1451
Christopher Columbus Born in Genoa
A wool weaver's son was born in a narrow house on the Vico dell'Olivella. He would go to sea as a boy, learn Portuguese and Latin the hard way, read Marco Polo until the pages frayed, and convince a skeptical Spanish queen that the Indies lay closer west than east. He was wrong and right.
Mehmed II Becomes Sultan
The nineteen-year-old, already once-deposed and sent home in humiliation, buried his father Murad II and took the Ottoman throne with a single cold obsession: Constantinople. Within weeks he was commissioning bronze siege cannons from a Hungarian renegade named Urban and building a fortress on the Bosphorus. His obsession with Constantinople was both personal and strategic, fulfilling a prophecy attributed to the Prophet Muhammad himself.
Bahlul Lodi Founds Lodi Dynasty
An Afghan warlord from the Punjab rode into Delhi and claimed its tattered sultanate from the exhausted Sayyids. The Lodi dynasty would rule a shrunken north India for seventy-five years, until a descendant named Babur arrived with artillery and redrew the subcontinent into Mughal territory. The Lodi sultans governed from Delhi's Red Fort and tried to revive the city's commercial importance, though their authority rarely extended far.
Jami Born in Herat
The Persian poet Nur ad-Din Abd ar-Rahman Jami, who would become the last great classical master of the Persian literary tradition, was born in the Timurid heartland of Khorasan. His mystical verses, prose romances, and Sufi treatises on the nature of divine love would be read and memorized from Istanbul to Delhi for centuries. He represented the final, magnificent flowering of a literary tradition stretching back six hundred years to Firdawsi's Shahnameh.