1552
Ivan the Terrible Takes Kazan
After a two-month siege that ended with a mining charge beneath the walls, Ivan IV's army stormed the Tatar khanate of Kazan on the Volga. He ordered thousands put to the sword and founded a Russian archbishopric on the ruins. Moscow's expansion across Eurasia had begun in earnest. The Cathedral of Saint Basil, commissioned to celebrate the victory, became Russian architecture's most iconic symbol with its onion domes.
Death of Francis Xavier
The Jesuit missionary died of fever on the desolate island of Shangchuan off the Chinese coast, still dreaming of preaching inside the Ming Empire. He was forty-six. His body, exhumed a year later and found incorrupt, became the most traveled relic in the Catholic world. His canonization in 1622 confirmed his status as patron saint of Catholic missions, and his preserved arm still performs blessings worldwide.
Las Casas Publishes A Short Account
The Dominican friar Bartolome de las Casas published A Short Account of the Destruction of the Indies, cataloguing Spanish atrocities in lurid, eyewitness detail. Translated across Europe, it fed the so-called Black Legend of Spanish cruelty and gave enemies of the Catholic king a ready arsenal of horror stories. Translated into Dutch, English, and French, it gave Protestant rivals powerful propaganda shaping perceptions of Spanish colonialism for centuries.
Xavier Dies on Shangchuan
The Jesuit Francis Xavier, having tried and failed to secure permission to enter Ming China, died of fever on the tiny island of Shangchuan within sight of the mainland. He was buried in lime, exhumed two months later, and found incorrupt. His right arm was eventually sent to the Gesu in Rome as a relic.
First Greek Orthodox Printing at Venice
A Greek expatriate named Andreas Koutzambasses began printing liturgical books in Greek script in Venice for the Orthodox communities under Ottoman rule. The press became a quiet lifeline for Greek learning during centuries when education in the Aegean and Anatolia was systematically suppressed. The press became a lifeline for Orthodox intellectual life under Ottoman rule, producing liturgical texts circulating from Crete to Constantinople.