1609
Kepler Publishes Astronomia Nova
After years wrestling with the observations of Tycho Brahe, Johannes Kepler published a book that broke the two-thousand-year tyranny of the circle. Mars, he proved, moved in an ellipse, sweeping equal areas in equal times. Two of his three planetary laws were on the page, waiting for Newton to explain why they worked with a single elegant equation.
Henry Hudson Enters New York Harbor
Sailing for the Dutch East India Company in the Half Moon, the Englishman Henry Hudson pushed his tiny ship up a broad, salt-tinged river as far as present-day Albany. He failed to find a passage to China but handed the Dutch a claim to the best harbor in North America.
Galileo Builds His Telescope
Hearing rumors of the Dutch invention, Galileo ground his own lenses and within months produced an instrument of twenty-power magnification, then thirty. He demonstrated it from the Campanile of Venice, selling senators a view of ships still two hours from port. Then he turned it upward, and what he saw in the night sky would overturn two millennia of astronomy.
Twelve Years' Truce
Spain, exhausted and bankrupt, signed a truce with its rebellious Dutch provinces, effectively recognizing the independence of the northern Netherlands. The ceasefire allowed Amsterdam's merchants twelve years to consolidate the world's most advanced economy and build a fleet that would soon rule the Indies. The Dutch Golden Age, with its painters, scientists, and bankers, flourished in the breathing space.
Expulsion of the Moriscos
Philip III of Spain ordered the deportation of some three hundred thousand Moriscos, descendants of Muslims forcibly converted a century earlier. Families were marched to ports and shipped to North Africa. Valencia lost a third of its farmers overnight, and Spanish agriculture would not recover in the seventeenth century. It was one of the largest ethnic cleansings in early modern Europe.