1516
Ferdinand Dies, Charles Inherits Spain
King Ferdinand of Aragon, grandfather of Europe's most tangled dynastic knot, died at Madrigalejo. His sixteen-year-old grandson Charles of Habsburg, raised in Flanders and barely speaking Spanish, became ruler of Castile, Aragon, Naples, and a fledgling empire in the Indies. A universal monarchy was coalescing. The young king's Flemish upbringing and inability to speak Spanish created immediate tension with the Castilian Cortes.
Ottomans Rout the Mamluks at Marj Dabiq
North of Aleppo, Selim I's artillery and arquebusiers obliterated the Mamluk cavalry of Sultan Qansuh al-Ghawri, who died of a stroke in the saddle. Syria fell in days. The Ottomans, already masters of the Balkans and Anatolia, now absorbed the heart of the medieval Arab world. The defeat exposed the fatal consequences of Mamluk refusal to adopt gunpowder weapons, clinging to cavalry tactics for two centuries.
More Publishes Utopia
The English humanist Thomas More, writing in elegant Latin, described an imaginary island commonwealth where property was held in common, priests married, and gold served as chamber pots. Printed in Louvain, Utopia gave its readers a word for ideal impossibility and a sly critique of Tudor England. The book's deliberate ambiguity has made it one of the most debated texts in the history of political thought.
Erasmus Edits the Greek New Testament
Working against a Basel printer's frantic deadline, Erasmus produced the first published Greek New Testament with a fresh Latin translation alongside. Reformers immediately used the corrected text to challenge Vulgate readings the Church had defended for a thousand years. Scripture was slipping free of Rome. His annotation showing the Comma Johanneum was absent from early manuscripts fueled Protestant arguments against Catholic doctrine for decades.
Concordat of Bologna
Francis I and Pope Leo X signed an agreement giving the French king the right to nominate bishops, abbots, and priors throughout France. The Concordat bound the French crown tightly to the papacy and made Catholic loyalty a matter of royal prerogative. Gallicanism had quietly been born. The agreement effectively prevented the Reformation from gaining institutional support in France, since the king controlled ecclesiastical appointments.