1719
Robinson Crusoe Published
Daniel Defoe, a bankrupt spymaster nearing sixty, published a book about a sailor who had spent years alone on a Pacific island. Readers took it for a true account. It went through four editions in four months and, in time, came to be called the first English novel. Its theme of solitary self-reliance became the founding myth of the colonial imagination for centuries afterward.
Dzungar-Qing War Intensifies
The Kangxi Emperor dispatched three armies into the steppe against the Dzungar Khanate, the last great nomadic empire of Central Asia. The campaign stalled in dust and distance, but the strategic aim was clear: Beijing would not tolerate a rival power on its western flank. The final destruction of the Dzungars lay forty years ahead.
Accession of Muhammad Shah
Four Mughal emperors had died in twelve years; another, Muhammad Shah, Rangila, pleasure-loving and poetic, took the throne in Delhi. Under him the empire would suffer invasion, provincial breakaway, and the loss of the Peacock Throne. Yet Delhi's poets, Mir and Sauda, produced Urdu's golden age amid the collapse, as if compensating.
Battle of Glenshiel
A Jacobite rising backed by Spanish gold and two frigates of troops, most of which were storm-scattered, was crushed by General Wightman in a Highland glen. The Spanish contingent surrendered; the clansmen melted into the hills. Scottish hopes were postponed, not extinguished. A young Bonnie Prince Charlie watched from exile.