30 results
Jahangir I
person · 1569 CEGrief-stricken by the loss of twin sons in infancy, the Mughal Emperor Akbar sought the blessings of a holy man, who promised him three sons who would live to a ripe old age. On August 31, 1569, the first of these promis
Age of Discovery
event · 15th c. CEThe impulse to sail beyond the horizon transformed a fragmented planet into a single, interconnected world-system, binding previously isolated civilizations together for the first time. Beginning in the fifteenth century
Reformation
concept · 1517 CEIn 1517, a German monk named Martin Luther published his Ninety-five Theses, unwittingly signaling the end of the Middle Ages and fracturing the spiritual monopoly of Western Christianity. What began as a challenge to th
Shah Jahan
person · 1592 CEThe Mughal Empire reached the absolute peak of its architectural and cultural opulence under a ruler who began his life as Prince Khurram, a child so cherished by his grandfather Akbar that he was raised in the imperial
Dutty Boukman
person · 18th c. CEAn English nickname, "Book Man," traveled with an enslaved Muslim cleric from the West African coast of Senegambia to the sugar fields of the Caribbean. To his captors, the name Dutty Boukman likely referenced the Dutih
Mughal Empire
event · 1526 CEIn 1526, a ruler named Babur swept down from the region of modern Uzbekistan, aided by the Safavid and Ottoman empires, to defeat the sultan of Delhi at the First Battle of Panipat. This victory laid the foundations of t
Koxinga
person · 1624 CEBorn on the coast of Japan to a Chinese merchant father and a Japanese mother, the boy first named Fukumatsu would spend his short, tempestuous life navigating the violent collapse of one empire and the birth of a mariti
Olaudah Equiano
person · 1745 CETo strip a child of his name is to attempt to erase his past, and by the time he was purchased by a Royal Navy lieutenant, the boy from West Africa had already been called Michael and Jacob. His new owner renamed him Gus
Tupaia
person · 1725 CEAkbar
person · 1542 CEBorn in the desert refuge of a Hindu Rajput fortress while his exiled father fled military defeat, Jalal-ud-Din Muhammad Akbar spent his childhood in Kabul learning to hunt, run, and fight rather than read or write. Yet
Kamehameha II
person · 1797 CEWhen the young prince Liholiho sailed into the Hawaiian capital of Kailua-Kona in May 1819 to claim his deceased father’s throne, he was met on the shore by his formidable stepmother, Queen Kaʻahumanu. Wearing the royal
Katsushika Hokusai
person · 1760 CEBy the time he was six years old, the boy who would eventually be known as Katsushika Hokusai was already painting, perhaps learning the brush by tracing designs onto the mirrors his father crafted for the shōgun in Edo.
Ashanti Empire
event · 1670 CETo understand the Asante Empire, one must understand that its very name, derived from the Twi words for war and because of, translates to because of war. Born in the late seventeenth century out of a need to throw off th
Túpac Amaru II
person · 1738 CEIn the autumn of 1780, a wealthy indigenous nobleman and muleteer named José Gabriel Condorcanqui Noguera took a step from which there was no turning back. A direct descendant of the last Inca of Vilcabamba, he had spent
Pontiac
person · 1720 CETo understand the geography of eastern North America is to encounter a ghost whose name is stamped across the land in steel, brick, and asphalt. Born somewhere between 1714 and 1720, the Odawa leader Pontiac emerged as a
Tipu Sultan
person · 1750 CELong before the industrialized armies of Europe perfected the art of rocket warfare, the skies over southern India burned with iron-cased missiles that shattered British infantry formations. At the center of this technol
George Stephenson
person · 1781 CEUntil the age of eighteen, George Stephenson could neither read nor write. Born in 1781 to illiterate parents in the colliery village of Wylam, Northumberland, his early life was defined by the relentless, low-wage grind
Kamehameha I
person · 18th c. CEProphecy and political intrigue swirled around the birth of the child first named Paiʻea, born into a fractured landscape of warring chiefs on the island of Hawaii. Emerging from a lineage of high status—his mother Kekuʻ
Kingdom of Tahiti
event · 1788 CEThe unification of Tahiti was forged through an alliance of local ambition and foreign steel. In 1788, the paramount chief Pōmare I began consolidating his power over the islands of Tahiti, Moʻorea, Teti‘aroa, and Meheti
Imjin War
event · 1592 CEGalileo Galilei
person · 1564 CEThe lute is an instrument of precise mathematical ratios, a truth well understood by the Florentine composer Vincenzo Galilei. When his eldest son, Galileo Galilei, was born in Pisa in 1564 CE, he inherited not only this
Atahualpa
person · 1500 CEThe sovereignty of the Inca Empire unraveled not from a lack of strength, but from the bitter friction of sibling rivalry. When the emperor Huayna Cápac and his designated heir perished in a smallpox epidemic around 1525
Nzinga of Ndongo and Matamba
person · 1582 CELegend has it that she was born with her umbilical cord twisted around her neck—a sign to the Mbundu people of central West Africa that the newborn girl would grow to possess spiritual gifts, pride, and immense power. Nz
Yi Sun-sin
person · 1545 CEThe villagers of Geoncheon-dong learned early on to avoid the home of young Yi Sun-sin, a boy who ruled his childhood war games with a miniature bow and arrow, ready to shoot at any adult he deemed unfair. Born in Hanseo
Oda Nobunaga
person · 1534 CEIn his youth, Oda Nobunaga was known as a bizarre eccentric who ran through Nagoya in sleeveless bathrobes, rode horses backward while eating melons, and danced in female clothing at local taverns. Yet this reputedly foo
Aurangzeb
person · 1618 CEThe brutal mechanics of imperial succession reached a dark zenith in the summer of 1658, when Muhi al-Din Muhammad, known to history as Aurangzeb, consolidated his grasp on the Mughal throne. Having defeated his liberal
Toyotomi Hideyoshi
person · 1537 CEIn the highly stratified world of sixteenth-century Japan, an individual’s destiny was almost always sealed by birth. Yet Toyotomi Hideyoshi, born in 1537 as a peasant's son in Owari Province with no surname and no noble
Simón Bolívar
person · 1783 CEIn the ruins of a young widower’s grief lay the seeds of an imperial collapse. After yellow fever claimed his bride in 1803, the wealthy Venezuelan-born Spaniard Simón José Antonio de la Santísima Trinidad Bolívar Palaci
Sequoyah
person · 1770 CETo grasp the magnitude of what Sequoyah achieved, one must look at the rate of literacy in the nineteenth-century American South. Within twenty-five years of completing his Cherokee syllabary in 1821, this polymath and n
Humayun
person · 1508 CETo inherit the throne of Delhi in 1530 was to step into a lethal inheritance of rivalries, where fraternal peace was a rarity and the state was always at risk of tearing itself apart. Nasir al-Din Muhammad, better known