1663
Royal African Company Chartered
Charles II granted his brother James and a group of London merchants a monopoly on English trade with West Africa, including gold, ivory, and enslaved people. The Company built forts along the Gold Coast and became the leading English carrier of captives across the Atlantic until its monopoly was ended.
Ottoman Defeat at Saint Gotthard
A combined Habsburg and French force, assembled under the reluctant banner of Christendom, routed the Ottoman army at the Battle of Saint Gotthard on the Raab River in Hungary. It was the first major European victory over the Ottomans in a generation, a hint that the balance of military power was beginning to tilt westward.
Carolina Charter
Charles II granted eight loyal supporters a charter for a proprietary colony south of Virginia stretching in theory to the Pacific Ocean. The Lord Proprietors would invite settlers from Barbados, write a philosophical constitution with John Locke, and plant rice and indigo along with a slave society imported from the sugar islands.
Turkish War with Austria
Grand Vizier Kopruluzade Fazil Ahmed led Ottoman armies into Royal Hungary, besieging and taking the border fortress of Novy Zamky. Austria bled and called on allied German princes. The Ottoman threat to Christian Europe, long dormant, was awake again and marching toward Vienna, setting the stage for the climactic siege that would come twenty years later.
Ottoman Carpet Trade Peaks in Europe
Anatolian and Persian carpets flooded European markets through Venice, Marseilles, and Amsterdam, decorating the floors and tables of the burgeoning merchant class. Painters from Holbein to Vermeer rendered them with painstaking care. The knotted geometry of the Islamic East had become the most coveted household luxury in the Christian West.