1450s

The Fall of Constantinople in 1453 marks the end of the Byzantine Empire and over two thousand years straight of Roman civilization.

The 1450s decade ran from January 1, 1450, to December 31, 1459.

Events

1450

January–March

  • January 19 – The Jingtai Era begins in China under the Emperor Daizong, and the Zhengtong Era ends after 14 years.
  • January 19 – King James II of Scotland gives royal assent to numerous acts passed by the Scottish Parliament in 1449, including the Leases Act 1449 ("Of takis of landis for termes and takis of wedset (mortgaged) landis eftir the oute quyting of the lande"), the Coinage Act, the Parties Summoned to King's Council Act and the Statute Law Revision Act ("Persons chosyn of the thre estatis til examyn the actis of parliamentis and general counsallis"). [1]
  • February 7 – John de la Pole, 2nd Duke of Suffolk, marries Lady Margaret Beaufort.[2]
  • February 26Francesco Sforza enters Milan after a siege, becoming Duke of the city-state, and founding a dynasty that will rule Milan for a century.
  • March 10 – Colonization of Terceira Island by Portugal begins as Dom Henrique, om Navigador (known in English accounds as "Prince Henry the Navigator" assigns jurisdiction to Jácome de Bruges. [3]
  • March 11 – The First Margrave War comes to an end in Germany as Albrecht III Achilles, Elector of Brandenburg, is defeated by Nuremberg troops a t the battle of Pillenreuther Reiher.
  • March 15 – English commander Thomas Kyriell and 2,500 soldiers land at Cherbourg in English-occupied France, where they join another 1,800 English troops recruited by the Duke of Somerset from the garrisons at Bayeux, Caen and Vire.[4]
  • March 25Francesco I Sforza becomes the Duke of Milan, restoring the Duchy of Milan and bringing an end to the Golden Ambrosian Republic that had governed Milan.

April–June

  • April 8 – At the Korean capital of Hanseong, Munjong of Joseon becomes the new King of Korea upon the death of his father, Sejong the Great.[5]
  • April 15 – The Battle of Formigny takes place as French troops under the Comte de Clermont defeat an English army under Sir Thomas Kyriel and Sir Matthew Gough, which was attempting to relieve Caen[6]
  • May 8 – Jack Cade's Rebellion: Kentishmen revolt against King Henry VI of England.
  • May 9 – Abdal-Latif Mirza, a Timurid dynasty monarch, is assassinated.
  • May 13 – Charles VIII of Sweden, also serving as Carl I of Norway, is declared deposed from the latter throne, in favor of Christian I of Denmark.[7]
  • June 5 – French troops under Guy de Richemont besiege Caen in English-occupied Normandy in France, attacking the fortress commanded by Edmund Beaufort, 1st Duke of Somerset.[8]
  • June 8 – The 17th English Parliament of King Henry VI closes. Royal assent is given to several acts, including a seven-year prohibition of importation of products from the Dutch provinces of Holland, Zealand and Brabant "until English cloth may be sold there."[9]
  • June 18 – Battle of Solefields (Sevenoaks): Jack Cade's rebels are driven from London by loyal troops.
  • June 20 – The First Margrave War between Nuremberg and Brandenburg ends with the signing of a peace treaty at Bamberg. Under the treaty, Albrecht III Achilles, Elector of Brandenburg, is forced to return all lands that he had captured from Nuremberg.

July–September

  • July 6Caen surrenders to the French.
  • July 7 – The surviving rebels who had participated in Jack Cade's rebellion in England are pardoned by King Henry VI. Cade himself, who had adoped the alias "John Mortimer", is pardoned under that name until his identity is discovered.[10] Cade himself is killed by Alexander Iden on July 12, after resisting arrest for treason. His corpse is given a mock trial at Newgate Prison and the body beheaded, then dragged through the streets of London and quartered, with the limbs being sent throughout the county of Kent, where the rebellion had started.[11]
  • August 2 – The coronation of Christian I of Denmark as King of Norway takes place at Trondheim.
  • August 12 – Cherbourg, the last English territory in Normandy, surrenders to the French.
  • August 29 – The Treaty of Bergen is signed by officials of Norway and Sweden to reunite the two kingdoms under the rule of King Christian I. Both Norway and Sweden retain self-government and their own governing bodies.[12]
  • September 5 – Three months after the close of the last session, King Henry VI summons the members of the English Parliament to assemble at Westminster on November 6.[9]
  • September 8 – Pietro di Campofregoso is elected as the new Doge of the Republic of Genoa following the abdication of his cousin, Lodovico di Campofregoso.[13]
  • September 19China's Emperor Yingzong returns to Beijing after having been held as a prisoner of war by the Mongols since September 1, 1449. Upon returning, he is held under house arrest in the Forbidden City along with his wife, the Empress Qian, on orders of his younger brother Emperor Daizong.[14]

October–December

  • October 5Jews are expelled from Lower Bavaria, by order of Duke Ludwig IX.
  • November 3 – The University of Barcelona is founded by the grant of King Alfonso V of Aragon.[15]
  • November 6 – The 18th parliament of King Henry VI of England opens. Commons elects William Oldhall as its speaker.[9]
  • November 23 – First Siege of Krujë: Albanian troops are victorious, forcing an Ottoman army of approximately 100,000 men to retreat from Albania.
  • December 23 – In Rome, the collapse of the Ponte Sant'Angelo, a bridge over the Via Giulia and the subsequent stampede combine to kill more than 300 people, most of whom were on a pilgrimage to the Holy See.[16]

Date unknown

1451

January–March

April–June

  • April 11Celje acquires market town status and town rights, by orders from Count Frederic II of Celje.
  • April 19 – In the Delhi Sultanate, the Afghan Lodi Dynasty succeeds the Turkish Sayyid Dynasty as the Sayyid ruler Ala-ud-Din Alam Shah flees Delhi and Bahlul Khan Lodi takes the throne.[24]
  • May 30 – (New moon (15th waning) of Nayon 813 ME) At Pegu (now in Myanmar, Binnya Waru, ruler of the Hanthawaddy kingdom, is assassinated by his cousin, Binnya Kyan.[25]
  • May 31 – King Henry VI of England gives royal assent to the Attainder of John Cade Act 1450, confiscating the lands of Jack Cade, who had led a rebellion against the King in 1450. Cade is posthumously convicted of treason so that his estate will go directly to the King.
  • June 30 – French troops under Jean de Dunois invade Guyenne, and capture Bordeaux.

July–September

  • July 31 – Jacques Coeur, accused of poisoning Agnes Sorel, mistress of King Charles VII of France, is arrested on the orders of the king and his large fortune is confiscated.[26]
  • August 14 – A three-year truce is signed between Scotland and England at the Church of St Nicholas at Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
  • August 20 – The French capture Bayonne, the last English stronghold in Guyenne.
  • September 10 – The Ottoman Empire renews its treaty with Republic of Venice and, on September 20, a truce with the Kingdom of Hungary.[27]

October–December

  • October 17 – After assassinating Bogdan II of Moldavia, Petru Aron takes up the throne.[28]
  • October 22Janos Hunyadi, Regent-Governor of the Kingdom of Hungary during the minority of the 11-year-old king, Ladislaus V, signs a peace treaty with the Holy Roman Emperor, Friedrich III.[29]
  • October 28 – Revolt of Ghent: Ghent takes up arms against Philip the Good, Duke of Burgundy.
  • November 20Janos Hunyadi, Regent-Governor of the Kingdom of Hungary during the minority of the 11-year-old king, Ladislaus V, signs a 3-year truce with the Ottoman Empire.
  • November 28 – At the Korean capital, Hanseong, Hwangbo In becomes the Chief State Councillor (Yeonguijeong) of the Kingdom of Korea as leader of the governing State Council, second in status only to King Munjong, replacing Ha Yeon.[30]
  • December 22 – (28 Zilhicce 855 AH) In Mamluk ruled Egypt, the Amir Asanbay al-Jamali al-Zahiri returns from a trip to the Ottoman Empire with a group of Ottoman diplomats, and the Mamluk Sultan Mehmed II hosts them at a banquet, granting them a private audience the next day. The Ottomans depart on January 17.[31]

Date unknown

  • Skennenrahawi, the Great Peacemaker, a chief Mohawk people, founds the Haudenosaunee, commonly called the Iroquois Confederacy, along with Jigonhsasee and Hiawatha. The Haudenosaunee is initially a political and cultural union of five Iroquoian-speaking Native American tribes (the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga, and Seneca) governing parts of the present-day state of New York, northern Pennsylvania, and the eastern portion of the provinces of Ontario, and Quebec.

1452

January–March

April–June

  • April 27George of Poděbrady is elected as regent of Bohemia until King Ladislaus of Hungary reaches the age of majority.[36]
  • May 2 – Jean Bréhal, chief of the French inquisition, reopens the case of Joan of Arc, who had been executed more than 20 years earlier for heresy and begins taking testimony from witnesses.[37]
  • May 4 – Pope John XI of Alexandria, leader of the Coptic Christian church since 1427, dies, leaving a vacancy in the Coptic papacy.
  • May 18 – The Battle of Brechin is fought in Scotland between the royalist supporters of Clan Gordon (led by Alexander Gordon, 1st Earl of Huntly) and the rebels of Clan Lindsay, led by Alexander Lindsay, 4th Earl of Crawford.[38] Clan Gordon wins and the Lindsays submit to the authority of King James II.
  • May 20 – China's Emperor Daizhong, brother of the former emperor Yingzong, designates his son as the new heir to the throne, demoting Daizhong's son Zhu Jianshen and placing his own son, Zhu Janji, as next in line for the throne.[39]
  • June 18Pope Nicholas V issues the bull Dum Diversas, legitimising the colonial slave trade.

July–September

  • July 21 – The League of God's House signs a peace treaty with the counts of Ortenstein in the Swiss Canton of Graubünden to fund the rebuilding of Ortenstein Castle, as long as they promise never to use the castle against the League.[40]
  • July 26 – The University of Valence is founded in France by the Dauphin Louis, son of King Charles VII. The university lasts for 330 years until being closed during the French Revolution.[41]
  • August 10 (25th day of 7th month of Hōtoku 4 – The Kyōtoku era is proclaimed in Japan during the reign of the Emperor Go-Hanazono.
  • September 14 – Serbian General Thomas Kantakouzenos leads troops in an invasion of the Principality of Zeta but is driven back by the Prince of Zeta, Stefan Crnojević.[42]
  • September 23 – Pope Matthew II of Alexandria is elected as the new Patriarch of the Coptic Christian Church, succeeding Pope John XI, who died on May 4.

October–December

  • October 17 – English troops under John Talbot, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury, land in Guyenne, in France, in order to recapture and retake most of the Guyenne province.[43]
  • October 23 – The Earl of Shrewsbury and his army capture Bordeaux, capital of Gascony, after having taken back most of the province without resistance.[44]
  • OctoberByzantine–Ottoman Wars: The Ottoman governor of Thessaly, Turakhan Beg, breaks through the Hexamilion wall for the fourth time, and ravages the Peloponnese Peninsula to prevent the Byzantine Despotate of the Morea from assisting Constantinople, during the final Ottoman siege of the imperial capital.[45]
  • November 23 – The Canton of Appenzell becomes an associate member of the Swiss Confederacy. Full membership will be granted more than 50 years later in 1513.
  • December 12 – Isidore of Kiev, the Latin Patriarch of Constantinople, proclaims the union of the Greek and Latin churches at the Hagia Sophia in hopes of an alliance with Western Christians to prevent the loss of Consttantinople to the Ottoman Turks.[46]

Date unknown

  • A major volcanic eruption, 1452/1453 mystery eruption, has a subsequent global cooling effect (the eruption releases more sulfate than any other event in the previous 700 years).
  • Portuguese navigator Diogo de Teive discovers the islands of Corvo and Flores, in the Azores.
  • Battle of Bealach nam Broig, a Scottish clan battle.
  • Edinburgh officially becomes the capital of the Kingdom of Scotland.[47]

1453

1454

January–March

April–June

July–September

  • July 12 – Within the Duchy of Pomerania in Germany, the Hanseatic League town of Stralsund ends its resistance to the Pomeranian dukes and enters into a peace agreement.[56]
  • July 21 – At Valladolid, Enrique IV is proclaimed as the new King of Castile on the day after the death of his father, King Juan II.[57]
  • July 31 – In France, the rebel Pierre II de Montferrand, former Governor of Baye, is beheaded, drawn and quartered after his July 14 conviction for treason.[58] Shortly afterward, Montferrand is beheaded, then drawn and quartered.
  • August 22 – In Moldavia, Petru Aron retakes the throne from Alexăndrel.[59]
  • August 26 – At Elbistan, capital of the principality of Dulkadir, Malik Arslan becomes the new ruler upon the death of his father, Suleiman of Dulkadir.[60]
  • August 30 – The Italic League is concluded in Venice as an alliance between the Republic of Venice, the Papal States, the Duchy of Milan, the Republic of Florence, and the Kingdom of Naples.[61]
  • September 18 – Thirteen Years' War – Battle of Chojnice: The Polish army is defeated by a smaller but more professional Teutonic army.
  • September 24 – At the Battle of Leskovac, Nikola Skobaljić, voivode of Dubočica, defeats Ottoman Turks invading Serbia.[62]

October–December

  • October 2 – At the Battle of Kruševac, the Serbian Army, commanded by General Skobaljić with the assistance of troops from John Hunyadi and Đurađ Branković, destroys Ottoman invaders commanded by Feriz Beg.[62]
  • October 9 – Thirteen Years' War: The Malbork treaty is concluded between the authorities of the Teutonic Order and the mercenary forces fighting for the Teutonic Order.
  • November 16 – Nikola Skobaljić, the Serbian voivode of Dubočica who had resisted Ottoman rule, is defeated by the armies of the Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II and is taken prisoner. Skobaljić is executed by impalement at the Mehmed's command, and his head is sent to Constantinople to serve as an example of the punishment for people who resist the Ottoman Sultan.[63]
  • December 12 (Julian calendar, December 21 Gregorian) – (24th day of 11th month of Kyotuku 3) An earthquake estimated by geologists at 8.4 magnitude strikes off the east coast of Japan and causes a tsunami that kills an indeterminate number of people in the Kantō region and the Tōhoku region.[64]
  • December – King Henry VI of England having regained his sanity dismisses the Duke of York as Protector.

Date unknown

  • The press of Johannes Gutenberg (at Mainz on the Rhine) produces the first printed documents bearing a date.
  • Isaac Zarfati sends a circular letter to Rhineland, Swabia, Moravia and Hungary, praising the happy conditions of the Jews under the crescent, in contrast to the "great torture chamber" under the cross, and urging them to come to the Ottoman Empire.[65]
  • The Statutes of Nieszawa are enacted in Poland.
  • The Drought of One Rabbit is recorded in Aztec history.

1455

January–March

  • January 8Pope Nicholas V publishes Romanus Pontifex, an encyclical addressed to King Afonso V of Portugal, which sanctions the conquest of non-Christian lands, and the reduction of native non-Christian populations to 'perpetual slavery'. (Later there will be a dramatic reversal when, in 1537, the bull Sublimis Deus of Pope Paul III forbids the enslavement of non-Christians.)
  • February 23 – The Gutenberg Bible is the first book printed with movable type.[66]
  • February 24 – Alexăndrel of Moldavia retakes the position of Prince of Moldavia after forcing out Petru Aron.
  • March 2 – After an agreement reached in Venice on August 30, the Italic League (Lega Italica) comes into being as a 25-year truce and mutual defense agreement between the Republic of Venice, the Papal States, the Duchy of Milan, the Republic of Florence, and the Kingdom of Naples.[67][68]
  • March 22 – Portuguese explorer and slave trader Alvise Cadamosto and a crew commanded by Vicente Dias depart from Porto Santo on the first of two voyages down the coast of West Africa and reaches the Gambia River before being forced to turn back by the crew.[69]
  • March 24 – (6th waxing of Tagu 816 ME Burmese kings Min Khayi of Arakan and Narapati of Ava meet in a summit near Minbu at Natyegan Hill.[70]

April–June

  • April 4 – The papal conclave to replace the late Pope Nicholas V begins. For the first time, the conclave is held at the Apostolic Palace in Rome.[71] In the first rounds of ballots, the two front-running candidates are Cardinal Latino Orsini and Cardinal Prospero Colonna, and Colonna receives a plurality of votes, but not the required two-thirds majority.[72]
  • April 8 – Cardinal Alfons de Borja is elected as the 209th Roman Catholic pontiff and takes the name Pope Calixtus III.
  • May 1 – Battle of Arkinholm: Forces loyal to King James II of Scotland defeat the supporters of the Earl of Douglas.
  • May 22 – The Wars of the Roses begin in England at the Battle of St Albans, as Richard, Duke of York, captures King King Henry VI as a prisoner of war.[73]
  • May 25 – Petru Aron retakes the position of Prince of Moldavia after forcing Prince Alexăndrel (who had taken the throne from him on February 24) to flee the country.
  • June 1 – Novo Brdo, the last defense of Serbia, falls to the Ottoman Turks after a siege of 40 days. All high ranking Serbian officials are executed and younger men and boys are taken captive to serve in the Ottoman Army, while 700 women and girls are taken as wives by Ottoman commanders.[74]
  • June 3 – Saint Vincent Ferrer is canonized 36 years after his death by Pope Callixtus III in a ceremony at the Dominican church of Santa Maria sopra Minerva in Rome.[75]
  • June 15 – In Egypt, the Sultan Sayf al-Din Inal confronts a revolt of 500 of his ethnic Circassian slave-troops (mamluks) after rejecting the soldiers' requests for camels to accompany them on an expedition against Bedouin invaders in the Nile Delta.[76] After attempting to assassinate the Sultan's secretary, Yunus al-Aqba'i, the rebels join discontented Zahiri troops and besieged the Cairo Citadel. Facing a withdrawal of support from the Egyptian Caliph, the Sultan eventually meets the rebels' demands.[77]
  • June 21 – In what is now the nation of Kosovo, the city of Prizren is captured from the Serbian Despotate by the Ottoman Turkish invaders.[78]
  • June 25Prince João, the new son of King Afonso V of Portugal, is approved as the heir to the throne by the representatives of the three estates of the realm (nobility, clergy and bourgeoisie) in the Portuguese Cortes at Lisbon.[79]

July–September

  • July 4 – King Danjong of Korea, ruler since the death in 1452 of his father, King Munjong, is forced to abdicate. He is promoted to the figurehead post of King Emeritus (Sangyang).[80]
  • July 14 – In the Thirteen Years' War, the Teutonic Order wins the Battle for Kneiphof,[81] though the Order will eventually lose with the signing of a treaty at Thorn.
  • August 4 – Prince Sejo, son of the late King Sejong, becomes the new monarch of Korea in Hanseong following the forced abdication of King Danjong.
  • September 8Pope Calixtus III decides to send Christians on a crusade against the Ottoman Empire in an attempt to recapture Constantinople. At a ceremony at St. Peter's Basilica in Rome, the Pope provides Cardinal Alain de Coëtivy with the crusader's cross and sends him on a mission to meet with King Charles VII of France in hopes of getting French support for the proposed crusade.[82]
  • September 15 – Ludwig von Erlichshausen, Grand Master of the Teutonic Order, signs the Treaty of Mewe, selling the Order's territory of the Neumark back to the Electorate of Brandenburg after having owned it for 34 years. Grand Master Ludwig had earlier "pawned" the territory to Brandenburg on February 22, 1454, in return for a loan approved by the Elector Frederick II.[83]

October–December

  • October 5 – Threatened with an invasion by the Ottoman Empire, the Principality of Moldavia sends its first tribute to the Ottoman Sultan, paying 2,000 ducats (equivalent to 6.99 kilograms (15.4 lb) of gold) in response to an ultimatum.[84]
  • November 15 – The conflict between Vladislav II of Wallachia and John Hunyadi escalates, so the latter decides to support Vlad the Impaler for the throne of Wallachia, the following year.
  • December 15 – At the Battle of Clyst Heath, part of the Bonville–Courtenay feud fought during the Wars of the Roses, Thomas Courtenay, Earl of Devon defeats the Baron William Bonville. Bonville had made the attack after the October 23 murder of his councillor, the lawyer Nicholas Radford.[85]

1456

January–March

  • January 6 – After two years as Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople, the Eastern Orthodox Christian partriarch in the Islamic Ottoman Empire, Gennadius Scholarius resigns, and Isidore II is elected to replace him.[86][87]
  • January 24 – After Dorino II Gattilusio seizes ownership of the Greek mainland harbor of Ainos and the islands of Samothrace and Imbros, Ottoman Sultan Mehmed II orders a blockade the port with 10 ships and leads a ground invasion. After the surrender off Ainos, Mehmed II sends his Admiral Mirza Yunus Beg commences the take control of Samothrace and Imbros.[88]
  • February 25
  • March 12 – After a session of eight months that had started on July 9, 1455, the English Parliament adjourns at Westminster. Royal assent is given by King Henry VI to bills passed, including the Importation Act 1455, banning the import for the next five years of woven silk goods (including ribbons and girdles) that had been manufactured outside of England, and subjecting importers to heavy fines.[92] and the Embezzlement Act, allowing civil remedies by executors of estates to recover goods that had been stolen by servants from their masters.[93]
  • March 13 – The papal bull Inter caetera is issued by Pope Callixtus III, recognizing the rights of the Kingdom of Portugal to colonize any territories its explorers discover on the West African coast, and making the non-Christian natives of those colonies perpetual vassals of the King of Portugal.[94]

April–June

  • April 5Skanderbeg, leader of the Albanians in their fight against the Ottomans, pardons Moisi Galemi, a former officer who had defected to the Ottomans and was then defeated by Skanderbeg at the Battle of Oranik.[95]
  • May 18 – Second Battle of Oronichea (1456): Ottoman Forces of 15,000 are sent to capture Albania, but are met and swiftly defeated by Skanderbeg's smaller forces.
  • June 9Halley's Comet makes an appearance, as noted by the humanist scholar Platina.

July–September

  • July 7 – A retrial of Joan of Arc acquits her of heresy, 25 years after her execution.
  • July 22 – At the Battle of Nándorfehérvár, the Hungarians under John Hunyadi rout the Turkish army of Sultan Mehmed II. The noon bell ordered by Pope Callixtus III commemorates the victory throughout the Christian world (and hence is still rung). Hunyadi dies two months later when a plague sweeps the Hungarian camp.
  • July 29 – A treaty is signed at Toruń between the Kingdom of Poland and mercenaries led by Oldrzych Czerwonka with Poland purchasing the 21 fortresses of Czerwonka's people in exchange for 463,794 florins (1.62 million grams or 58,000 ounces of gold).[96]
  • August 20 – Vladislav II, reigning Prince of Wallachia, is killed in hand-to-hand combat by the former Prince, Vlad the Impaler, who succeeds him.[97]
  • September 15 – The Burgundian state, led by Prince Philip the Good, captures the rebel city of Deventer in the Netherlands after a 32-day siege that had been defended by Gijsbrecht van Brederode, Bishop of Utrecht.[98]
  • September 23Pope Calixtus III issues a papal bull granting a seven-year indulgence to any Christian who makes a pilgrimage to Our Lady of the Pillar in Zaragoza in Spain's Kingdom of Aragon[99]

October–December

  • October 17 – The University of Greifswald is established, making it the second oldest university in Northern Europe. Due to border changes, from 1648 to 1815 it is the oldest in Sweden, and from 1815 to 1945 the oldest in Prussia.
  • November 9 – Ulrich II, Count of Celje, regent for King Ladislas of Hungary and governor of Slavonia, Croatia and Dalmatia, is assassinated the day after he had entered the fortress of Belgrade, apparently at the direction of Ladislaus Hunyadi, son of the late John Hunyadi.[100]
  • December 5 – A 7.4 magnitude earthquake (estimated subsequently by geologists), the first of two on the Italian peninsula, strikes near Pontelandolfo (at the time, part of the Papal States) at 11:00 at night and kills as many as 70,000 people.[101]
  • December 30 – A second earthquake strikes the Italian peninsula in the Kingdom of Naples at 9:30 p.m. and is estimated by geologists at 7.0 magnitude, followed by a 6.0 aftershock, and kills an indeterminate number of people.[101]

Date unknown

1457

January–March

  • January 21 – Jan IV, Duke of Oświęcim, sells the duchy to the Kingdom of Poland.[103]
  • February 11 – In Ming dynasty China, the Emperor Yingzong of Ming is returned to the throne by General Cao Jixiang and other officers who had staged a coup d'etat and overthrown his brother, the Emperor Daizong.[104] Yingzong, whose first reign was the Zhengtong era, proclaims the Tianshun era.
  • February 24 – King Charles VIII of Sweden is declared deposed after fleeing from Stockholm to Danzig following a rebellion.[105] The Archbishop of Sweden, Jöns Bengtsson Oxenstierna, and statesman Erik Axelsson Tott become co-regents of Sweden.[106] The coup leaders then offer the throne to Christian I, King of Denmark and Norway.
  • March 1 – Prince Zhu Jianshen is designated as the heir to the Chinese throne by his father, the Emperor Yingzong.[104]
  • March 6 – King James II of Scotland gives royal assent to laws passed by the Scottish Parliament, including several relating to the killing of various animals including rooks, crows and other birds of prey, as well as red fish, wolves, hares and rabbits Approval is also given for the Wapinschaws Act 1457 (regarding weapon shows, the required gathering of troops for review in each district four times a year) which makes the first written mention of the game of golf. The act declares that while archery is to be used at the gatherings, "the fut bal ande the golf are to be uterly cryt done and not usyt" ("football and golf are to be shouted down and not used", subject to arrest by the King's officers for violations.[107]
  • March 14 – Ladislaus Hunyadi, who had assassinated the Hungarian regent Ulrich of Celje on November 9, is arrested soon after being tricked by King Ladislaus V into believing that he would become Lord Treasurer and Captain-General upon his arrival in Budapest.[108]Hunyadi is beheaded two days later by order of the King.[109]
  • March 25 – At the age of 11, Mirza Shah Mahmud briefly becomes the Sultan of the Timurid Empire upon the death at Mashhad of the Sultan Abul-Qasim Babur Mirza.[110] Shah Mahmud is overthrown a few weeks later by his cousin Ibrahim Mirza.[111]

April–June

July–September

  • July 21 – Former Korean King Danjong (who had been given a comfortable office as "King Emeritus") is arrested after having conspired to reclaim the throne of Korea from his uncle, King Sejo. The other six conspirators (Sŏng Sammun, Pak Paeng-nyeon, Ha Wi-ji, Yi Kae, Yu Ŭngbu, and Yu Sŏngwŏn) are executed, while Danjong is initially spared the death penalty.
  • August 14 – The Mainz Psalter, the second major book printed with movable type in the West, the first to be wholly finished mechanically (including colour), and the first to carry a printed date, is printed for the Elector of Mainz.
  • September 2 – At the Battle of Albulena, the Albanian general Skanderbeg's defeats Ottoman Empire army, in the open field.[115]

October–December

Date unknown

1458

January–March

April–June

  • April 2George of Poděbrady (King Jiří z Poděbrad) receives the Crown of Saint Wenceslas at his coronation at the St. Vitus Cathedral in Prague as King of Bohemia.
  • April 19 – In Bohemia, a group of Silesian princes and city rulers form an alliance against the new King, George of Podebrady. Within a year, the resistance is dropped and the Silesian princes pay homage to King George.
  • April 20 – Isidore of Kiev is installed as the Latin Patriarchate of Constantinople, leader of Eastern Orthodox Christians in the Ottoman Empire, with the approval of the Muslim Ottoman Sultan, Mehmed II.[124]
  • May 6 – At Bidar in India, the Sultan of Bahmani, dies after a reign of 22 years and is succeeded by his son, Humayun Shah Zalim Bahmani.[125]
  • June 27Alfonso V of Aragon, King of Aragon in Spain since 1416 and King of Naples in Italy since 1442, dies at his home at the Castel dell'Ovo in Naples.[126] By prior arrangement with his family, Alfonso is succeeded as King of Naples by his son, Fernando, popularly known in Naples as "Ferrante". At the same time, Alfonso's brother Juan, King of Navarre and King of Sicily, becomes the new King of Aragon.[127]
  • June – Francesco II Acciaioli, last Duke of Athens, surrenders the city to the Ottoman Empire and Sultan Mehmed II enters peacefully in August. Ottoman authorities issue a decree to protect the Acropolis.[128]

July–September

  • July 15Magdalen College, Oxford, is founded.[129]
  • August 6 – Pope Callixtus III dies after a reign of slightly more than three years.
  • August 19 – The conclave to elect a new Pope concludes at the Apostolic Palace, with only 19 of the 27 members of the College of Cardinals participating. One of the electors, Cardinal Domenico Capranica appeared to be the most likely choice for Pope, but had died suddenly on August 14, two days before the conclave opened. On the first ballot on August 18, no candidate had more than five votes, but by the next day, Cardinal Enea Piccolomini, Archbishop of Siena, receives unanimous support after initially competing against Guillaume d'Estouteville and Filippo Calandrini.[130] Piccoloni takes the name Pope Pius II as the 210th pope.[131]
  • September 3 – The coronation of Pope Pius II by Cardinal Prospero Colonna takes place on the front steps of St. Peter's Basilica in Rome.[132]

October–December

  • October 24 – King Afonso V of Portugal conquers the area around Ksar es-Seghir in the Sultanate of Morocco, led by Sultan Abd al-Haqq II.[133]
  • November 12 – (6th waxing of Nadaw 820 ME) Min Khayi, ruler of the Burmese Kingdom of Arakan leads a successful defense of an invasion from the Shan State by his son, Prince Min Swe.[134]
  • November 13 – Sultan Abd al-Haqq II of Morocco begins a 7-week siege of the Portuguese settlement of Alcácer-Ceguer, but is ultimately unsuccessful in recovering the captured territory.[135]
  • December 26 – François II becomes the new Duke of Brittany upon the death of his uncle Arthur de Richemont.[136]

Date unknown

  • The Jewish community is expelled from Erfurt (Germany); their houses are sold, and the synagogue turned into an arsenal.[137]
  • Moctezuma I, Tlatoani of Tenochtitlán, leads an expedition to the city-state Coixtlahuaca in Mixtec territory, but is defeated.
  • A major volcano erupts.[138]

1459

January–March

  • January 18 – The Order of Our Lady of Bethlehem is founded by Pope Pius II, to defend the island of Lemnos.
  • February 3 – The coronation of François II as Duke of the semi-independent Duchy of Brittany takes place in Nantes.
  • February 27Frederick III, Holy Roman Emperor and Archduke of Austria, proclaims himself to be rightful King of Hungary and prepares to invade the kingdom in order to overthrow King Mathias Corvinus.[139]
  • March 4 – Austrian troops, on orders of Frederick III, invade Hungary, starting the Austrian–Hungarian War. The war continues for three years before the Austrians withdraw in 1462.

April–June

  • April 8 – Stefan Branković, despot of Serbia, is overthrown by King Stefan Tomaš of Bosnia, who installs his son, Stephen Tomašević as the new despot[140]
  • April 24 – The Fra Mauro map of the world is completed by the Italian cartographers Fra Mauro and Andrea Bianco, who had been hired by the late King Afonso V of Portugal to produce an up-to-date geography for the use by explorers.[141]
  • April 25 – The Treaty of Eger is signed by representatives of the Kingdom of Bohemia and the Electorate of Saxony, setting a border that remains more than 500 years later as the border between the Czech Republic and Germany as running along the main ridge of the Ore Mountains from Eger to the River Elbe.[142]
  • May 3, Pope Pius II issues a papal bull to approve building the University of Valence in France. The university will exist for almost 240 years before being closed during the French Revolution.
  • May 12 – In India, Rao Jodha, ruler of the Kingdom of Marwar (now in the state of Rajasthan) selects the site of a new capital city, which will be named Jodhpur in his honor.[143]
  • May 27Pope Pius II arrives in Mantua in the Italian region of Lombardy as the guest of Ludovico III Gonzaga, Marquis of Mantua, in order to convene the Council of Mantua in hopes of organizing a crusade against the Ottoman Empire.[144] Meetings being on June 1 the Council continues for six months.
  • June 20 – The Despotate of Serbia comes to an end as the despot Stefan Tomašević surrenders the last Serbian city, Smederevo, without a fight.

→§§§§==== July–September ====

  • July 2 – The Sultanate of Morocco renews its siege of Ksar es-Seghir (renamed Alcácer-Ceguer), which had been seized by the Kingdom of Portgal on October 24, 1458. The Portuguese Governor Duarte de Meneses leads the defense of the city against the attacks led by the Sultan Abd al-Haqq II, who calls off the siege after less than two months.[145]
  • August 24 – Morocco's Sultan Abd al-Haqq II ends his siege of the Portuguese fortress at Ksar es-Seghir.[145]
  • September 23Wars of the Roses: At the Battle of Blore Heath in the Kingdom of England, Yorkists under Richard Neville, 5th Earl of Salisbury, defeat a Lancastrian force.[146]
  • September 26 – Pope Pius II calls upon the participants of at the Council of Mantua to fund and participate in a Christian crusade to recapture Constantinople from the Muslim Ottomans, who had seized it in 1453.[144]

October–December

Date unknown

Religion

  • King Thomas of Bosnia forces the clergy of the Bosnian Church into exile.
  • According to a legend, the wedding of Christian Rosenkreuz takes place.

Births

1450

  • February 12 – Yejong of Joseon, Joseon King (d. 1469)
  • May 18 – Piero Soderini, Florentine statesman (d. 1513)
  • June 22 – Eleanor of Naples, Duchess of Ferrara (d. 1493)
  • July 25 – Jakob Wimpfeling, Renaissance humanist (d. 1528)
  • August 18 – Marko Marulić, Croatian poet (d. 1524)
  • September 25 – Ursula of Brandenburg, Duchess of Münsterberg-Oels and Countess of Glatz (d. 1508)
  • November 12 – Jacques of Savoy, Count of Romont, Prince of Savoy (d. 1486)
  • date unknown
    • William Catesby, English politician (d. 1485)
    • Bartolomeo Montagna, Italian painter (d. 1523)
    • Heinrich Isaak, German-Dutch composer (d. 1517)
    • John Cabot, Italian-born explorer (d. 1499)
  • probable
    • Kamāl ud-Dīn Behzād, Persian leader of the Herat school
    • Hieronymus Bosch, Dutch painter (d. 1516)
    • Gaspar Corte-Real, Portuguese explorer (d. 1501)
    • Juan de la Cosa, Spanish navigator and cartographer (d. 1510)
    • Josquin des Prez, Dutch composer (d. 1521)
    • Heinrich Isaac, Franco-Flemish composer (d. 1517)
    • Pietro Antonio Solari, Italian architect (d. 1493)
    • Petrus Thaborita, Dutch historian and monk (d. 1527)
    • Nyai Gede Pinateh, Javanese merchant (d. 1500)

1451

Christopher Columbus

1452

Joanna, Princess of Portugal

1453

1454

  • June 3 – Bogislaw X, Duke of Pomerania (1474–1523) (d. 1523)
  • June 16 – Joanna of Aragon, Queen of Naples (d. 1517)
  • July 14 – Poliziano, Italian humanist (d. 1494)
  • September 4 – Henry Stafford, 2nd Duke of Buckingham, English politician (d. 1483)
  • September 24 – Gerold Edlibach, Swiss historian (d. 1530)
  • November 25 – Catherine Cornaro, Queen of Cyprus (d. 1510)
  • date unknown
    • Domenico Maria Novara da Ferrara, Italian astronomer (d. 1504)
    • Pinturicchio, Italian painter (d. 1513)
    • Choe Bu, Korean official and venturer to China (d. 1504)
    • Alexander Stewart, Duke of Albany (d. 1485)

1455

  • January 9 – William IV, Duke of Jülich-Berg, Count of Ravensberg (d. 1511)
  • January 29 – Johann Reuchlin, German-born humanist and scholar (d. 1522)
  • February 2 – King John of Denmark, Norway, and Sweden (d. 1513)[176]
  • March 3
  • March 15 – Pietro Accolti, Italian Catholic cardinal (d. 1532)
  • April 17 – Andrea Gritti, Doge of Venice (d. 1538)[178]
  • May 16 – Wolfgang I of Oettingen, German count (d. 1522)
  • June 1 – Anne of Savoy, Savoy royal (d. 1480)
  • July 9 – Frederick IV of Baden, Dutch bishop (d. 1517)
  • July 15 – Queen Yun, Korean queen (d. 1482)
  • August 2 – John Cicero, Elector of Brandenburg (d. 1499)
  • August 15 – George, Duke of Bavaria (d. 1503)
  • November 9 – John V, Count of Nassau-Siegen, Stadtholder of Guelders and Zutphen (d. 1516)
  • date unknown
    • Peter Vischer the Elder, German sculptor (approximate date) (d. 1529)
    • Estefania Carròs i de Mur, Spanish educator (approximate date) (d. 1511)
    • Raden Patah, Javanese sultan, founder of the Demak Sultanate (d. 1518)
    • María de Ajofrín, Spanish visionary (d. 1489)
    • Nicholas Barnham, English knight, killed in the War of the Roses (d. 1485)
    • Angelo da Vallombrosa, Italian jurist and abbot (d. 1530)

1456

1457

1458

  • February 15 – Ivan the Young, Ruler of Tver (d. 1490)
  • April 9 – Camilla Battista da Varano, Italian saint (d. 1524)[185]
  • April 13 – John II, Duke of Cleves (d. 1521)[186]
  • May 2 – Eleanor of Viseu, Portuguese princess and later Queen of Portugal (d. 1525)[187]
  • July 28 – Jacopo Sannazaro, Italian poet (d. 1530)[188]
  • August 18 – Lorenzo Pucci, Italian Catholic cardinal (d. 1531)
  • October 3 – Saint Casimir, Prince of Poland and Duke of Lithuania (d. 1484)[189]
  • October 16 – Adolph II, Prince of Anhalt-Köthen, German prince (d. 1526)
  • December 25 – Amago Tsunehisa, Japanese warlord (d. 1541)
  • probable
    • Thomas Docwra, Grand Prior of the English Knights Hospitaller (d. 1527)
    • Jacob Obrecht, Dutch composer (d. 1505)

1459

Deaths

1450

1451

Sultan Murad II

1452

Švitrigaila and Michał Bolesław Zygmuntowicz (Michael Žygimantaitis) died on February 10, 1452
Konrad VII the White
Reinhard III, Count of Hanau
  • February 10
    • Švitrigaila, Grand Prince of Lithuania
    • Michał Bolesław Zygmuntowicz (Michael Žygimantaitis), Prince of Black Ruthenia
  • February 14 – Konrad VII the White, Duke of Oleśnica
  • February 22 – William Douglas, 8th Earl of Douglas (b. 1425)
  • April 20 – Reinhard III, Count of Hanau (1451–1452) (b. 1412)
  • May – John Stafford, Archbishop of Canterbury[194]
  • October – Nicholas Close, English bishop
  • probable – Gemistus Pletho, Greek philosopher

1453

  • Dmitry Shemyaka, claimant to the Principality of Moscow[207]
  • Giovanni Giustiniani, Genoese mercenary[208]
  • Nguyễn An, Vietnamese-born Ming Dynasty court eunuch and architect[209]
  • Sophia of Lithuania, Grand Princess of Moscow[210]

1454

1455

1456

1457

1458

1459

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