1347
Black Death reaches Sicily
Genoese galleys docked at Messina carrying sailors already dying - black swellings under the armpits, blood at the lips. Within five years the plague killed roughly a third of Europe and reshaped every institution it touched. Boards of health, quarantine procedures, mass graves, and new inheritance laws emerged. Europe's relationship with disease changed overnight.
Bahmani Sultanate proclaimed in the Deccan
Hasan Gangu, a Turkic noble who had revolted against Muhammad bin Tughluq's failing southern empire, was crowned Alauddin Bahman Shah at Daulatabad. He established a Deccan kingdom that drew its court culture from Persian traditions and its military strength from Central Asian cavalry tactics. The Bahmani Sultanate would dominate the northern Deccan for nearly two centuries, sparring constantly with Vijayanagara across the Tungabhadra.
Plague devastates Constantinople
Black Death arrived at Constantinople from Caffa along with Genoese trading ships. The Byzantine historian John Kantakouzenos described the epidemic in Thucydidean prose, noting how the dying were abandoned by family and how physicians fell sick beside their patients. A city already shrunken to perhaps a hundred thousand lost a third of its residents.
Calais surrenders to Edward III
After eleven months of starvation, the Channel port capitulated. Six burghers came out in their shirts with ropes around their necks to plead for the city's people. Queen Philippa famously begged her husband to spare them, and Edward relented. Calais would remain English for two centuries, a constant thorn in French sides and a bridgehead for invasion.
Cola di Rienzo proclaims Roman Republic
The notary's son, intoxicated by classical Latin and lurid prophecies, seized the Capitoline and declared himself tribune of a restored Roman commonwealth. Petrarch sent congratulations from Avignon, believing the republic reborn. Within seven months Cola was driven from the city by aristocratic mobs. He would return briefly in 1354 and be torn apart.