1590
Hideyoshi Takes Odawara
Toyotomi Hideyoshi sealed the Hojo clan into their enormous Odawara castle and lounged in a lacquered tea house just outside the walls while holding concerts and cherry-blossom parties. Four months later the Hojo surrendered. With them, the last independent daimyo fell. The reunification of Japan was finally complete. The Hojo surrender completed Japan's reunification, and Hideyoshi's redistribution of fiefs reshaped the entire archipelago's political geography.
Tycho Brahe's Uraniborg
The Danish astronomer Tycho Brahe had been running his island observatory of Uraniborg for over a decade, compiling the most accurate naked-eye astronomical measurements ever made. Eventually his relationship with the Danish crown soured, and he would transfer his instruments and assistants to the imperial court at Prague. His Mars observations would later enable Kepler to discover elliptical orbits, revolutionizing astronomy.
John White Finds Roanoke Empty
Delayed by the Armada war, John White finally returned to Roanoke Island to find the settlement deserted and the word CROATOAN carved into a post. No bodies, no sign of struggle, no survivors. The fate of the Lost Colony has been debated ever since, and White never saw his granddaughter again.
Spenser Publishes the Faerie Queene
Edmund Spenser printed the first three books of his enormous allegorical epic The Faerie Queene, celebrating Elizabeth as Gloriana and ransacking Arthurian romance for Protestant English myth. The queen gave him a pension of fifty pounds a year. Sir Philip Sidney had not lived to see English poetry gain such a monument.
Henry IV Wins at Ivry
At the battle of Ivry, Henry IV famously told his troops to follow the white plume on his helmet. He crushed the army of the Catholic League. The victory did not end the civil war, but it established him as France's legitimate warrior king and set the stage for his eventual triumph.