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1472

Year 1472 (MCDLXXII) was a leap year starting on Wednesday of the Julian calendar.

Events

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January&ndash;March

April&ndash;June

July&ndash;September

  • July 3 &ndash; The Cathedral and Metropolitical Church of Saint Peter in York, England, commonly known as York Minster, is declared complete and consecrated.
  • August 19 &ndash; King Edward IV summons the members of the English Parliament to assemble at Westminster on October 6.
  • September 11 &ndash; The Treaty of Chateaugiron is concluded between King Edward IV of England and the Duchy of Brittany, providing for an English invasion of either Gascony or Normandy by April 1, 1473.

October&ndash;December

  • October 6 &ndash; King Edward IV of England gives royal assent to the Statute of Westminster 1472 which requires, effective immediately, a tax of four bow staves per every tun (252 wine gallons) of cargo brought in by a ship to an English port. The Statute is passed to remedy a shortage of yew wood, from which longbows are made, following the issuing of an edict in 1470 requiring compulsory training for soldiers to use the longbow.
  • October 28 &ndash; The Catalan Civil War comes to an end as Barcelona surrenders to King Juan II of Aragon with the signing of the by the rebel leader Hugh Roger III of Pallars SobirÃÂ, guaranteeing the rights of the Principality of Catalonia in return for allegiance to the Kingdom of Aragon.
  • November 5 &ndash; Duke Nicholas of Lorraine and Duke Charles of Burgundy agree that the engagement between Nicholas and Charles's daughter can be called off without jeopardizing the alliance between the two duchies.
  • December 31 &ndash; The city council of Amsterdam prohibits snowball fights: "Neymant en moet met sneecluyten werpen nocht maecht noch wijf noch manspersoon." ("No one shall throw with snowballs, neither men nor (unmarried) women.")

Undated

  • The possible discovery of the island of "Bacalao" (which some historians believe to have been Newfoundland off North America, 20 years before Christopher Columbus had arrived in the "New World") is made by João Vaz Corte-Real. The suggestion that Corte-Real found lands that he called the "Terras do Bacalhau" (and was granted lands in the Azores by the king of Portugal as a result) will be advanced by Italian writer Gaspar Frutuoso a century later in his work Saudades da Terra, although the reliability of Frutuoso's 1570 book is questioned by later historians because of the book's misinformation on other matters.

Births

Deaths

References