1557
Portuguese Lease Macao
After decades of informal trading, Portuguese merchants obtained permission from Ming authorities to establish a permanent settlement on the peninsula of Macao. A Catholic enclave of stone churches and fan-shaped streets rose at the edge of the Pearl River, funnelling silk and porcelain toward Europe for centuries. Macao's unique position as Europe's only Chinese foothold channeled silk and porcelain toward Europe for three centuries.
Spanish Bankruptcy and Saint-Quentin
Philip II defeated the French at Saint-Quentin and captured the constable of France, but his triumph was undercut within months by the first Spanish royal bankruptcy. Flemish bankers to whom he owed millions groaned. The new king of Spain, fresh on the throne, learned that his silver could not keep up with his armies.
Akbar's Uncle Bairam Khan Regent
The young Akbar's regent Bairam Khan imposed discipline on Mughal nobles, crushed Sikandar Shah Suri at Mankot, and consolidated Punjab, Delhi, and Agra under Mughal rule. His high-handed style would soon alienate the teenage emperor, who dismissed him three years later in a decisive assertion of independence. Akbar's dismissal of Bairam Khan three years later marked his transition from puppet emperor to assertive ruler.
Japanese Christianity Grows in Kyushu
Jesuits operating out of Nagasaki, Hirado, and Bungo saw steady conversions among the Kyushu daimyo, who appreciated Portuguese trade as much as Catholic theology. Some sixty thousand Japanese Christians now attended Mass in tatami-floored chapels. Japan had the largest Catholic population outside Europe and Latin America. Daimyo who converted often did so for commercial advantage, seeking Portuguese firearms, though many converts' sincerity was genuine.