1574
Akbar Reforms Mughal Administration
Akbar introduced the mansabdari system, ranking his officials by numerical grades that determined their pay, troop quotas, and prestige. Combined with the dahsala revenue system measured in rupees, it gave Mughal India one of the most sophisticated bureaucracies of the early modern world. The mansabdari system's numerical ranking created a bureaucratic hierarchy of unprecedented precision and flexibility in South Asian governance.
Siege of Leiden
Dutch rebels opened the dikes to flood the polders and float a rescue fleet toward the starving city of Leiden. The Spanish lifted the siege in early October. William of Orange rewarded the city with a university that still bears his name, and that still takes in Dutch students on October 3.
Selim II Dies, Murad III Ascends
The bibulous Ottoman sultan Selim II, known as Selim the Sot, died after slipping on the bathhouse floor. His son Murad III succeeded him and promptly had his five younger brothers strangled with silk bowstrings, a grim Ottoman tradition of fratricide that would continue through the century. Murad's withdrawal into the harem shifted real power to viziers and palace factions, a trend characterizing Ottoman politics for a century.
Henry III Crowned in France
Henry, Duke of Anjou, briefly elected king of Poland, fled that kingdom to succeed his dead brother Charles IX as Henry III of France. He found a France exhausted by religious war and a treasury empty. His eccentricities and favoritism would earn him few allies in the decades before his assassination.