1702
Queen Anne Ascends the English Throne
Stout, gouty, and mourning seventeen lost children, Anne Stuart took the throne her brother-in-law William had warmed. Her reign would see Union with Scotland, victories at Blenheim, the first cabinet government, and a literature from Swift and Pope that mocked her even as it was made possible by her peace.
Queen Anne's War Begins
The American theater of the Spanish Succession conflict opened with raids between French Canada and English Carolina. Abenaki warriors burned Deerfield; Carolinians sacked St. Augustine. Along a thousand miles of forested frontier, Europe's dynastic quarrel became a matter of scalps and smoke. The war would grind on for a decade and end with Britain's acquisition of Acadia, Newfoundland, and Hudson Bay.
Forty-Seven Ronin Avenge Their Lord
On a snowy Edo night, forty-seven masterless samurai stormed the mansion of Kira Yoshinaka and took his head to lay on the grave of their disgraced lord, Asano. The shogunate ordered them to commit seppuku with honor intact. Their story became Japan's most enduring parable of loyalty. Kabuki playwrights dramatized it within weeks, and the tale has never left the Japanese imagination.
Gujarat Famine
A prolonged drought devastated western India as the Mughal tax system buckled under Aurangzeb's Deccan wars. European travelers described villages emptied and bodies unburied in the roads. The Mughal chronicles record mortality in the hundreds of thousands. Imperial decline was being measured, above all, in the bellies of peasants. The famine accelerated Maratha and British encroachment into Gujarat's weakened principalities.
First English Daily Newspaper
The Daily Courant, a single broadsheet printed above the White Hart tavern near Fleet Bridge, became London's first daily newspaper. Its anonymous editor promised only foreign news and no comments or conjectures. The press had discovered that yesterday's event could be today's commodity. The paper ran for thirty-three years and helped establish the rhythms of daily journalism that still govern the trade.
War of the Camisards
In the Cevennes mountains of southern France, Protestant peasants, forced underground by the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, rose against royal dragoons. Led by a baker boy named Cavalier and visionary prophetesses, they fought Louis XIV's army for three years in ravines and caves. Their defeat became a Huguenot memory carried to Berlin and Carolina.