1461
Battle of Towton
On Palm Sunday, in blinding snow on a Yorkshire plateau, two armies totaling perhaps sixty thousand men fought the bloodiest battle ever on English soil. By dusk, twenty-eight thousand Englishmen lay dead in drifts of red-stained snow. Edward of York, nineteen, was the undisputed victor and new king. The Yorkist victory was so complete that Henry VI fled to Scotland and the Lancastrian cause was reduced to a fugitive court.
Mehmed II Conquers Trebizond
The last fragment of the Byzantine world, the tiny Komnenian empire on the Black Sea, surrendered to the Ottomans after a brief siege. Emperor David Komnenos and his family were taken to Constantinople, converted to Islam, and later, for safety's sake, executed. Rome's political heritage ended in a fishing port.
Ming Shipyards Maintain Advanced Naval Technology
Despite the imperial abandonment of treasure fleets, Ming shipyards along the coast continued building advanced naval vessels equipped with watertight bulkhead compartments, a technology unknown in European shipbuilding for another three centuries. Coastal defense junks patrolled against Japanese pirate fleets using hull construction that could survive serious breaches without sinking. Chinese maritime technology remained globally supreme even as imperial policy turned its attention stubbornly inward toward the steppe frontier.
Sonni Ali Builds Songhai Navy on the Niger
The Songhai warrior-king constructed a formidable fleet of war canoes on the Niger River, creating the first organized inland navy in West African military history. His riverine forces could strike upstream and downstream with devastating speed, faster than any cavalry column could march along the seasonal floodplain. The Niger became a military highway under exclusive Songhai control, connecting the empire's three great cities of Timbuktu, Djenne, and the capital at Gao.
Louis XI Crowned King of France
The spider king, as his enemies would call him, was crowned at Reims. He would spend twenty-two years ruthlessly centralizing the French monarchy, breaking the great feudal magnates through treachery and patience rather than open war. Philippe de Commynes's memoirs of his reign remain one of the most honest political documents of the fifteenth century.