1579
Union of Utrecht
Seven northern provinces of the Netherlands signed a defensive pact at Utrecht, pledging to fight the Spanish together. It was the founding document of what would become the Dutch Republic. The southern provinces, increasingly Catholic and increasingly Spanish, drifted away toward the Union of Arras. Its guarantee of religious freedom, though limited, made the Dutch Republic one of early modern Europe's most tolerant states.
Drake Claims Nova Albion
Francis Drake careened his ship in a sheltered cove on the Pacific coast of what is now northern California and claimed the land for Queen Elizabeth, calling it Nova Albion. The Miwok inhabitants greeted him with gifts. Drake nailed a brass plate to a post and sailed on into the Pacific.
Akbar Proclaims the Mahzar
Akbar issued the Mahzar, a decree declaring himself the final arbiter on disputed questions of Islamic law in the Mughal Empire. Conservative ulama were horrified. The emperor, now thirty-seven, was consolidating religious as well as political authority, and moving toward his syncretic Din-i Ilahi experiment. The decree subordinated the ulama's traditional authority to imperial judgment, a revolutionary assertion of secular power over sacred law.
Drake Captures the Cacafuego
Off the Pacific coast of Peru, Francis Drake's Golden Hind overtook the enormous Spanish silver ship Nuestra Senora de la Concepcion, called by sailors the Cacafuego. The capture yielded twenty-six tons of silver and a chest of emeralds. Drake's crew spent days transferring the treasure and celebrating. The treasure, worth perhaps half a million pounds, provided Elizabeth a return exceeding ten thousand percent on her investment.
Union of Arras
The Catholic southern provinces of the Netherlands signed the Union of Arras, pledging loyalty to Philip II in return for the withdrawal of Spanish troops. The Dutch rebellion had cracked into a Catholic south and Protestant north, a split that would eventually produce Belgium and the Netherlands. The confessional division would eventually harden into the permanent political separation of Belgium and the Netherlands.