1541
Calvin Returns to Geneva
After an earlier expulsion, Jean Calvin accepted an invitation to return to Geneva and began implementing his ecclesiastical ordinances. A consistory of pastors and elders policed morals, closed taverns, and examined citizens on doctrine. Geneva became a model Protestant city and a refuge for reformers fleeing persecution. His consistory of pastors policing morals made Geneva a model Protestant city, earning it the nickname the Protestant Rome.
Pizarro Assassinated in Lima
A faction of disgruntled conquistadors loyal to the murdered Diego de Almagro burst into Francisco Pizarro's palace in Lima and hacked him down. The conqueror of the Inca tried to draw a cross in his own blood before dying. Spanish Peru descended into years of conquistador civil war. The conquistador civil wars that followed lasted a decade and killed more Spaniards than the original conquest itself.
De Soto Crosses the Mississippi
Hernando de Soto's bedraggled expedition reached the Mississippi River below modern Memphis and spent weeks building barges to cross the brown flood. Mound-building Chickasaw chiefs watched from the opposite bank. De Soto would die of fever the following spring, and his men would hide his corpse in the river. His expedition's devastating impact through disease and violence was so severe that later explorers found only shadows of the chiefdoms he had encountered.
Suleiman Occupies Buda
Suleiman the Magnificent formally annexed the Hungarian capital of Buda after tricking the child-king John Sigismund out of the citadel. Ottoman pashas would rule from the Danube hill for a hundred and forty-five years. Habsburg and Ottoman Hungary hardened into separate, bleeding provinces. Ottoman pashas ruled from the Danube hill for a hundred and forty-five years, as Habsburg and Ottoman Hungary hardened into separate bleeding provinces.
Orellana Descends the Amazon
Francisco de Orellana, separated from Gonzalo Pizarro's expedition while searching for cinnamon, floated down the Napo and into the Amazon River and followed it all the way to the Atlantic. He reported river skirmishes with armed women, giving the great river the name of the Greek warrior Amazons. His seven-month journey through complex agricultural societies remains one of the most extraordinary feats of exploration in the age of discovery.
El Greco Born on Crete
On the Venetian-ruled island of Crete, a boy named Domenikos Theotokopoulos was born into a family of Greek merchants. He would train as an icon painter, travel to Venice and Rome, and finally settle in Toledo, where his elongated saints and acid skies would make him Europe's strangest artist. His Byzantine icon-painting training combined with Venetian colorism and Roman Mannerism produced a style defying classification for centuries.