1566
Suleiman Dies at Szigetvar
At seventy-two and too feeble to mount a horse, Suleiman the Magnificent died in his tent during the siege of the Hungarian fortress of Szigetvar. His death was concealed for forty-eight days while the army marched back toward Istanbul. An Ottoman golden age had quietly ended. The fortress's defender Zrinski died in a suicidal sortie hours before Suleiman, making Szigetvar a double tragedy in both national memories.
Beeldenstorm in the Netherlands
Calvinist mobs burst into Catholic churches across the Low Countries, smashing statues, altars, stained glass, and relics in a coordinated fury known as the iconoclastic fury. Antwerp's cathedral was stripped in a single night. Philip II, watching from Madrid, decided the Dutch must be disciplined by force. The coordinated iconoclasm suggested planning rather than spontaneity, though the degree of Calvinist organization remains historically debated.
Pope Pius V Elected
The ascetic Dominican Michele Ghislieri became Pope Pius V and set about enforcing the decrees of Trent with ferocity. He standardized the Roman Missal, promoted the rosary, excommunicated Queen Elizabeth, and helped put together the Holy League that would win Lepanto. Rome had a reforming zealot at the top. His personal asceticism, including sleeping on bare boards, made him one of the Counter-Reformation's most genuinely pious popes.
Compromise of Nobles Signed
A group of lower Dutch nobles presented a petition at Brussels asking Philip II's regent Margaret of Parma to moderate the anti-heresy placards. Mocked at court as gueux, or beggars, they proudly adopted the name. It became the rallying cry of the Dutch Revolt and the nickname of Sea Beggar privateers.