1576
Spanish Fury at Antwerp
Unpaid Spanish troops mutinied and sacked Antwerp, the richest city in Europe, killing seven thousand citizens and looting for three days. The Spanish Fury drove the southern Netherlands into alliance with the rebellious north at the Pacification of Ghent, briefly uniting all seventeen provinces against Madrid. The sack destroyed Antwerp's commercial preeminence and triggered the merchant exodus to Amsterdam that initiated the Dutch Golden Age.
Frobisher Sails for the Northwest Passage
Martin Frobisher led three small English ships into the Arctic in search of a northern sea route to China. He reached Baffin Island, mistook it for an island separating Asia from America, and brought back shiploads of black ore that turned out to be worthless pyrite. Disappointment paid dearly. The two hundred tons of ore proved worthless pyrite, bankrupting the Cathay Company and discrediting Arctic exploration for a generation.
Titian Dies in Venice
The enormous Venetian painter Tiziano Vecellio, who had painted emperors, popes, and pagan goddesses for sixty years, died during an outbreak of plague in Venice, perhaps of that disease. He was nearly ninety. Looters broke into his studio within hours of his death and stripped it bare. His seven-decade career encompassing portraiture, mythology, and landscape made him arguably the most versatile painter in Western art history.
Bodin Publishes Les Six Livres
The French political philosopher Jean Bodin published Les Six Livres de la Republique, articulating the first systematic theory of sovereignty as indivisible and absolute. Writing in the middle of France's religious wars, he argued that only a strong monarch could hold a religiously divided state together. His insistence that sovereignty must be indivisible provided the theoretical framework for the absolute monarchies of the seventeenth century.