1655

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Featured events in 1655
1655·North America·War

English Capture Jamaica

An English expeditionary force, having failed to seize Hispaniola, consoled itself by taking the lightly defended Spanish island of Jamaica. It would become the richest sugar island in the British Empire, a haven for pirates, and in the eighteenth century the largest slave port of the Caribbean. The island's brutal plantation economy would produce both enormous wealth and bottomless suffering.

May 10, 1655Enlightenment
1655·Europe·War

Swedish Deluge Begins

Swedish armies under Charles X invaded Poland-Lithuania and devastated it from north to south, sacking Warsaw and Krakow and driving the king into exile. The Polish Commonwealth lost perhaps a third of its population to war, plague, and famine. The seventeenth century was burying Poland under snow, and the once-mighty Commonwealth would never regain its former strength.

July 1655Enlightenment
1655·Africa·Politics

Queen Nzinga Dies in Matamba

Ana de Sousa Nzinga, the warrior queen of Ndongo and Matamba who had fought the Portuguese slave trade for four decades, died at the age of eighty-one. She had led armies in person, forged alliances with the Dutch, and converted strategically to Christianity. Central Africa had lost its most formidable diplomat and its most dangerous adversary.

1655Enlightenment
1655·Europe·Science

Huygens Discovers Titan

The Dutch astronomer Christiaan Huygens, using an improved telescope he had ground himself, noticed a moon orbiting Saturn and named it, unhelpfully, Luna Saturni. It was the first new satellite discovered since Galileo's Jovian moons forty-five years earlier. Huygens would go on to describe Saturn's rings properly in 1659, solving one of the most puzzling sights in the night sky.

1655Enlightenment
1655·Europe·Religion

Cromwell Readmits Jews to England

Oliver Cromwell quietly permitted Jewish merchants and their families to return to England after an exile of three hundred and sixty-six years. No formal edict was published; instead, individual permissions accumulated. The readmission was driven as much by Puritan millenarianism and commercial pragmatism as by any enlightened tolerance, but it reopened a door that Edward I had slammed shut in 1290.

1655Enlightenment
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