1709
Abraham Darby Smelts Iron with Coke
In the Severn Gorge at Coalbrookdale, a Quaker ironmaster replaced scarce charcoal with coke from local coal. The hearth flared and held. The process, long a trade secret, would eventually unlock mass iron production. The Industrial Revolution's first coal fire was lit in a small Shropshire valley. His grandson would use the technique to cast the world's first iron bridge across the same river.
Battle of Poltava
On a Ukrainian plain, Peter the Great's reformed Russian army shattered Charles XII of Sweden in a single morning. The Swedish king fled to the Ottomans; Russia stepped onto the European stage as a great power for the first time in its history. The balance of the North had turned.
Battle of Malplaquet
Marlborough and Eugene won the bloodiest battle of the century, losing twenty-one thousand men to drive a French force from the field. It is a victory, wrote the French marshal, that will ruin us no more than this one. England, sickened by the butcher's bill, began to long for peace.
The Great Frost of 1709
The coldest winter in five hundred European years froze the Venetian lagoon, split oaks in Sweden, and killed half the olive trees of Provence. French peasants starved; bread riots stalked Paris. Some historians argue the Grand Hiver hastened the Sun King's collapse as surely as any English regiment. Rivers from the Rhine to the Ebro froze solid, and Baltic ports did not thaw until May.