1486

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File:Elizabeth and Henry.jpg
January 18: The marriage of King Henry VIII of the House of Lancaster and Elizabeth of York brings an official end to the Wars of the Roses.

Template:Year nav Template:C15 year in topicYear 1486 (MCDLXXXVI) was a common year starting on Sunday.

Events

January–March

April–June

  • April 9 – The coronation of Maximilian the First as "King of the Romans" takes place at Aachen, in that the Holy Roman Imperial capital of Vienna was captured by Hungary.<ref>Joseph Baader, "Bericht des Ritters Ludwig von Eyb über des Römischen Königs Maximilian Krönung zu Aachen im Jahre 1486" ("Report of the knight Ludwig von Eyb on the coronation of the Roman King Maximilian in Aachen in the year 1486"), in Annalen des historischen Vereins für den Niederrhein, insbesondere die alte Erzdiöcese Köln (Annals of the Historical Society for the Lower Rhine), Volume 15 (Köln: 1864) pp.1–18</ref>
  • April 21 – The adoption of the Sentència Arbitral de Guadalupe ends the War of the Remences, in the Principality of Catalonia.
  • April 23 – The Stafford and Lovell rebellion is started against King Henry VII of England by three House of York supporters, Sir Humphrey Stafford, Thomas Stafford and Francis Lovell, 1st Viscount Lovell, who had hoped to restore the Yorkist monarchy led by the late King Richard III.<ref>Template:Cite ODNB</ref>
  • May 1 – After being rejected twice by Portugal's King Joao II, Italian-born explorer Christopher Columbus (Cristoforo Colombo) is granted an audience by Queen Isabella I of Castile and presents to her his proposal to sail westward to find an alternate route to Asia. The Queen refers the matter to a committee of experts, who conclude (as the Portuguese advisers did in 1484) that Columbus has underestimated the distance to Asia. However, she and King Ferdiand of Aragon elect to keep Columbus from taking his plans elsewhere, and grant him an allowance of 14,000 maravedis per year, and an expense account for food and lodging while in Spain.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
  • May 13 – Humphrey Stafford and his brother Thomas Stafford, who had been given sanctuary by the church at Culham, Oxfordshire, are forcibly removed by Sir John Savage and 60 armed men on charges of treason.<ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Protests are made to Pope Innocent VIII against the breaking of the right of sanctuary in the Roman Catholic Church, and while Thomas is pardoned by King Henry, Humphrey is executed for treason on July 8.
  • May 31 – The French delegation from King Charles arrives in Rome to discuss the assistance request from Pope Innocent, but negotiations fail because of Cardinal Borgia's support of the Spanish King of Naples.<ref name=Gregorovius/>
  • June 7 – Pope Innocent VIII responds to complaints made in a letter to him from King Matthias Corvinus of Hungary and Austria, and declares that the Holy See does not resent Hungary for its war against the Holy Roman Empire, and promises to examine the Hungarian King's concerns.<ref>Liviu Pilat and Ovidiu Cristea, The Ottoman Threat and Crusading on the Eastern Border of Christendom During the 15th Century (Brill, 2017) p.228</ref>
  • June 13 – King Henry VII of England issues a proclamation confirming that Pope Innocent VIII had issued a papal bull recognizing Henry's title as the rightful King. In the same proclamation, King Henry asserts that opposition to his title will be punishable by excommunication under the papal bull, and declares that the marriage to Elizabeth of York ended "the variances, dissensions and debates that had been in the realm of England between the houses of the Dukes of Lancaster on the one part and the house of the Duchy of York on the other."<ref>Michael Hicks, The Wars of the Roses (Yale University Press, 2010) Template:ISBN</ref> King Henry uses the new technology of the printing press as his means of mass communiction throughout England, and hires printer Walter de Machlinea mass produce the declaration for distribution.<ref>David Loades, The Tudors: History of a Dyansty (Bloomsbury Publishing, 2012) p.173 Template:ISBN</ref>

July–September

October–December

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Date unknown


Births

Deaths

References

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