Year 1556 (MDLVI ) was a leap year starting on Wednesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar .
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The world in 1556
January 23 : Shaanxi earthquake , devastation kills 830,000 people in China.
January– March
January 4 – In Japan, Saitō Yoshitatsu , the eldest son of Saitō Dōsan , arranges the murders of his two younger brothers, Magoshiro and Kiheiji, and forces his father to flee from the Sagiyama Castle.
January 16 – Charles V resigns the throne of the Spanish Empire (including his colonies in the New World) in favor of his son, Philip II , and retires to a monastery.[1]
January 23 – The Shaanxi earthquake , the deadliest earthquake in history, occurs with its epicenter in Shaanxi province, China; 830,000 people may have been killed.[2] [3]
January 24 – In India, at the Sher Mandal in Delhi , the Mughal Emperor Humayun trips while descending the stairs from his library and strikes the side of his head against a stone step, sustaining a fatal injury. He never regains consciousness and dies seven days later.[4]
February 5 – Truce of Vaucelles : Fighting temporarily ends between France and Spain .[5]
February 14 – Akbar the Great ascends the throne of the Mughal Empire in India at age 13; he will rule until his death in 1605 , by which time most of the north and centre of the Indian subcontinent will be under his control.[6]
March 21 – In Oxford , Thomas Cranmer ,the former Archbishop of Canterbury , is burned at the stake for treason for his role in the English Reformation as chief bishop of the Anglican Church.[7]
March 22 – Reginald Pole , a Roman Catholic Cardinal , is appointed by Queen Mary of England as the new Archbishop of Canterbury and head of the Catholic Archdiocese of Canterbury.[8]
April– June
April 3 – In Qazvin , the Shah of Iran Tahmasp I , becomes enraged with the sexual orientation of his son Ismail II , and sends Ismail to Afghanistan to serve as the Iranian governor of Herat province.[9]
April 24 – Pál Márkházy surrenders the Hungarian fortress at Ajnácskő (now Hajnáčka in Slovakia ) to the Ottoman Empire. Márkházy, accused of treachery, is stripped of his estates and title by the King of Hungary, and forced to flee to the Principality of Transylvania.[10]
May 28 (20th day of 4th month of Kōji 2 ) – In Japan , the Battle of Nagara-gawa takes place along the Nagara River in Mino Province near what is now the Gifu Prefecture . Saitō Yoshitatsu , with 17,500 troops, overwhelms and kills his father, Saitō Dōsan , who had attempted to avenge the Saitō family honor with less than 3,000 people.[11]
June 14 – Lorenzo Priuli becomes the new Doge of the Venetian Republic .[12]
June 27 – Thirteen English Protestants (11 men and two women), the "Stratford Martyrs ", are burned at the stake at Stratford-le-Bow near London after being convicted of heresy.[13] [14]
October– December
October 7 – The Battle of Delhi is fought in India, at Tughlaqabad ) near Delhi between forces of the Sur Empire (ruled by Muhammad Adil Shah ) and the Mughal Empire (ruled by Akbar the Great ). General Hemchandra Vikramaditya (Hemu) of the Suris overwhelms the forces commanded by the Mughal Governor of Delhi, Tardi Beg Khan within one day.[17]
November 5 – Second Battle of Panipat : Fifty miles north of Delhi , a Mughal army defeats the forces of Hemu and recaptures Delhi for the Mughal Empire, guaranteeing Akbar 's rule.[18] [19]
November 10 – The English ship Edward Bonadventure , commanded by Richard Chancellor is wrecked on the coast of Scotland at Pitsligo , killing most of its crew, including Chancellor. The few survivors include the first Russian ambassador to England, Osip Nepeya.[20]
November 17 – In the Holy Roman Empire, the Steter Kriegsrat is founded as a War Council with five generals and five civil servants to advise the Habsburg rulers.[21]
December 7 – The Mughal Emperor Akbar personally travels with Bairam Khan to lead an invasion force to defeat the Sultan of the Sur Empire, Sikandar Shah Suri .[22]
December 27 – Péter Erdődy is appointed as the Ottoman Viceroy of Croatia after the death on September 7 of Nikola IV Zrinski .
December 31 – All military authorities in the Holy Roman Empire are ordered to submit to the decisions of the Imperial War Council.
Countess Maria of Nassau
January 8 – Uesugi Kagekatsu , Japanese samurai and warlord (d. 1623 )
January 24 – Christian Barnekow , Danish noble, explorer and diplomat (d. 1612 )[28]
February 4 – Dorothea of Hanau-Münzenberg , German noblewoman (d. 1638 )
February 7 – Countess Maria of Nassau (d. 1616 )[29]
February 16 – Tōdō Takatora , Japanese daimyō (d. 1630 )[30]
February 21 – Sethus Calvisius , German calendar reformer (d. 1615 )[31]
March 7 – Guillaume du Vair , French statesman and philosopher (d. 1621 )[32]
March 13 – Dirck van Os , Dutch merchant (d. 1615 )
April 8 – David Hoeschel , German librarian (d. 1617 )[33]
April 9 – Andreas von Auersperg , Carniolan noble and military commander in the battle of Sisak (d. 1593 )
April 27 – François Béroalde de Verville , French writer (d. 1626 )[34]
May 31 – Jerzy Radziwiłł , Polish Catholic cardinal (d. 1600 )[35]
June 6 – Edward la Zouche, 11th Baron Zouche , English politician and diplomat (d. 1625 )[36]
June 13 – Pomponio Nenna , Italian composer (d. 1608 )[37]
June 24
July 9 – Elizabeth Finch, 1st Countess of Winchilsea , English countess (d. 1634 )[38]
July 22 – Otto Henry, Count Palatine of Sulzbach (d. 1604 )[39]
July 26 – James Melville , Scottish divine and reformer (d. 1614 )[40]
August 10 – Philipp Nicolai , German Lutheran pastor (d. 1608 )[41]
August 16 – Bartolomeo Cesi , Italian painter (d. 1629 )[42]
September 21 – William Harris , English knight (d. 1616 )
October 18
October 24 – Giovanni Battista Caccini , Italian artist (d. 1613 )[45]
October 26 – Ahmad Baba al Massufi , Malian academic (d. 1627 )[46]
November 25 – Jacques Davy Duperron , French cardinal (d. 1618 )[47]
November 28 – Francesco Contarini , Doge of Venice (d. 1624 )[48]
December 5 – Anne Cecil, Countess of Oxford , English countess (d. 1588 )[49]
December 17 – Abdul Rahim Khan-I-Khana , Indian composer (d. 1627 )[50]
December 27 – Jeanne de Lestonnac , French saint (d. 1640 )
date unknown
Thomas Cranmer
Saint Ignatius of Loyola
January 8 – Anne Shelton , English courtier, elder sister of Thomas Boleyn (b. 1475 )[54]
January 27 – Humayun , 2nd Mughal Emperor (b. 1508 )[55]
February 12 – Giovanni Poggio , Italian cardinal and diplomat (b. 1493 )[56]
February 26 – Frederick II, Elector Palatine (1544–1556) (b. 1482 )[57]
March 21 – Thomas Cranmer , Archbishop of Canterbury (burned at the stake) (b. 1489 )[58]
April 18
April 26 – Valentin Friedland , German scholar and educationist of the Reformation (b. 1490 )[61]
May 4 – Luca Ghini , Italian physician and botanist (b. 1490 )[62]
May 28 – Saitō Dōsan , Japanese warlord (b. 1494 )
June 10 – Martin Agricola , German composer (b. 1486 )[63]
June 24 – Joan of Valois , French princess (b. 1556)[64]
July 31 – Ignatius of Loyola , Spanish founder of the Jesuit order and saint (b. 1491 )[65]
August 1 – Girolamo da Carpi , Italian painter (b. 1501 )[66]
August 11 – John Bell , Bishop of Worcester[67]
August 17 – Victoria of Valois , French princess (b. 1556)
September – Patrick Hepburn, 3rd Earl of Bothwell , Scottish traitor (b. 1512 )[68]
October 7 – Frederick of Denmark , Prince-bishop (b. 1532 )[69]
October 21 – Pietro Aretino , Italian author (b. 1492 )[70]
November 10 – Richard Chancellor , English Arctic explorer (drowned at sea) (b. c. 1521 )[71]
November 14 – Giovanni della Casa , Italian poet (b. 1503 )[72]
date unknown
probable
Feng, X.; Ma, J.; Zhou, Y.; England, P.; Parsons, B.; Rizza, M. A.; Walker, R. T. (December 2020). "Geomorphology and Paleoseismology of the Weinan Fault, Shaanxi, Central China, and the Source of the 1556 Huaxian Earthquake" . Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth . 125 (12): 1–23. Bibcode :2020JGRB..12517848F . doi :10.1029/2019JB017848 . ISSN 2169-9313 . S2CID 228829854 . Retrieved October 10, 2023 .
Turnbull, Stephen (1998). The Samurai Sourcebook . Cassell & Co. p. 215. ISBN 1-85409-523-4 .
Woodward, Geoffrey (2013). "8". Philip II . London, New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-1317897736 .
Holmes, Richard, ed. (2001). The Oxford companion to military history . p. 411.
Majumdar, R.C. (ed.) (2007). The Mughul Empire , Mumbai: Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan, ISBN 81-7276-407-1 , pp.106-7
Wendt, Hans Hinrich (1859). Dr. Philipp Nicolai (in German). Nolte & Köhler. p. 4. Retrieved October 12, 2023 .
Meginness, John Franklin (1894). The Historical Journal . Gazette and Bulletin Print. House. p. 66. Retrieved October 14, 2023 .
Aretino, Pietro (1909). L'oeuvre du divin Arétin (in French). Bibliothèque des Curieux. p. 3. Retrieved October 14, 2023 .