Pohnpei's first European visitor is Spanish navigator…
September 1529 CE
He charts it as San Bartolomé and calls this one and the surrounding islands as Los Pintados (literally, "the painted ones" in Spanish) because the natives were frequently tattooed.
It will later be visited by the navigator Pedro Fernandes de Queirós, commanding the Spanish ship San Jeronimo, on December 23, 1595; his description is brief, he will make no attempt to land.
Locations
Regions
Micronesia
View →Subregions
West Micronesia
View →Related Events
No active filters.
Showing 10 events out of 38089 total
Martin Luther's Small Catechism (Der Kleine Katechismus) is written and published in 1529 for the training of children.
Luther's Small Catechism reviews the Ten Commandments, the Apostles' Creed, the Lord's Prayer, the Sacrament of Holy Baptism, the Office of the Keys and Confession and the Sacrament of the Eucharist.
It is included in the Book of Concord as an authoritative statement of what Lutherans believe.
It is widely used today in Lutheran churches as part of youth education and Confirmation.
Mazovia had become Poland's fief in 1351 after the reunification of the Polish state by Władysław I in the early fourteenth century.
The eastern part of the Mazovia region (Łomża) had been settled in the fifteenth century, mainly by the yeomanry (drobna szlachta).
Western Mazovia had in the second half of the fifteenth century been incorporated into the Polish state, as, in 1526/1529, is the main part, with its capital in Warsaw.
In comparison with Greater Poland and Lesser Poland, Mazovia, with the lowest urban population, is considered underdeveloped.
Georg Bauer, the German physician and mineralogist better known as Agricola, describes the fluorine-containing mineral fluorspar (fluorite) in 1529, noting its use as flux in metallurgy.
Agricola also latinizes wismut to bisemutum, identifying the distinctive qualities of bismuth and describing how to obtain the element from its ores.
Albrect Altdorfer’s atypical Battle of Issus (or of Alexander) of 1529 is commissioned by William IV, Duke of Bavaria as part of a series of eight historical battle scenes destined to hang in the Residenz in Munich.
A masterpiece of large spatial organization, the panoramic painting exemplifies the forty-eight-year-old artist’s interest in magic, ruins, fantastic landscape, and mysterious light.
Altdorfer’s use of sophisticated atmospheric and aerial perspective as well as naturalistic detail produces an image that ultimately evokes a sense of the primordial powers that rule the universe.
His depiction of the moment in 333 BCE when Alexander the Great routed Darius III for supremacy in Asia Minor is vast in ambition, sweeping in scope, vivid in imagery, rich in symbols, and obviously heroic.
In the painting, a swarming cast of thousands of soldiers surround the central action: Alexander on his white steed, leading two rows of charging cavalrymen, dashes after a fleeing Darius, who looks anxiously over his shoulder from a chariot.
The opposing armies are distinguished by the colors of their uniforms: Darius' army in red and Alexander's in blue.
The upper half of The Battle of Alexander expands with unreal rapidity into an arcing panorama comprehending vast coiling tracts of globe and sky.
The victory also lies on the planar surface; The sun outshone the moon just as the Imperial and allied army successfully repel the Turks.
By making the mass number of soldiers blend within the landscape/painting, it shows that he believes that the usage and depiction of landscape is just as significant as a historical event, such as a war.
He had renounced the office of Mayor of Regensburg to accept the commission.
Few of his other paintings resemble this apocalyptic scene of two huge armies dominated by an extravagant landscape seen from a very high viewpoint, which looks south over the whole Mediterranean from modern Turkey to include the island of Cyprus and the mouths of the Nile and the Red Sea (behind the isthmus to the left) on the other side.
However his style here is a development of that of a number of miniatures of battle-scenes he had done much earlier for Maximilian I in his illuminated manuscript Triumphal Procession in 1512-14.
It is thought to be the earliest painting to show the curvature of the Earth from a great height.
Stephen Báthory, a son of Nicholas Báthory (1462–1500) of the Somlyó branch of the Báthory family, had in 1522 been appointed adjutant of the Voivode of Transylvania, serving under the Voivode John Zápolya.
After the Battle of Mohács in 1526, Stephen had supported Zápolya's claim to the Kingship of Hungary and in 1529 is made Voivode of Transylvania.
The Hindu Vijayanagara kingdom under Krishnadevaraya, who dies in 1529, has developed into one of the world’s great trading centers, despite internal opposition and invasions from northeastern Hindu kingdoms.
Krishnadevaraya has worked with Portuguese allies to take control of the Bahmani successor state of Bijapur.
Achyutadevaraya succeeds him.
Troops of the Somali military leader Imam Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi Imam Ahmad defeat a larger Ethiopian contingent in 1529 at the Battle of Shimbra Kure, one hundred and thirty kilometers (eighty miles) southeast of Addis Ababa.
The victory comes at a heavy cost but it solidifies the Somali forces' morale, providing proof that they can stand up to the sizable Ethiopian army.
Five Catholic cantons of the Swiss Confederacy—Uri, Zug, Luzern, Schwyz, and Unterwalden—form the Christian Union to restrict the influence of Protestant Zürich, whose citizens have begun proselytizing and embargoing those cantons still loyal to Rome.
Forces from Zürich skirmish with those of the Union in 1529.
The militantly Protestant Swiss canton of Zürich, under the terms of an armistice signed in 1529 at Kappel on the border between Zürich and Zug, forces the five Catholic Swiss cantons of the Christian Union to break their alliance with Austria.
Uri, Zug, Luzern, Schwyz, and Unterwalden agree to allow religious freedom within their cantons.
The death of Hernán Cortés’s wife Catalina Suárez had produced a scandal and a major investigation, but weathering that, Cortés is now free to marry someone of high status more appropriate to his wealth and power.
In 1529 he is accorded the noble designation of don, but more importantly is given the noble title of Marquis of the Valley of Oaxaca and marries the Spanish noblewoman Doña Juana de Zúñiga.
The marriage will produce three children, including another son, who is also named Martín.
As the first-born legitimate son, Don Martín Cortés y Zúñiga will become Cortés's heir and succeed his father as holder of the title and estate of the Marquisate of the Valley of Oaxaca.
Cortés's legitimate daughters will be known as Doña Maria, Doña Catalina, and Doña Juana.