1695
Zumbi of Palmares Killed
Portuguese colonial forces tracked down and killed Zumbi, the last king of Quilombo dos Palmares, a free community of escaped enslaved Africans that had survived for nearly a century in the Brazilian interior. His head was displayed on a pike in Recife. Palmares, which had sheltered twenty thousand people at its height, passed into legend as a symbol of resistance.
End of English Press Licensing
Parliament allowed the Licensing of the Press Act to lapse, effectively ending prior censorship of printing in England. Newspapers, pamphlets, and political squibs proliferated overnight. Within a decade, London would have a dozen newspapers and a printing trade that shaped political opinion as never before, creating the freewheeling press culture that would become a hallmark of English-speaking democracy.
Kangxi Emperor Commissions the Complete Tang Poems
The Kangxi Emperor ordered the compilation of the Quantangshi, a monumental anthology gathering every surviving poem from the Tang dynasty into nine hundred volumes. The project enlisted dozens of scholars and preserved nearly fifty thousand poems. It was cultural statecraft at its grandest - a Manchu emperor claiming custodianship of China's golden literary age.
Abenaki Raids on New England
During King William's War, French-allied Abenaki warriors repeatedly raided the Maine and New Hampshire frontier, burning farmsteads and carrying captives to Quebec. The pattern of frontier warfare with taken prisoners, ransoms, and slow assimilation would define New England's northern border for the next seventy years, blurring the line between European imperial conflict and indigenous resistance.
Earthquake Destroys Port-au-Prince Area
A powerful earthquake struck the island of Hispaniola, killing many colonists and Taino survivors and damaging Spanish towns along the southern coast. The Caribbean, sitting astride major fault lines, would punctuate the European slave-plantation project with catastrophes for the rest of the colonial era, reminding settlers that the tropical paradise they exploited rested on dangerously unstable ground.