1447
Shah Rukh Dies and Timurid Empire Fragments
The death of Timur's cultured son plunged the Timurid realm into savage civil war among ambitious grandsons and great-grandsons. Herat and Samarkand became prizes fought over by rival princes with cavalry armies and portable siege weapons. The libraries survived the fighting, the miniature painters somehow continued their exquisite work, but the political coherence that had sheltered the Timurid Renaissance and its sciences was crumbling irreversibly into princely warlordism.
Joseon Court Refines Metal Movable Type
Korean printers under royal patronage refined their bronze movable type system into the Gabinja typeface, which dramatically improved the speed, clarity, and quality of book production in the Korean script. The state printing office issued Confucian classics, medical texts, and agricultural manuals in growing numbers. Korea's printing technology remained the most technically advanced in the world, though its reach was limited by the court's strict monopoly over presses.
Filippo Maria Visconti Dies in Milan
The last male Visconti died childless in his bed, ending two centuries of family rule. Milan briefly proclaimed itself the Ambrosian Republic. Within three years, Francesco Sforza, a mercenary captain married to the duke's bastard daughter, would ride in and simply take the city by starvation and bribery. The brief Ambrosian Republic that followed was one of Italy's few republican experiments, lasting barely three years before collapsing.
Nicholas V Elected Pope
Tommaso Parentucelli, a humanist scholar, became pope and began systematically rebuilding Rome as a Renaissance capital. He founded what would become the Vatican Library, commissioned Latin translations of Greek classics, and began restoration work on Saint Peter's. The papacy committed itself to cultural patronage as an instrument of authority. His dream of transforming Rome into a monumental capital was only partly realized, but successors built on his vision for two centuries.