Spain against the Ottoman Empire.[166] Mohammed is succeeded by his son,
Abdallah al-Ghalib.
With the permission of the
Ming dynasty government of
China, and for the benefit of both Western and Eastern merchants, the
Portuguese settle in
Macau (retroceded in
1999).[171] Direct Sino-Portuguese trade has existed since
1513, but this is the first official legal treaty port on traditional Chinese soil, that will form a long-term Western settlement.
Spain becomes
bankrupt, throwing the German banking houses into chaos.[172]
German adventurer
Hans Staden publishes a widely translated account of his detention by the
Tupí people of
Brazil, Warhaftige Historia und beschreibung eyner Landtschafft der Wilden Nacketen, Grimmigen Menschfresser-Leuthen in der Newenwelt America gelegen ("True Story and Description of a Country of Wild, Naked, Grim, Man-eating People in the New World, America").[179]
June 23 – France is successful in the
siege of Thionville in the Duchy of Luxembourg and recovers the fortress from the Spanish Empire after an operation that began on April 17 and lasted more than two months.
July–September
July 9 – The Ottoman Empire, with 15,000 troops and 150 warships, besieges the Spanish garrison at
Ciutadella de Menorca at Spain's Balearic Islands. When the town falls on July 17, the 3,099 surviving inhabitants are sold into slavery.[183]
November 15 – The five
Canterbury Martyrs, three men and two women, are burned at the stake, becoming the last of 312 Protestants put to death for
heresy during the reign of England's last Roman Catholic ruler,
Queen Mary.[187] Queen Mary dies two days later, bringing an end to her campaign. During the final year of Mary's reign, 49 Protestants are burned at the stake and three others die in prison while awaiting execution.
November 17 – Queen Mary, a devout Roman
Catholic dies of uterine cancer at the age of 42, and is succeeded by her younger half-sister
Elizabeth, an adherent to the Protestant
Church of England, beginning the
Elizabethan era in British history.
December 5 – Less than three weeks of becoming Queen of England, Elizabeth summons the members of the
English Parliament with orders to assemble at Westminster on January 23. Under Elizabeth's agenda, the Parliament is charged with restoring the laws passed at the beginning of the
English Reformation, and repealing the reforms made during the reign of Queen Mary.
June 30 –
King Henry of France participates in a
jousting tournament at the
Place des Vosges in Paris, where French nobles are celebrating the marriage of Princess Elisabeth to King Philip of Spain. During competition against
Gabriel de Lorges, Count of Montgomery, commander of King Henry's bodyguards, the
Garde Écossaise, King Henry is struck in the eye by a splinter from Montgomery's lance and fatally injured.[194] Henry survives for 10 days without treatment until dying from
sepsis.
July 25 – The
Articles of Leith are signed in
Edinburgh between the Protestant
Lords of the Congregation and the Roman Catholic representatives the Scottish regent,
Mary of Guise, the widow of
King James V, who is ruling on behalf of her daughter, the 17-year-old
Mary, Queen of Scots. The Lords, who have occupied Edinburgh since June, withdraw their troops in return for the Scottish crown's agreement to not interfere with the practice of Protestantism in Scotland.[197]
August 18 –
Pope Paul IV, leader of the Roman Catholic Church since 1555, dies at the age of 83 after a reign of four years. The office of the Pope remains vacant until almost the end of the year before a successor is chosen.
September 4 –
Gorkha state is established by
Dravya Shah, beating local Khadka kings, which is the origin of the current country of
Nepal.
September 19 – Just weeks after arrival at
Pensacola, the Spanish missionary colony is decimated by a
hurricane that kills hundreds, sinks five ships, with a
galleon, and grounds a
caravel; the 1,000 survivors divide to relocate/resupply the settlement, but suffer famine & attacks, and abandon the effort in
1561.
September 25 – At the age of 12,
Petru cel Tânăr (Peter the Younger) is named as the new
Prince of Wallachia at the capital,
Târgoviște (now in Romania) after the death of his father,
Mircea the Shepherd. In response, members of Wallachian nobility (
boyars) opposed to Mircea's rule launch the first of three attempts to take the throne, fighting battles at Românești, Șerpătești and Boiani.
October–December
October 24 – Backed by Ottoman Empire troops, the army of Wallachia defeats the boyars at the battle of Boiani. The
Ottoman central government at Constantinople confirms Petru as the rightful ruler of the principality within the Empire.
November 6 – The Ottoman Empire ends its attempt to wrest control of the island of
Bahrain from Portuguese control, after a siege of Manama Castle that began on July 2.[202]
Jean Nicot, French ambassador to Portugal, introduces
tobacco to the French court in the form of
snuff, and describes its medicinal properties. The active ingredient in tobacco is later named "
nicotine" in his honor.[205]
December 7 – Lithuanian noble
Barbara Radziwiłł, wife of
Sigismund II Augustus, King of Poland and Duke of Lithuania since 1547, has an elaborate coronation in
Kraków as Queen consort and Grand Duchess, five months before her death at the age of 30.[234]
^
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^John S. C. Abbott, The Empire of Russia from the Remotest Period to the Present Time (Mason Brothers, 1859, reprinted 2020)("On the 23rd of February, 1551, a larger convention of the clergy...")
^Porteous, John (1969). Coins In History. New York: Putnam. pp. 178–180..
^Ernst Wilhelm Möller, History of the Christian Church: A.D. 1517-1648, Reformation and Counter-reformation (S. Sonnenschein & Company, 1900) p.240
^John S. C. Abbott, Austria : Its Rise and Present Power (P. F. Collier and Son, 1902) p.132
^Kala, U (1724). Maha Yazawin (in Burmese). Vol. 2 (2006, 4th printing ed.). Yangon: Ya-Pyei Publishing. p. 210.
^Further Selections from the Tragic History of the Sea, 1559-1565: Narratives of the Shipwrecks of the Portuguese East Indiamen (Taylor & Francis, 2017)
^Hardwick, Charles (1851). A History of the Articles of Religion. Cambridge: John Deighton. pp. 74–79.
^War and Peace in the Religious Conflicts of the Long Sixteenth Century (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2022) pp.47-48
^Fierro, Maribel, ed. (2010). "Chronology". The New Cambridge History of Islam, Volume 2: The Western Islamic World, Eleventh to Eighteenth Centuries. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. xxxiii.
ISBN978-0-521-83957-0. Failed Ottoman attempt to conquer Hormuz.
^Victor Duruy, A Short History of France (J. M. Dent & sons, Ltd. 1918) p.501
^Robert Knecht, The Valois Kings of France 1328-1589 (Bloomsbury Academic, 2007) p.149 ("By the time Charles V lifted the siege, on 2 January 1553, his army had dwindled to a third of its original size.")
^Encyclopedia of Tudor England, ed. by John A. Wagner, et al. (ABC-CLIO, 2011) p.12
^David Wilmshurst, The Ecclesiastical Organisation of the Church of the East, 1318–1913 (Peeters Publishers, 2000) pp.21–22
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^Weikel, Ann (1980). Tittler, Robert; Loach, Jennifer (eds.).
The Mid-Tudor Polity c.1540-1560. The Marian Council Revisited: Rowman and Littlefield. p. 53.
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Historia general de Chile (in Spanish). Vol. 4 (Digital edition based on the second edition of 2000 ed.). Alicante: Biblioteca Virtual Miguel de Cervantes. pp. 346–347.
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ab Richard Hakluyt, The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques & Discoveries of the English Nation Made by Sea Or Overland to the Remote and Farthest Distant Quarters of the Earth at Any Time Within the Compass of These 1600 Years (1597, reprinted by J. M. Dent and Sons, Ltd., 1927) pp.47-50 ("The first day of November at nine of the clocke at night, departing from the coast of England, se set off...")
^p.50 ("The two and twentieth of December we came to the river of Sesto & remained there until the nine and twentieth day of said moneth.")
^Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson.
ISBN0-304-35730-8.
^Goldsmid, E. (ed.) (1886). The Principal Navigations, Voyages, Traffiques and Discoveries of the English Nation, collected by
Richard Hakluyt, Preacher, Vol. III: North-Eastern Europe and Adjacent Countries, Part II: The Muscovy Company and the North-Eastern Passage. Edinburgh: E. & G. Goldsmid.
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^Lucinda H. S. Dean, 'In the Absence of an Adult Monarch', Medieval and Early Modern Representations of Authority in Scotland and the British Isles (Routledge, 2016), p. 155.
^Svat Soucek (2008):"The Portuguese and Turks in the Persian Gulf", in Revisiting Hormuz: Portuguese Interactions in the Persian Gulf Region in the Early Modern Period, p.37 copies archived on January 2, 2021 on the Wayback Machine website
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^Ahlqvist, Alfred Gustaf (1874).
Karin Månsdotter (in Swedish). Central-tryckeriets förlag. p. 2. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
^Orazio Vecchi (in Italian). Modena: Accademia di scienze, lettere e arti. 1950. p. 9. Retrieved 3 October 2023.
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^Rankin, Andrew (20 November 2012).
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ISBN978-1-56836-448-3. Retrieved 9 October 2023. An early instance of a remonstrative seppuku, recorded by Ōta Gyuichi in his biography of Oda Nobunaga, was the death of Hirate Masahide on February 25, 1553. A former general, in his sixties Masahide served as personal tutor to the young Nobunaga, whose teenage bad-boy antics are legendary in Japan.