1510
Albuquerque Seizes Goa
The Portuguese governor Afonso de Albuquerque stormed the Indian port of Goa, slaughtering its Muslim defenders and claiming the harbor as the capital of a new seaborne empire. He encouraged his sailors to marry local women, creating a hybrid Luso-Indian colony that would outlast every rival for four centuries. His policy of intermarriage created a distinctive Luso-Indian community whose descendants still inhabit Goa's churches and old quarters.
Shaybani Khan Killed at Merv
The Uzbek warlord Muhammad Shaybani, conqueror of Transoxiana and tormentor of Babur, rode out of Merv to face Shah Ismail's Qizilbash. The Persians crushed him. Ismail had Shaybani's skull lined with gold and sent to his Ottoman rival as a drinking cup, a gesture nobody in Istanbul forgot. The skull-cup became a diplomatic provocation poisoning Ottoman-Safavid relations for decades afterward.
Death of Botticelli in Florence
Sandro Botticelli, once the darling of the Medici and painter of the Birth of Venus, died in obscurity and poverty. In his final years, haunted by Savonarola's sermons, he had burned some of his own pagan canvases. Florence buried its greatest decorator almost without ceremony. His rediscovery by the Pre-Raphaelites transformed him from a forgotten decorator into one of Western culture's most beloved artists.
Tumelo Revolt in Hispaniola
Taino chieftains led by Enriquillo began a long guerilla war against Spanish encomenderos in the mountains of Hispaniola. The struggle would last thirteen years and force Charles V to negotiate personally. It was the first sustained indigenous resistance war in the Spanish Americas. Enriquillo's success forced Charles V to grant him freedom, a rare concession to indigenous resistance in the early colonial period.
Reuchlin Defends Hebrew Books
The German humanist Johannes Reuchlin refused to endorse an imperial order calling for the confiscation of Jewish books, arguing that the Talmud and Kabbalah had value for Christian scholarship. A bitter lawsuit with the Dominican Johann Pfefferkorn ensued, and the controversy became a rallying point for northern humanists. The controversy prefigured the Reformation's debate about intellectual freedom, with humanists rallying to his defense against Dominican censorship.