Difference between revisions of "1557"

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Year '''1557''' ('''[[Roman numerals|MDLVII]]''') was a [[common year starting on Friday]] of the [[Julian calendar]].
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== Events ==
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=== January–June ===
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* [[March]] – The [[Takeda clan]] [[Siege of Katsurayama|besiege Katsurayama Castle]] in eastern Japan. The siege ends with the [[last stand]] of the castle garrison, and the complete destruction of Katsurayama, allowing the Takeda to further expand in [[Shinano Province]].
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* [[April 12]] – The [[Spanish Empire|Spanish]] settlement of [[Cuenca, Ecuador]], is founded.
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* [[April 30]] – [[Arauco War]] – [[Battle of Mataquito]]: [[Spanish Empire|Spanish]] forces of Governor [[Francisco de Villagra]] launch a dawn surprise attack against the [[Mapuche]] (headed by their [[toqui]] [[Lautaro]]), in present-day [[Chile]].
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* By [[June]] – The [[1557 influenza pandemic]] has spread, probably from China, to Europe.
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* [[June 7]] – [[Mary I of England]] joins her husband [[Philip II of Spain]], in his war against [[Kingdom of France|France]].
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* [[June 10]] – The [[New Testament]] of the [[Geneva Bible]], a [[Protestant]] [[Bible translations into English|Bible translation into English]] (produced under the supervision of [[William Whittingham]], and printed in [[Roman type]]), is published in [[Geneva]].
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=== July–December ===
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* [[August 10]] – [[Battle of St. Quentin (1557)|Battle of St. Quentin]]: French forces under Marshal [[Anne de Montmorency]] are decisively defeated by the Spanish and English under Duke Emanuel Philibert of [[Savoy]]. Montmorency himself is captured, but Philip II refuses to press his advantage, and withdraws to the Netherlands.
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* [[September 11]]–[[October 8]] – The [[Colloquy of Worms (1557)|Colloquy of Worms]] convenes.
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* [[October 27]] – [[Emperor Ōgimachi]] accedes to the throne of [[Japan]].
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=== Date unknown ===
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* Özdemir Pasha conquers the [[Red Sea]] port of [[Massawa]] for the [[Ottoman Empire]].
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* [[Cossack]] chieftain Dimitrash tries to take [[Azov]].
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* With the permission of the [[Ming dynasty]] government of [[Ming dynasty|China]], and for the benefit of both Western and Eastern merchants, the [[Portuguese Empire|Portuguese]] settle in [[Macau]] (retroceded in [[1999]]). Direct Sino-Portuguese trade has existed since [[1513]], but this is the first official legal treaty port on traditional Chinese soil, that will form a long-term Western settlement.
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* [[Spanish Empire|Spain]] becomes [[bankrupt]], throwing the German banking houses into chaos.<ref>Archer, Christon; et al. (2002). World History of Warfare. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. p. 251</ref>
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* [[Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge]], is refounded by [[John Caius]].<ref> "History – Gonville & Caius". Gonville & Caius College. Retrieved September 13, 2014.</ref>
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* The following schools are founded in [[Kingdom of England|England]]:
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** [[Brentwood School (Brentwood)|Brentwood School]], [[Essex]], by Sir Antony Browne.
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** [[Hampton School]], [[Hampton, London]], by Robert Hammond.
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** [[Repton School]], by [[John Port (the younger)|Sir John Port]].
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* [[Wales|Welsh]]-born mathematician [[Robert Recorde]] publishes ''[[The Whetstone of Witte]]'' in [[London]], containing the first recorded use of the [[equals sign]] and also the first use in [[English language|English]] of [[plus and minus signs]].
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* [[Holy Roman Empire|German]] adventurer [[Hans Staden]] publishes a widely translated account of his detention by the [[Tupí people]] of [[Brazil]], {{Lang|de|Warhaftige Historia und beschreibung eyner Landtschafft der Wilden Nacketen, Grimmigen Menschfresser-Leuthen in der Newenwelt America gelegen}} ("True Story and Description of a Country of Wild, Naked, Grim, Man-eating People in the New World, America").</onlyinclude>
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== Births ==
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* [[January 1]] &ndash; [[Stephen Bocskay]], Prince of Transylvania (d. [[1606]])
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* [[February 11]] &ndash; [[Johannes Wtenbogaert]], Leader of the Remonstrants (d. [[1644]])
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* [[February 15]]
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**[[Alfonso Fontanelli]], Italian composer (d. [[1622]])
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**[[Vittoria Accoramboni]], Italian noblewoman (d. [[1585]])
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* [[February 24]] &ndash; [[Mathias, Holy Roman Emperor]] (d. [[1619]])
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* [[March 21]] &ndash; [[Anne Howard, Countess of Arundel]], English countess and poet (d. [[1630]])
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* [[March 22]] &ndash; [[Casimir VI, Duke of Pomerania]] and Lutheran Administrator of Cammin Prince-Bishopric (d. [[1605]])
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* [[April 4]] &ndash; [[Lew Sapieha]], Polish-Lithuanian noble (d. [[1633]])
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* [[April 11]] &ndash; [[Frederick, Count Palatine of Zweibrücken-Vohenstrauss-Parkstein]] (d. [[1597]])
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* [[May 5]] &ndash; [[Emanuel Philibert de Lalaing]], Belgian noble and army commander (d. [[1590]])
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* [[May 31]] &ndash; Tsar [[Feodor I of Russia]] (d. [[1598]])
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* [[June 10]] &ndash; [[Leandro Bassano]], Italian painter (d. [[1622]])
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* [[June 28]] &ndash; [[Philip Howard, 20th Earl of Arundel]], English nobleman (d. [[1595]])
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* [[August 16]] &ndash; [[Agostino Carracci]], Italian painter and graphical artist (d. [[1602]])
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* [[August 19]] &ndash; [[Frederick I, Duke of Württemberg]] (d. [[1608]])
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* [[August 26]] &ndash; [[Sibylle of Jülich-Cleves-Berg]], Duchess of Jülich-Cleves-Berg by birth and by marriage Margravine of Burgau (d. [[1628]])
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* [[September 4]] &ndash; [[Sophie of Mecklenburg-Güstrow]], Danish-Norwegian royal consort (d. [[1631]])
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* [[September 11]] &ndash; [[Joseph Calasanz]], Spanish priest and founder of Piarists (d. [[1648]])
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* [[September 16]] &ndash; [[Jacques Mauduit]], French composer (d. [[1627]])
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* [[October 5]] &ndash; [[Antoine Favre]], Savoisian lawyer, first President of the Sovereign Senate of Savoy (d. [[1624]])
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* ''date unknown''
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** [[Julius Caesar (judge)|Julius Caesar]], English judge and politician (d. [[1636]])
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** [[Giovanni Croce]], Italian composer (d. [[1609]])
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** [[Balthasar Gérard]], assassin of [[William I of Orange]] (d. [[1584]])
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** [[Toda Katsushige]], Japanese warlord (d. [[1600]])
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** [[Olaus Martini]], [[Archbishop of Uppsala]] (d. [[1609]])
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** [[Thomas Morley]], English composer (d. [[1602]])
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** [[Oda Nobutada]], Japanese general (d. [[1582]])
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* ''probable'' &ndash; [[Giovanni Gabrieli]], Italian composer and organist (d. [[1612]])
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== Deaths ==
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* [[January 2]] &ndash; [[Pontormo]], Italian painter (b. [[1494]])
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* [[January 4]] &ndash; [[Philip, Duke of Mecklenburg]], (b. [[1514]])
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* [[January 8]] &ndash; [[Albert Alcibiades, Margrave of Brandenburg-Kulmbach]] ("Albert the Warlike"), Prince of Bayreuth (b. [[1522]])
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* [[March 13]] &ndash; [[Louis de Bourbon de Vendôme]], French cardinal (b. [[1493]])
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* [[April 9]] &ndash; [[Mikael Agricola]], Finnish scholar (b. c. [[1510]])
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* [[April 24]] &ndash; [[Georg Rörer]], German theologian (b. [[1492]])
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* [[April 29]] &ndash; [[Lautaro]], Mapuche warrior (b. [[1534]])
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* [[May 18]] &ndash; [[John II, Count Palatine of Simmern]], Count Palatine of Simmern (1509-1557) (b. [[1492]])
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* [[June 11]] &ndash; King [[John III of Portugal]] (b. [[1502]])
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* [[July 10]] &ndash; [[Giovanni Battista Ramusio]], Italian geographer (b. [[1485]])
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* [[July 16]] &ndash; [[Anne of Cleves]], fourth queen of [[Henry VIII of England]] (b. [[1515]])<ref>v</ref>
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* [[August 1]] &ndash; [[Olaus Magnus]], Swedish ecclesiastic and writer (b. [[1490]])
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* [[August 18]] &ndash; [[Claude de la Sengle]], 48th Grandmaster of the [[Knights Hospitaller]] (b. [[1494]])
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* [[September 1]] &ndash; [[Jacques Cartier]], French explorer (b. [[1491]])
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* [[September 13]] &ndash; [[John Cheke]], English classical scholar and statesman (b. [[1514]])
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* [[September 15]] &ndash; [[Juan Álvarez de Toledo]], Spanish Catholic cardinal (b. [[1488]])
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* [[September 27]] &ndash; [[Emperor Go-Nara|Emperor Go-Nara of Japan]] (b. [[1495]])
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* [[October 5]] or [[October 6]] &ndash; [[Kamran Mirza]], Mughal prince (b. [[1509]])
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* [[October 20]] &ndash; [[Jean Salmon Macrin]], French poet (b. [[1490]])
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* [[October 25]] &ndash; [[William Cavendish (courtier)|William Cavendish]], English courtier (b. [[1505]])
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* [[November 19]]
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** [[Bona Sforza]], queen of [[Sigismund I the Old|Sigismund I of Poland]] (b. [[1494]])
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** [[Maria de' Medici (1540–1557)|Maria de' Medici]], Italian noble (b. [[1540]])
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* [[December 6]] &ndash; [[Elisabeth of Hesse, Hereditary Princess of Saxony]] (b. [[1502]])
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* [[December 13]] &ndash; [[Niccolò Fontana Tartaglia]], Italian mathematician (b. [[1499]])
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* [[December 27]] &ndash; [[Queen Dangyeong]], Korean royal consort (b. [[1487]])
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* ''date unknown''
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** [[Gonzalo Fernández de Oviedo y Valdés]], Spanish historian (b. [[1478]])
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** [[Charlotte Guillard]], French printer
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** [[Nicolas de Herberay des Essarts]], French translator
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** [[Geoffrey Glyn]], English lawyer
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* ''probable''
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** [[Sebastian Cabot (explorer)|Sebastian Cabot]], Italian-born English explorer (b. [[1476]])
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** [[Thomas Crecquillon]], Flemish composer (b. [[1490]])
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==References==
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{{reflist}}

Latest revision as of 01:10, 20 February 2021

1547 < 1548 < 1549 < 1550 < 1551 < 1552 < 1553 <1554 < 1555 < 1556 < 1557 > 1558 > 1559 > 1560 > 1561 > 1562 > 1563 > 1564 > 1565 > 1566 > 1567

Decade.png 1550s: )    Year.png 1557 Rdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Year 1557

Year 1557 (MDLVII) was a common year starting on Friday of the Julian calendar.

Events

January–June

July–December

Date unknown

Births

Deaths


 

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References

  1. Archer, Christon; et al. (2002). World History of Warfare. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. p. 251
  2. "History – Gonville & Caius". Gonville & Caius College. Retrieved September 13, 2014.
  3. v