16th century
The 16th century begins with the Julian year 1501 and ends with either the Julian or the Gregorian year 1600 . The Habsburg Spanish Empire, Portuguese Empire, Ottoman Empire, Safavid Persia, Mughal India and Ming China were the most powerful and hegemonic states.
The Renaissance in Italy and Europe saw the emergence of important artists, authors and scientists, and led to the foundation of important subjects which include accounting and political science. Copernicus proposed the heliocentric universe, which was met with strong resistance, and Tycho Brahe refuted the theory of celestial spheres through observational measurement of the 1572 appearance of a Milky Way supernova. These events directly challenged the long-held notion of an immutable universe supported by Ptolemy and Aristotle, and led to major revolutions in astronomy and science. Galileo Galilei became a champion of the new sciences, invented the first thermometer and made substantial contributions in the fields of physics and astronomy, becoming a major figure in the Scientific Revolution in Europe.
Spain and Portugal colonized large parts of Central and South America, followed by France and England in Northern America and the Lesser Antilles. The Portuguese became the masters of trade between Brazil, the coasts of Africa, and their possessions in the Indies, whereas the Spanish came to dominate the Greater Antilles, Mexico, Peru, and opened trade across the Pacific Ocean, linking the Americas with the Indies. English and French privateers began to practice persistent theft of Spanish and Portuguese treasures. This era of colonialism established mercantilism as the leading school of economic thought, where the economic system was viewed as a zero-sum game in which any gain by one party required a loss by another. The mercantilist doctrine encouraged the many intra-European wars of the period and arguably fueled European expansion and imperialism throughout the world until the 19th century or early 20th century.
The Reformation in central and northern Europe gave a major blow to the authority of the papacy and the Catholic Church. In England, the British-Italian Alberico Gentili wrote the first book on public international law and divided secularism from canon law and Catholic theology. European politics became dominated by religious conflicts, with the groundwork for the epochal Thirty Years' War being laid towards the end of the century.
In the Middle East, the Ottoman Empire continued to expand, with the sultan taking the title of caliph, while dealing with a resurgent Persia. Iran and Iraq were caught by a major popularity of the Shia sect of Islam under the rule of the Safavid dynasty of warrior-mystics, providing grounds for a Persia independent of the majority-Sunni Muslim world.
In the Indian subcontinent, following the defeat of the Delhi Sultanate and Vijayanagara Empire, new powers emerged, the Sur Empire founded by Sher Shah Suri, Deccan sultanates, Rajput states, and the Mughal Empire by Emperor Babur, a direct descendant of Timur and Genghis Khan. His successors Humayun and Akbar, enlarged the empire to include most of South Asia.
Japan suffered a severe civil war at this time, known as the Sengoku period, and emerged from it as a unified nation under Toyotomi Hideyoshi. China was ruled by the Ming dynasty, which was becoming increasingly isolationist, coming into conflict with Japan over the control of Korea as well as Japanese pirates.
In Africa, Christianity had begun to spread in Central Africa and Southern Africa. Until the Scramble for Africa in the late 19th century, most of Africa was left uncolonized.
Events
1501–1509
- 1501: Michelangelo returns to his native Florence to begin work on the statue David.
- 1501: Safavid dynasty reunifies Iran and rules over it until 1736. Safavids adopt a Shia branch of Islam.
- 1501: First Battle of Cannanore between the Third Portuguese Armada and Kingdom of Cochin under João da Nova and Zamorin of Kozhikode's navy marks the beginning of Portuguese conflicts in the Indian Ocean.
- 1502: First reported African slaves in the New World
- 1502: The Crimean Khanate sacks Sarai in the Golden Horde, ending its existence.
- 1503: Spain defeats France at the Battle of Cerignola. Considered to be the first battle in history won by gunpowder small arms.
- 1503: Leonardo da Vinci begins painting the Mona Lisa and completes it three years later.
- 1503: Nostradamus is born on either December 14 or December 21.
- 1504: A period of drought, with famine in all of Spain.
- 1504: Death of Isabella I of Castile; Joanna of Castile becomes the Queen.
- 1504: Foundation of the Sultanate of Sennar by Amara Dunqas, in what is modern Sudan
- 1505: Zhengde Emperor ascends the throne of Ming dynasty.
- 1505: Martin Luther enters St. Augustine's Monastery at Erfurt, Germany, on 17 July and begins his journey to instigating the Reformation.
- 1505: Sultan Trenggono builds the first Muslim kingdom in Java, called Demak, in Indonesia. Many other small kingdoms were established in other islands to fight against Portuguese. Each kingdom introduced local language as a way of communication and unity.
- 1506: Leonardo da Vinci completes the Mona Lisa.
- 1506: King Afonso I of Kongo wins the battle of Mbanza Kongo, resulting in Catholicism becoming Kongo's state religion.File:Elgrancapitantrasbatalladeceriñola.jpg|thumb|upright|Battle of Cerignola: El Gran Capitan finds the corpse of Louis d'Armagnac, Duke of Nemours
- 1506: At least two thousand converted Jews are massacred in a Lisbon riot, Portugal.
- 1506: Christopher Columbus dies in Valladolid, Spain.
- 1506: Poland is invaded by Tatars from the Crimean Khanate.
- 1507: The first recorded epidemic of smallpox in the New World on the island of Hispaniola. It devastates the native Taíno population.
- 1507: Afonso de Albuquerque conquered Hormuz and Muscat, among other bases in the Persian Gulf, taking control of the region at the entrance of the Gulf.
- 1508: The Christian-Islamic power struggle in Europe and West Asia spills over into the Indian Ocean as Battle of Chaul during the Portuguese-Mamluk War
- 1508–1512: Michelangelo paints the Sistine Chapel ceiling.
- 1509: The defeat of joint fleet of the Sultan of Gujarat, the Mamlûk Burji Sultanate of Egypt, and the Zamorin of Calicut with support of the Republic of Venice and the Ottoman Empire in Battle of Diu marks the beginning of Portuguese dominance of the Spice trade and the Indian Ocean.
- 1509: The Portuguese king sends Diogo Lopes de Sequeira to find Malacca, the eastern terminus of Asian trade. After initially receiving Sequeira, Sultan Mahmud Shah captures and/or kills several of his men and attempts an assault on the four Portuguese ships, which escape. The Javanese fleet is also destroyed in Malacca.
- 1509: Krishnadevaraya ascends the throne of Vijayanagara Empire.
1510s
- 1509–1510: The 'great plague' in various parts of Tudor England.
- 1510: Afonso de Albuquerque of Portugal conquers Goa in India.
- 1511: Afonso de Albuquerque of Portugal conquers Malacca, the capital of the Sultanate of Malacca in present-day Malaysia.
- 1512: Copernicus writes Commentariolus, and proclaims the Sun the center of the Solar System.
- 1512: The southern part of the Kingdom of Navarre is invaded by Castile and Aragon.
- 1512: Qutb Shahi dynasty, founded by Quli Qutb Mulk, rules Golconda Sultanate until 1687.
- 1512: The first Portuguese exploratory expedition was sent eastward from Malacca to search for the 'Spice Islands' led by Francisco Serrão. Serrão is shipwrecked but struggles on to Hitu and wins the favour of the local rulers.
- 1513: Machiavelli writes The Prince, a treatise about political philosophy
- 1513: The Portuguese mariner Jorge Álvares lands at Macau, China, during the Ming dynasty.
- 1513: Henry VIII defeats the French at the Battle of the Spurs.
- 1513: The Battle of Flodden Field in which invading Scots are defeated by Henry VIII's forces.
- 1513: Sultan Selim I orders the massacre of Shia Muslims in Anatolia.
- 1513: Vasco Núñez de Balboa, in service of Spain arrives at the Pacific Ocean across the Isthmus of Panama. He was the first European to do so.
- 1514: The Battle of Orsha halts Muscovy's expansion into Eastern Europe.
- 1514: Dózsa rebellion in Hungary.File:Luther 95 Thesen.png|thumb|upright|Martin Luther initiated the Reformation with his Ninety-five Theses in 1517.
- 1514: The Battle of Chaldiran, the Ottoman Empire gains decisive victory against Safavid dynasty.
- 1515: Ascension of Francis I of France as King of France following the death of Louis XII.
- 1515: The Ottoman Empire wrests Eastern Anatolia from the Safavids after the Battle of Chaldiran.
- 1515: The Ottomans conquer the last beyliks of Anatolia, the Dulkadirs and the Ramadanids.
- 1516–1517: The Ottomans defeat the Mamluks and gain control of Egypt, Arabia, and the Levant.
- 1517: The Sweating sickness epidemic in Tudor England.
- 1517: The Reformation begins when Martin Luther posts his Ninety-five Theses in Saxony.
- 1518: The Treaty of London was a non-aggression pact between the major European nations. The signatories were Burgundy, France, England, the Holy Roman Empire, the Netherlands, the Papal States and Spain, all of whom agreed not to attack one another and to come to the aid of any that were under attack.
- 1518: Mir Chakar Khan Rind leaves Baluchistan and settles in Punjab.
- 1518: Leo Africanus, also known as al-Hasan ibn Muhammad al-Wazzan al-Fasi, an Andalusian Berber diplomat who is best known for his book Descrittione dell’Africa, is captured by Spanish pirates; he is taken to Rome and presented to Pope Leo X.
- 1518: The dancing plague of 1518 begins in Strasbourg, lasting for about one month.
- 1519: Leonardo da Vinci dies of natural causes on May 2.
- 1519: Wang Yangming, the Chinese philosopher and governor of Jiangxi province, describes his intent to use the firepower of the fo-lang-ji, a breech-loading Portuguese culverin, in order to suppress the rebellion of Prince Zhu Chenhao.
- 1519: Barbary pirates led by Hayreddin Barbarossa, a Turk appointed to ruling position in Algiers by the Ottoman Empire, raid Provence and Toulon in southern France.
- 1519: Death of Emperor Maximilian; Charles I of Austria, Spain, and the Low Countries becomes Emperor of Holy Roman Empire as Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor.
- 1519–1522: Spanish expedition commanded by Magellan and Elcano are the first to Circumnavigate the Earth.
- 1519–1521: Hernán Cortés leads the Spanish conquest of the Aztec Empire.