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* 1562 – Antoine de Bourbon, French noble ( b. 1518 )
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1562 and –
* Adrian Willaert ( c. 1490 – 1562 ), Flemish composer of the Renaissance and founder of the Venetian School
The council was reconvened by Pope Pius IV ( 1559 – 65 ) for the last time, meeting from 18 January 1562, and continued until its final adjournment on 4 December 1563.
The history of the council is thus divided into three distinct periods: 1545 – 49, 1551 – 52 and 1562 – 63.
After the occupation and loss of Le Havre in 1562 – 1563, Elizabeth avoided military expeditions on the continent until 1585, when she sent an English army to aid the Protestant Dutch rebels against Philip II.
Renewed Catholic reaction – headed by the powerful Francis, Duke of Guise – led to a massacre of Huguenots at Vassy in 1562, starting the first of the French Wars of Religion, during which English, German, and Spanish forces intervened on the side of rival Protestant and Catholic forces.
* 1562 – 23 Huguenots are massacred by Catholics in Wassy, France, marking the start of the French Wars of Religion.
Mindful of the origin of his success, Innocent IX supported, during his two months ' pontificate, the cause of Philip II and the Catholic League against Henry IV of France ( 1589 – 1610 ) in the civil Wars of Religion ( 1562 – 1598 ), where a papal army was in the field.
1562 and Antoine
At the Siege of Rouen ( May – October 1562 ), the crown regained the city, but Antoine de Navarre died of his wounds.
Antoine de Bourbon, Duke of Vendôme ( 22 April 1518 – 17 November 1562 ) was head of the House of Bourbon from 1537 to 1562, and jure uxoris King of Navarre from 1555 to 1562.
It did not obtain fame until the 16th century, when its head, Antoine de Noailles ( 1504 – 1562 ), became admiral of France, and was ambassador in England during three important years, 1553 – 1556, maintaining a gallant but unsuccessful rivalry with the Spanish ambassador, Simon Renard.
Antoine, 1st comte de Noailles ( 1504 – 1562 ) became admiral of France, and was ambassador in England during three important years, 1553 – 1556, maintaining a gallant but unsuccessful rivalry with the Spanish ambassador, Simon Renard.
1562 and de
On 1562, John de Vere had contracted with Henry Hastings, 3rd Earl of Huntingdon for Edward to marry one of Huntingdon's sisters ; when he reached the age of 18, he would choose either Elizabeth or Mary Hastings.
* Treaty of Hampton Court ( 1562 ), also known as the Treaty of Richmond, signed on 22 September 1562 between Queen Elizabeth and Huguenot leader Louis I de Bourbon, prince de Condé
Zurita resigned these posts on the January 21, 1571, obtained a sinecure at Zaragoza, and dedicated himself wholly to the composition of his Anales de la Corona de Aragón, the first part of which had appeared in 1562 ; he lived to see the last volume printed at Zaragoza on the April 22, 1580, and died on the November 3 following.
In 1562, Catherine de ' Medici had the castle restored as a powerful fortress, but, her son, Henry III, reduced the height of the towers and had the towers and walls stripped of their embattlements ; Henry III used the castle stones to build streets and develop the village of Angers.
Founded as University of Douai in 1562, the state university in Northern France was renamed Université impériale de Douai-Lille in 1808, then as Université de Lille with faculty expansion from Douai to Lille from mid-19th century onwards.
French Huguenot explorer Jean Ribault became the first ( recorded ) European visitor to Napoyca in 1562, which he named Isle de Mai.
Hoping to turn over the town to Condé, the Huguenots of Toulouse seized the Hôtel de ville but were countered by angry Catholic mobs resulting in street battles and the killing of around 3, 000 ( mostly Huguenots ) during the 1562 Riots of Toulouse.
* At least 27 Maya codices were ceremonially destroyed by Diego de Landa ( 1524 – 1579 ), bishop of Yucatán, on 12 July 1562.
Scève's chief works are Délie, objet de plus haulte vertu ( 1544 ); three anatomical blazons ( La Gorge, Le Sourcil, La Larme ); the elegy Arion ( 1536 ) and the eclogue La Saulsaye ( 1547 ); and Microcosme ( 1562 ), an encyclopaedic poem beginning with the fall of man.
1562 and Bourbon
In 1562, Montgomery allied himself with another Protestant convert, Louis I de Bourbon, prince de Condé.
Charles de Soissons died at Blandy 1 November 1612, of puerperal fever according to Père Anselme, and was buried in the Soissons ' family tomb in the charterhouse of Gaillon, where his wife and son would also be buried ( The Chartreuse de Bourbon-lèz-Gaillon, built in 1562 one km from the Château de Gaillon by Charles, Cardinal de Bourbon, who was buried there, was sold during the French Revolution and demolished in 1834 ).
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