January 23 –
1635 Capture of Tortuga: The Spanish Navy captures the Caribbean island of
Tortuga off of the coast of
Haiti after a three-day battle against the English and French Navy.
August 3 – Cossack rebel leader
Ivan Sulyma stages a surprise attack on Poland's newly constructed
Kodak fortress, and his raiders kill most of the 200 mercenaries stationed there. Sulyma and his allies are captured by the army of
Stanisław Koniecpolski, and Sulyma is executed on December 12.
December 23 –
Shah Jahan, Emperor of
India's
Mughal Empire, issues a decree against the Portuguese Jesuits, ordering that the Agra Church be demolished and barring them from attempting to convert Hindus and Muslims to the Christian faith, but allows them to conduct their religious ceremonies in private.
A Japanese imperial memorandum decrees: "Hereafter entry by the Portuguese galeota is forbidden. If they insist on coming, the ships must be destroyed and anyone aboard those ships must be beheaded."
^Setton, Kenneth (1991). Venice, Austria, and the Turks in the seventeenth century. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society. p. 66.
ISBN9780871691927.
^Stone, Daniel (2001). The Polish-Lithuanian state, 1386-1795. Seattle: University of Washington Press. p. 154.
ISBN9780295980935.
^Jardine, Lisa (2003). The Curious Life of Robert Hooke: The Man who Measured London (1st ed.). New York: Harper Collins Publishers. p. 23.
ISBN978-0-00-714944-5.
January 23 –
1635 Capture of Tortuga: The Spanish Navy captures the Caribbean island of
Tortuga off of the coast of
Haiti after a three-day battle against the English and French Navy.
August 3 – Cossack rebel leader
Ivan Sulyma stages a surprise attack on Poland's newly constructed
Kodak fortress, and his raiders kill most of the 200 mercenaries stationed there. Sulyma and his allies are captured by the army of
Stanisław Koniecpolski, and Sulyma is executed on December 12.
December 23 –
Shah Jahan, Emperor of
India's
Mughal Empire, issues a decree against the Portuguese Jesuits, ordering that the Agra Church be demolished and barring them from attempting to convert Hindus and Muslims to the Christian faith, but allows them to conduct their religious ceremonies in private.
A Japanese imperial memorandum decrees: "Hereafter entry by the Portuguese galeota is forbidden. If they insist on coming, the ships must be destroyed and anyone aboard those ships must be beheaded."
^Setton, Kenneth (1991). Venice, Austria, and the Turks in the seventeenth century. Philadelphia: American Philosophical Society. p. 66.
ISBN9780871691927.
^Stone, Daniel (2001). The Polish-Lithuanian state, 1386-1795. Seattle: University of Washington Press. p. 154.
ISBN9780295980935.
^Jardine, Lisa (2003). The Curious Life of Robert Hooke: The Man who Measured London (1st ed.). New York: Harper Collins Publishers. p. 23.
ISBN978-0-00-714944-5.