1680
Pueblo Revolt
In the Rio Grande valley, a Tewa medicine man named Pope coordinated a revolt of twenty-four Pueblo villages against Spanish colonial and missionary rule. Churches were burned, friars killed, and the colonists driven south to El Paso. For twelve years, Spain was expelled from New Mexico. Native America had won.
Asante Union Begins to Form
In the forests of present-day Ghana, Akan-speaking chieftains began coalescing under the Oyoko clan's leadership, forging the alliances that would crystallize into the Asante confederacy. Gold, kola nuts, and enslaved captives from the interior fueled the union's growth. Within a generation the Golden Stool would symbolize one of West Africa's most powerful states.
Comet Observed Across Europe
A great comet, the brightest since before anyone remembered, appeared in the night sky of late 1680 and remained visible for months. Newton, Halley, Cassini, and Flamsteed observed it carefully. Newton would use its parabolic path as evidence that the same inverse-square force ruled comets as planets, folding even these wild wanderers into the mathematical order of the Principia.
Kangxi Revives Classical Chinese Learning
The Kangxi Emperor, determined to win over Ming loyalist scholars, commissioned vast state-sponsored projects of classical editing, including dictionaries, encyclopedias, and histories. Han literati found themselves courted by Manchu rule. Qing cultural prestige was being built volume by volume, and the strategy proved brilliantly effective: within a generation, many of China's finest scholars had made their peace with the new dynasty.
Dodo Confirmed Extinct on Mauritius
Sailors searching for the fat, flightless bird on Mauritius that Dutch settlers had hunted for food found none. The dodo, a pigeon the size of a turkey with vestigial wings and no fear of humans, had vanished from its only home. It became the first creature whose extinction was widely noted and mourned, a cautionary emblem for centuries to come.