1586
El Greco Paints the Burial of Count Orgaz
For the Church of Santo Tome in Toledo, Domenikos Theotokopoulos completed an enormous altarpiece showing the burial of a fourteenth-century nobleman attended by Saint Augustine and Saint Stephen while the sky above swarmed with elongated saints and angels. It became his masterpiece and a definition of Spanish mystical painting. Its division between naturalistic earthly zone and visionary heavenly zone created a visual theology making the invisible seem more real than the visible.
Hideyoshi Titled Kampaku
Toyotomi Hideyoshi, the peasant-born lieutenant who had avenged Nobunaga's death, secured the ancient court title of kampaku, imperial regent. Forbidden as a commoner from becoming shogun, he built his authority on imperial protocol instead and continued bringing the remaining daimyo of Japan under his sword. The court title was a creative solution for a man whose peasant origins barred him from the shogunal title.
Babington Plot Uncovered
Francis Walsingham's agents intercepted coded letters between Mary Queen of Scots, imprisoned at Chartley, and a young Catholic gentleman named Anthony Babington plotting to assassinate Elizabeth. Mary approved the plan in writing. Walsingham added a postscript asking for names, and now had the evidence he wanted. Walsingham's espionage provided the evidence needed to try Mary Queen of Scots, removing the Catholic threat to Elizabeth's throne.
Hideyoshi Builds Osaka Castle
On the ruins of an Ikko-Ikki temple fortress, Toyotomi Hideyoshi completed Osaka Castle with enormous stone walls and a black-and-gold tower that dominated the surrounding plain. Tens of thousands of laborers had worked on it for three years. It was the largest castle in Japan and the seat of his new authority.