1602
Dutch East India Company Founded
The States-General of the Netherlands merged a half dozen squabbling spice-trade ventures into a single joint-stock leviathan with the right to wage war, coin money, and sign treaties. The VOC, history's first multinational corporation, would dominate Asian commerce for two centuries and invent the shareholder, creating a model of corporate capitalism that reshaped the world economy.
Matteo Ricci Presents a World Map to the Ming
In Beijing the Jesuit polymath Matteo Ricci unveiled an updated world map, the Kunyu Wanguo Quantu, printed on six enormous panels. He placed China near the center to flatter his hosts, labeled the continents in Chinese characters, and quietly demonstrated that the Earth was round. Ming scholars were fascinated, disturbed, and not entirely convinced.
Safavid Shah Abbas Recaptures Bahrain
Shah Abbas I, having spent a decade rebuilding Persia's military with the help of English adventurers, wrested the island of Bahrain from the Portuguese after nearly a century of European occupation. Persian galleys swept the garrison aside. The Safavid Empire was reclaiming its coastline and reasserting its sovereignty over the warm waters of the Gulf.
Galileo Studies the Pendulum
In Padua, Galileo Galilei timed the swings of a chandelier in the cathedral against his own pulse and noticed something strange: the period seemed independent of the arc. The observation would seed his laws of falling bodies and, eventually, mechanical timekeeping accurate enough to keep ships from running aground. A swinging lamp had whispered the beginnings of modern physics.