1474
Isabella Crowned Queen of Castile
On the death of her half-brother Henry IV, the twenty-three-year-old princess had herself proclaimed queen in Segovia's main square before her rivals could organize. A civil war with her niece Juana followed. Isabella won through alliance, siege, and patient letter-writing. Spain's modern political geography begins on that December afternoon. A civil war with her niece Juana followed, settled as much by diplomacy as by arms. Spain's modern geography begins that December afternoon.
Venetian Patent Statute Enacted
The Republic of Venice passed the world's first codified patent law, granting inventors a ten-year exclusive right to profit from their novel creations and imposing fines on anyone who copied a patented device without permission. The statute attracted foreign artisans and ambitious engineers to Venice from across Europe and established the revolutionary legal principle that ideas themselves, not merely physical objects, could constitute protected property. Modern intellectual property law descends from this single Venetian decree.
Caxton Prints First English Book
In Bruges, William Caxton produced his Recuyell of the Historyes of Troye, the first book printed in English. The text was his own translation from the French. Caxton had spent decades as a Merchant Adventurer abroad and returned technology and a language together. English print culture had a founder. The choice of a Trojan romance reflected the medieval belief that Britain was founded by Trojan refugees, giving English readers classical pedigree.
Battle of Drazenci
Ottoman forces under Mehmed II's western commanders pushed into Croatia, raiding as far as the Sava and returning with slaves and cattle. The Croatian borderland was becoming an Ottoman hunting ground. Hungarian and Venetian defenders could only react. The pattern of seasonal Balkan raids was now fixed for the next century and a half.