In today's world, 1579 has become a topic of great relevance and interest to a wide variety of people and communities. The impact of 1579 can be seen in different aspects of everyday life, from the way people relate to each other to the decisions they make in their professional lives. This article explores in detail and depth the importance of 1579 in the current context, analyzing its implications and consequences in different areas. In addition, the different perspectives and approaches that exist regarding 1579 are examined, with the aim of providing a complete and enriching vision of this very relevant topic.
March 2 – Battle of Borgerhout in Brabant (now Belgium): Spanish troops under the command of the Duke of Parma overwhelm rebels fighting for the Union of Utrecht.[5]
March 12 – The Siege of Maastricht, a center of the Dutch resistance to Spanish rule, is started in the Netherlands by Spanish troops under the command of Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma.[6] The siege will last almost four months before Maastricht falls on July 1.
April–June
April 10 – In the village of Cuers in France, near Toulon rebel peasants kill 600 nobles and upper-class gentlemen of the Catholic League serving the Count of Carces.[7]
June 17 – Francis Drake, during his circumnavigation of the world, lands in modern-day California, which he claims for Queen Elizabeth I.[10][11] With an English claim here and in Newfoundland, it becomes the basis for English colonial charters which will claim all land from the Atlantic to the Pacific, from "sea to sea." Drake's claim is called Nova Albion (New England), and subsequent maps will show all lands north of New Spain and New Mexico under this name.
July–September
July 1 – Maastricht surrenders to Spanish troops after a surprise attack by the Duke of Parma, who had besieged the city for more than three months.
August 17 – "Yasuke", a man of African origin who has been hired as a manager by the Chancellor of the Realm, Oda Nobunaga, arrives in Japan. Called "The Black Samurai" in dramatizations of his experience, he begins a service of three years to the Chancellor, ending on June 21, 1582.
September 10 – (5th waning of Tawthalin 941 ME) In the Kingdom of Mrauk U in what is now Myanmar and Bangladesh, King Min Phalaung becomes the owner of the first of three white elephants, and gives himself the title of Hsinbyushin.[16]
September 12 – Amendments are made to the May 17 Treaty of Arras, with further concessions to Spain by the Union of Arras. The final version is promulgated by King Philip of Spain in Mons, one of the regions in the Arras Union.[8]
October 19 – King James VI of Scotland makes his ceremonial entry into Edinburgh to assume the throne at the age of 13, after being declared to have reached the age of majority.[20] Scotland had been ruled by regents since 1567, when James was declared king.
November 3: Seditious writer John Stubbs is barred from writing again
November 3 – The English puritan John Stubbs, author of numerous pamphlets against the doctrines of the Church of England, is convicted of sedition, and his right hand is amputated as punishment.[22]
December 16 – After Willem van Pamele, the Spanish Governor of Flanders, is forced to flee during the Dutch Revolt, the Duke of Parma orders Pamele and the Catholic members of the Council of Flanders to convene at Douai as the temporary Flemish capital.[26]
December 24 – German astronomer Michael Maestlin makes the first cataloging of the Pleiades cluster, recording 11 separate stars visible to the naked eye, with a detailed illustration and measurements.[27]
December 25 – In France, Protestant French troops under the command of Matthieu Merle, make a surprise attack on the Roman Catholic cathedral in the village of Mende during Mass, and kill 400 civilians.[28]
Date unknown
In the Mughal Empire in India, Akbar abolishes the jizya, the tax placed upon non-Muslim residents.
Akbar issues a mazhar signed by the leading ulamas, putting himself as the highest religious authority, allowing him to interpret the Quran.[29]
^Encyclopaedie van Nederlandsch-Indië (M. Nijhoff & Brill, 1917)
^ ab"Murad III", by J. H. Kramers, in E. J. Brill's First Encyclopedia of Islam, ed. by M. Th. Houtsma, et al., Vol. VI (Brill, 1993) p.730
^Meikle, Maureen M. (1 January 2008). "Chapter Twelve. Anna Of Denmark's Coronation And Entry Into Edinburgh, 1590: Cultural, Religious And Diplomatic Perspectives". Sixteenth-Century Scotland. Brill. pp. 277–294. ISBN978-90-474-3373-6. Retrieved 30 January 2024.
^Sergio Buonadonna and Mario Marcenaro, Rosso Doge: I dogi della Repubblica di Genova dal 1339 al 1797 (De Ferrari Press, 2000).
^"Dismembering and Forgetting in Titus Andronicus", by Katherine A. Rowe, Shakespeare Quarterly (Autumn 1994) p.285
^William Palmer, The Problem of Ireland in Tudor Foreign Policy, 1485–1603 (Boydell & Brewer, 1995)
^"Jérémie II", in Dictionnaire d'histoire et de géographie ecclésiastiques, Vol. 28 (Letouzey et Ané, 2003) pp. 999-1000
^"Pamele (Guillaume de)", by Émile de Borchgrave, in Biographie Nationale de Belgique, vol. 16 (Royal Academy of Belgium, 1901), pp.526-528
^"On the Visibility of Stars in the Pleiades with the Naked Eye", by Friedrich Winnecke, Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society (December 1878), pp.146–148
^"Léon Costecalde, Monographie illustré de la cathédrale de Mende (Imprimerie Ignon-Renouard, 1922) p.13 ("La nuit de Noel 1579, Mathieu Merle, chef des protestants cevenois, s'avanca vers Mende, a la feveur des tenebres, s'empara de la ville par trabison, y massacra 400 pretres ou fideles, la plupart, dans l'enceinte meme de la cathedrale."
^Hamann, Richard (1936). Marburger Jahrbuch für Kunstwissenschaft (in German). Verlag des Kunstgeschichtlichen Seminars der Universität Marburg an der Lahn. p. 59. Retrieved 4 March 2024.
^Transilvania (in Romanian). Comitetul Județean de Cultură și Educație Socialistă. 2009. p. 16. Retrieved 4 March 2024.