1539
Year 1539 was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Julian calendar.
Events
January–March
- January 4 - Giannandrea Giustiniani Longo is elected to a two year term as Doge of the Republic of Genoa in Italy, succeeding Giovanni Battista Doria.
- January 12 - Treaty of Toledo: Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor and Francis I of France agree to make no further alliances with England. The treaty comes after Henry VIII of England's split with Rome and Pope Paul III.
- January - Toungoo–Hanthawaddy War - Battle of Naungyo, Burma: The Toungoos decisively defeat the Hanthawaddys.
- February 9 - The first horse race is held at Chester Racecourse, the oldest still in use in England.
- March 1 - King Henry VIII of England summons Parliament to meet, with the session to start on April 28.
- March 2 - Askia Isma'il, ruler of the Songhai Empire in West Africa, dies after a reign of slightly less than two years and is succeeded by Askia Ishaq I.
- March 30 - Canterbury Cathedral surrenders, and reverts to its previous status of 'a college of secular canons.
April–June
- April 17 - At Dresden in Germany, Heinrich IV of the House of Wettin, nicknamed "Heinrich der Fromme" becomes the new Duke of Saxony within the Holy Roman Empire upon the death of his older brother, Georg der Bärtige.
- April 19 - The Treaty of Frankfurt is signed at Frankfurt-am-Main by Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor on behalf of the Empire's Roman Catholic states, and the Lutheran theologian Philip Melanchthon, representative of the Schmalkaldic League of Protestant German states. Effective May 1, the parties agree that no violent actions will be taken by either side against the other during a 15 month truce period.
- April 28 - The English Parliament meets for the first time since 1536, after being summoned by King Henry VIII as his seventh Parliament.
- May 5 - The English House of Lords creates a committee, balanced between religious reformers and religious conservatives, to examine and determine doctrine, eventually forming the "Six Articles".
- May 25 - The inaugural declaration of the Protestant Reformation takes place in Leipzig with Martin Luther present, as Duke Henry IV pledges to adopt Lutheranism as the official religion of make the Duchy of Saxony.
- May 30 - Hernando de Soto lands at Tampa Bay, Florida with 600 soldiers, with the goal of finding gold. He also introduces pigs into North America.
- June 26 - Battle of Chausa in modern-day Buxar, India: Sher Shah Suri defeats the Mughal emperor, Humayun .
- June 28 - The Six Articles, an Act of the Parliament of England, is given royal assent reaffirms certain Catholic principles in Henry VIII's Church of England.
July–September
- July 13 - Lütfi Pasha becomes the new Grand vizier of the Ottoman Empire after being appointed by the Sultan Suleiman the Great following the death of Ayas Mehmed Pasha
- July 18 - The siege of Castelnuovo is started by General Hayreddin Barbarossa, leader of the Ottoman Empire's Army, after the Spanish commanding officer, Francisco de Sarmiento, rejects an offer of honorable surrender with safe passage. Spain had taken the city in war from the Ottomans in 1538, giving the Christian Europeans control of the eastern Mediterranean sea and access to the Holy Land. With 50,000 Ottomans against less than 4,000 Spanish defenders, Castelnuovo falls in less than three weeks.
- The siege of Castelnuovo ends after 19 days and the deaths of as many as 20,000 of the Ottoman attackers. After the city falls, almost all of the surviving Spanish defenders are executed, including Spain's General de Sarmiento.
- August 15 - King Francis I of France issues the Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêt, that places the whole of France under the jurisdiction of the royal law courts, and makes French the language of those courts, and the official language of legal discourse.
- August 17 - The revolt of Ghent begins in the Spanish Netherlands as members of the city's guilds demand the right to choose their own leaders, and the resignation of the Spanish-sponsored city leaders. Within four days, the city is under the control of nine guild leaders.
- September 7 - Guru Angad Dev becomes the second Guru of the Sikhs.
October–December
- October 4 - Henry VIII contracts to marry Anne of Cleves.
- November 1 - Joachim II Hector introduces Lutheranism in the Margraviate of Brandenburg, becoming the second Prince-Elector after the Prince-Elector of Saxony to turn Protestant.
- November 26 - Abbot Marmaduke Bradley and 31 monks sign the deed surrendering Fountains Abbey to the English Crown.
- December 7 - Juan Pardo de Tavera, Archbishop of Toledo, begins his administration as the Grand Inquisitor of Spain.
- December 15 - In the Spanish colony of Nueva Granada against the indigenous armies of the Muisca Confederation, led by Tundama.
- December 27 - Anne of Cleves arrives in England in fulfillment of the October 4 contract for marriage to King Henry VIII and the payment of a dowry of 100,000 florins to her brother. Anne and Henry are married 10 days later, but the marriage is annulled on July 12.
Undated
- Protestant Reformation
- * Lutheranism is forcibly introduced into Iceland, despite the opposition of Bishop Jón Arason.
- * Beaulieu Abbey, Bolton Abbey, Colchester Abbey, Newstead Abbey, St Albans Abbey, St Mary's Abbey, York and Hartland Abbey fall prey to the Dissolution of the Monasteries in England.
- * The first edition of the Calvinist Genevan Psalter is published.
- In Henan province, China, a severe drought with swarms of locusts is made worse, by a major epidemic outbreak of the plague.
- The first printing press in North America is set up in Mexico City.
- Teseo Ambrogio's Introductio in Chaldaicam lingua, Syriaca atq Armenica, & dece alias linguas, published in Pavia, introduces several Middle Eastern languages to western Europe for the first time.