1638
Shimabara Rebellion Crushed in Japan
Thirty-seven thousand Christian peasants and ronin, driven to revolt by famine and persecution, barricaded themselves inside Hara Castle on the Shimabara Peninsula. After months of siege the Tokugawa forces, aided by Dutch naval bombardment, stormed the walls and slaughtered virtually everyone inside. Japan sealed itself shut to the outside world for two centuries.
Siege of Baghdad by the Ottomans
Sultan Murad IV, the last Ottoman sultan to lead an army in person, besieged Baghdad for forty days and wrested it from Safavid Persia in a blood-soaked final assault. The Treaty of Zuhab that followed drew the Ottoman-Persian frontier roughly where the Iraq-Iran border stands today, a line scratched in seventeenth-century gunpowder.
Scottish National Covenant
Thousands of Scots signed a national covenant in Greyfriars Kirkyard, Edinburgh, pledging to defend Presbyterian worship against Charles I's attempt to impose an Anglican prayer book. The signature sheet passed through the crowd on a tombstone. The Bishops' Wars that followed would help ignite the English Civil War, drawing Scotland into a constitutional crisis that consumed the entire British Isles.
Anne Hutchinson Banished
The Boston midwife and theologian Anne Hutchinson, who held weekly Bible discussions in her kitchen and questioned Puritan orthodoxy, was banished from Massachusetts as an antinomian heretic. She and her followers decamped to Rhode Island. A woman with opinions had proved too much for the Bay Colony, and her trial became an early landmark in the American struggle over religious freedom.