1496

1496 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1496
MCDXCVI
Ab urbe condita2249
Armenian calendar945
ԹՎ ՋԽԵ
Assyrian calendar6246
Balinese saka calendar1417–1418
Bengali calendar902–903
Berber calendar2446
English Regnal year11 Hen. 7 – 12 Hen. 7
Buddhist calendar2040
Burmese calendar858
Byzantine calendar7004–7005
Chinese calendar乙卯年 (Wood Rabbit)
4193 or 3986
    — to —
丙辰年 (Fire Dragon)
4194 or 3987
Coptic calendar1212–1213
Discordian calendar2662
Ethiopian calendar1488–1489
Hebrew calendar5256–5257
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1552–1553
 - Shaka Samvat1417–1418
 - Kali Yuga4596–4597
Holocene calendar11496
Igbo calendar496–497
Iranian calendar874–875
Islamic calendar901–902
Japanese calendarMeiō 5
(明応5年)
Javanese calendar1413–1414
Julian calendar1496
MCDXCVI
Korean calendar3829
Minguo calendar416 before ROC
民前416年
Nanakshahi calendar28
Thai solar calendar2038–2039
Tibetan calendarཤིང་མོ་ཡོས་ལོ་
(female Wood-Hare)
1622 or 1241 or 469
    — to —
མེ་ཕོ་འབྲུག་ལོ་
(male Fire-Dragon)
1623 or 1242 or 470

Year 1496 (MCDXCVI) was a leap year starting on Friday of the Julian calendar.

Events

January–December

  • February – Pietro Bembo's Petri Bembi de Aetna Angelum Chalabrilem liber, a description of a journey to Mount Etna, is published in Venice by Aldus Manutius, the first book printed in the old-style serif or humanist typeface cut by Francesco Griffo (known from the 20th century as Bembo) and with early adoption of the semicolon (dated 1495 according to the more veneto).
  • February 24 – King Henry VII of England signs the commercial treaty Intercursus Magnus with Venice, Florence, and the cities of the Hanseatic League and the Netherlands.[1]
  • March 5 – Henry VII of England issues letters patent to Italian-born adventurer John Cabot and his sons, authorizing them to discover unknown lands.[2]
  • March 10 – Christopher Columbus leaves Hispaniola for Spain, ending his second visit to the Western Hemisphere. During his time here he has forcibly subjugated the island, enslaved the Taíno, and laid the basis for a system of land grants tied to the Taíno's enslavement.
  • June 12 – Jesus College, Cambridge, is founded.[1]
  • July – Spanish forces under Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba capture Atella after a siege. Among the prisoners is the French viceroy of Naples, the Comte de Montpensier. Ferdinand II of Naples is restored to his throne.
  • August 5 – Bartholomew Columbus, brother of Christopher Columbus, formally founds the city of Santo Domingo (first settled in March) on Hispaniola (in the modern-day Dominican Republic), making it the oldest permanent European settlement in the New World.
  • September 21–25 – James IV of Scotland invades Northumberland, in support of the pretender to the English throne, Perkin Warbeck.[2]
  • October 20 – Joanna of Castile, second daughter of Ferdinand II of Aragon and Isabella I of Castile, heiress to Castile, marries the archduke Philip, heir through his mother to the Burgundian Netherlands, and through his father to the Holy Roman Empire.
  • December 5 – King Manuel I of Portugal issues a decree ordering the expulsion of "heretics" from the country.
  • Date unknown – Jan de Groote, a Dutchman, obtains a grant for the north ferry from the mainland of Scotland to Orkney, from King James IV of Scotland.

Births

  • March 18 – Mary Tudor, Queen of Louis XII of France, daughter of Henry VII of England (d. 1533)
  • May 12 – King Gustav Vasa of Sweden (d. 1560)
  • July 10 – Johann Forster, German theologian (d. 1558)
  • August 28 – Konrad Heresbach, German Calvinist (d. 1576)
  • September 27 – Hieronymus Łaski, Polish diplomat (d. 1542)
  • October 20 – Claude, Duke of Guise, French aristocrat and general (d. 1550)
  • November 23 – Clément Marot, French poet of the Renaissance period (d. 1544)
  • December 20 – Joseph ha-Kohen, Spanish-born French Jewish historian and physician (d. 1575)
  • December 21 – Elisabeth Corvinus, Hungarian princess (d. 1508)
  • date unknown
    • Lazare de Baïf, French diplomat and author (d. 1547)
    • João de Barros, Portuguese historian (d. 1570)
    • Cuauhtémoc, 11th Tlatoani (emperor) of Tenochtitlan (modern Mexico City), 1520–1521, (d. 1521)[3]
    • Dirck Jacobsz., Dutch painter (d. 1567)
    • Richard Maitland, Scottish poet (d. 1586)
    • Louise de Montmorency, French noblewoman (d. 1547)
    • Martín Ocelotl, Mexican priest (d. c. 1537)
    • William Roper, son-in-law and biographer of Thomas More (d. 1578)
    • Giovanni Battista da Sangallo, Italian architect (d. 1548)
    • Menno Simons, Dutch Anabaptist leader (d. 1561)
    • Agostino Steuco, Italian humanist scholar (d. 1548)
    • Johann Walter, Lutheran composer and poet (d. 1570)
  • probable – Henry Somerset, 2nd Earl of Worcester (d. 1549)
    • María Pacheco, Spanish heroine and defender of Toledo (d. 1531)

Deaths

References

  1. ^ a b Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 135–138. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2.
  2. ^ a b Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 189–192. ISBN 0-304-35730-8.
  3. ^ "Cuauhtémoc" (in Spanish). Biografias y Vidas. Retrieved June 1, 2019.