1620

Same year, around the world
Featured events in 1620
1620·Europe·War

Battle of White Mountain

Outside Prague, Catholic imperial and Spanish forces smashed the hastily assembled Protestant army of Frederick V, the Winter King, in under two hours. Bohemia was reconquered and forcibly re-Catholicized, its Protestant nobility executed or exiled. The Thirty Years' War had produced its first catastrophe, and the Bohemian national identity was suppressed for nearly three centuries.

November 8, 1620Renaissance
1620·North America·Politics

Mayflower Compact Signed

Anchored off Cape Cod outside the Virginia patent area, forty-one male passengers of the Mayflower signed a brief civil covenant binding themselves to frame just and equal laws for the good of the colony. The Plymouth settlers had improvised the first self-government in New England before setting foot ashore, establishing a precedent for consensual governance that would echo through American history.

November 11, 1620Renaissance
1620·Africa·Politics

Slave Ship Trade Intensifies

With Dutch Brazil, Portuguese Angola, and new English and French Caribbean colonies all demanding labor, the transatlantic slave trade began its steep seventeenth-century expansion. Tens of thousands of Africans were now shipped across the Atlantic each year. The apparatus of forts, middle passage, and plantation was taking industrial shape, and the human cost would eventually reach into the tens of millions.

1620Renaissance
1620·North America·Politics

Pilgrims Land at Plymouth

After a miserable Atlantic crossing and a month of coastal scouting, a shallop of Mayflower passengers waded ashore at a sheltered harbor on Massachusetts Bay. Half of the hundred and two settlers would die before spring. The survivors called the place Plymouth and planted what would become New England, though only the kindness of the Wampanoag kept them from perishing entirely.

December 21, 1620Renaissance
1620·Europe·Science

Francis Bacon's Novum Organum

The English Lord Chancellor published a Latin treatise proposing a radical new method for natural philosophy: inductive reasoning from carefully tabulated experiments. Bacon called it the Great Instauration. He meant to replace Aristotle wholesale, and though he never finished the project, generations of scientists took up the plan, making the empirical method the foundation of Western science.

1620Renaissance
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