1343
Majapahit fleet enforces tribute across the Malay world
Gajah Mada, the empire's great prime minister, dispatched naval expeditions to enforce Majapahit suzerainty over Sumatra, Borneo, and the Moluccas. His Palapa Oath - a vow to eat no spiced food until the archipelago was unified - became the founding legend of Indonesian political unity five centuries before Indonesia existed.
Great Zimbabwe reaches its architectural zenith
The stone-walled enclosures of the Shona kingdom on the Zimbabwe Plateau reached their greatest extent, housing perhaps eighteen thousand people. The Great Enclosure's walls rose thirty-six feet without mortar, testament to a civilization that controlled gold and ivory routes from the interior to the Swahili coast and needed no written word.
Estonian peasants rise on St. George's Night
Estonian villagers, groaning under Danish rule, rose in coordinated rebellion against their German landlords on the eve of St. George's feast. Manor houses burned across Harju and Laane. The Teutonic Order intervened, slaughtered peasants by the thousands, and bought the entire province from Denmark within three years. Estonia became a Baltic crusader state for two more centuries.
Muhammad V of Granada ascends the Nasrid throne
The eleven-year-old emir would rule Granada intermittently for four decades, despite coups and exile. His second reign saw the completion of the Palace of the Lions at the Alhambra, with its intricate muqarnas ceilings, slender marble columns, and central fountain fed by twelve sculpted lions. Islamic Iberia reached its cultural apotheosis under his patronage.
Joanna I inherits the Kingdom of Naples
At seventeen, the Angevin princess became queen of Naples, beginning a turbulent reign marked by the murder of her first husband Andrew of Hungary, Hungarian invasion in retaliation, papal intrigue, and four marriages. Joanna's court nevertheless patronized Boccaccio and Petrarch, and her kingdom remained the linchpin of Mediterranean politics for four decades.