1551
Xavier Leaves Japan
Disheartened by his inability to learn the language yet hopeful for Asia's future, Francis Xavier sailed from Japan after two years of missionary labor. He had baptized perhaps a thousand converts and left small but stubborn Christian communities in Kagoshima, Hirado, and Yamaguchi. Next stop, he decided: China. His strategy of targeting elites and adapting teaching to Buddhist categories established the Jesuit model Matteo Ricci later refined in China.
Spanish Galleon Trade Deepens
Spanish authorities in New Spain and Peru began systematizing the convoy sailings of silver fleets to Seville. Two fleets each year, the flota from Veracruz and the galeones from Portobelo, would rendezvous in Havana before recrossing the Atlantic in formation. American silver was becoming the bloodstream of global commerce. The convoy system, though expensive and vulnerable, transported billions of pesos to Seville over two centuries, financing Spain's European wars.
Ottomans Capture Tripoli
An Ottoman fleet under Turgut Reis and Sinan Pasha wrested the North African city of Tripoli from the Knights of Malta. The Knights' brief experiment on the Barbary coast was over, and Ottoman corsairs gained a new base from which to raid Sicilian and Spanish shipping. The loss weakened the Knights' Mediterranean position and shifted naval power toward the Ottomans, who now controlled most of North Africa.
Jesuits Open College at Coimbra
The Society of Jesus opened a major college at Coimbra in Portugal that would become a training ground for missionaries bound for Brazil, Angola, and the Indies. Rigorous in Latin, Greek, theology, and mathematics, Jesuit colleges would eventually number in the hundreds and reshape Catholic education globally. The rigorous curriculum became the template for the global Jesuit educational network that would reshape Catholic education.