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Page "History of Ecuador" ¶ 23
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1533 and burned
He was burned at the stake on July 4, 1533 at Smithfield, London for, he was told, his soul's salvation.
* 4 July 1533 Publicly burned at the stake in Smithfield, London
Solomon Molko preached, without declaring the date of the advent, in both Italy and Turkey, and as a result was burned at the stake in Mantua in 1533.

1533 and city
After splitting the treasure of Inca emperor Atahualpa, both Pizarro and Almagro left towards Cuzco and took the city in 1533.
Benalcázar had also founded the city of Guayaquil in 1533, but it had subsequently been retaken by the local Huancavilca tribesmen.
Holding their capital at the great puma-shaped city of Cuzco, the Inca civilization dominated the Andes region from 1438 to 1533.
The Spanish colonial city was founded on June 1, 1533 and named after Cartagena, Spain.
The city began with 200 people in 1533 and during the 16th century showed incredible growth.
After Inca emperor Atahualpa was captured in the Battle of Cajamarca and later executed on July 26, 1533, the Pizarro brothers and their followers marched towards the Inca capital of Cuzco to complete the conquest, capturing the city on November 15 after a brief battle with the Inca forces under Quizquiz holding it after previously defeating the central government and massacring the nobility of Cuzco.
It was an important commercial center during the colonial era ( 1533 – 1821 ) and it was given city status in 1857.
In the treaty of 14 February 1533, Münster was recognized as a Lutheran city.
Bran Castle belonged to the Magyar Kings but due to King Vladislas II ’ s failure to repay loans, the city of Brasov gained possession of the fortress in 1533.
According to his own testimony, he went to the German city of Münster, arriving in 1533, because he had heard there were inspired preachers there.
His frottolas, by far the largest and most historically significant part of his output ( 176 in all ) are more varied than those of the other famous frottolist, Marchetto Cara, and they also tend to be more polyphonic than is typical for most frottolas of the time ; in this way they anticipate the madrigal, the first collections of which began to be published near the very end of Tromboncino's life, and in the city where he lived ( for example Verdelot's Primo libro di Madrigali of 1533, published in Venice ).
In the Pskov Republic the veche continued until 1510, when that city was taken over by Grand Prince Vasilii III ( 1505 – 1533 ).
Through her, the city came into the possession of the house of Nassau, where it remained until 1795, passing to William I of Orange ( 1533 – 1584 ), stadtholder of Holland, Zeeland and Utrecht and leader of the Dutch revolt.
When Ivan the Terrible ascended the throne in 1533, Staraya Russa was a populous city.
In 1533, by treaty, he conceded full religious freedom to the city of Münster.
In 1533, King Francis I decided to endow the city with a city hall which would be worthy of Paris, then the largest city of Europe and Christendom.
He was professor of music in the University of this city ( 1522 ) and appeared in 1533 in the commission of reform of the statutes of the same.
Fort was called as the inner citadel of the city of Dina-panah during Humayun's rule who renovated it in 1533 and completed five years later.
Having joined the governing council of the city and become leader of the democratic party, he was appointed burgomaster early in 1533 and threw himself into the movement for restoring Lübeck to her former position of influence.
About the year 1514 he removed to Rome, where, under Clement VII, he held the office of apostolic protonotary ; but having in the sack of that city ( 1527 ), which almost coincided with the death of his patron Cardinal Rangone, lost all his property, he returned in poverty once more to Mirandola, whence again he was driven by the troubles consequent on the assassination of the reigning prince in 1533.

1533 and Spanish
* 1533 – Alonso de Ercilla, Spanish soldier and poet ( d. 1595 )
The Spanish then set out to conquer the rest of Tawantinsuyu capturing Cuzco in November 1533.
* 1533 – Atahualpa, the 13th and last emperor of the Incas, dies by strangulation at the hands of Francisco Pizarro's Spanish conquistadors.
Cartagena was founded on June 1, 1533 by Spanish commander Pedro de Heredia, in the former location of the indigenous Caribbean Calamarí village.
William I, Prince of Orange ( 24 April 1533 – 10 July 1584 ), also widely known as William the Silent (), or simply William of Orange (), was the main leader of the Dutch revolt against the Spanish that set off the Eighty Years ' War and resulted in the formal independence of the United Provinces in 1648.
Spanish edition of Amadis of Gaula ( 1533 ).
* January 5-Juan Maldonado, Spanish Jesuit theologian ( born 1533 )
Yaqui tribes settled in the region at approximately 1100 and in 1533 had the first contact with the Spanish conquistadors, when Diego de Guzmán arrived at the Yaqui region.
When the Spanish first came into contact with the Yaqui in 1533, they occupied a territory along the lower course of the Yaqui River.
Captain Diego de Guzman, leader of an expedition to discover lands north of the Spanish settlements, encountered the Yaqui in 1533.
The earliest known example comes from Hernando Pizarro, the brother of the Spanish military leader Francisco Pizarro, who recorded an encounter that he and his men had in 1533 as they traveled along the royal road from the highlands to the central coast.
In 1533 he went to join his other brother Grudius at the Spanish court of Charles V. There he spent two years working as secretary to the Archbishop of Toledo.
By 1533, a local native leader, called Çiçumba ( or Çoçumba, or Socremba, or Joamba ... we don't really know since the Spanish recorded so many variants of his name ) had destroyed the town, reportedly taking a woman from Sevilla, Spain captive.
Atahualpa, Atahuallpa, Atabalipa, or Atawallpa ( March 20, 1497 – August 29, 1533 ), was the last Sapa Inca or sovereign emperor of the Tahuantinsuyu, or the Inca Empire, prior to the Spanish conquest of the Incan Empire.
As older maps confirm, Spanish authorities and local residents were well aware where the actual northern terminus of the Gulf of California lay, but by extending the coastline north past Cape Mendocino and eventually even into Puget Sound, Drake's claim of Nova Albion for England ( 1579 ) could be invalidated by the priority of Cortes ' claim ( 1533 ).
Fortún Ximénez () ( died 1533 ) was Spanish sailor who led a mutiny during an early expedition along the coast of Mexico and is the first European known to have landed in Baja California.
After the Inca defeat in 1533, the region was invaded by the Spanish in 1542 and since 1547 administered by catholic missions.
Abu ` Abdallah Muhammad XII ( Abū ‘ Abd Allāh Muḥammad al-thānī ‘ ashar ) ( c. 1460 – c. 1533 ), known as Boabdil ( a Spanish rendering of the name Abu Abdullah ), was the twenty-second and last Nasrid ruler of Granada in Iberia.
He was also a disciple of Antonio de Nebrija ( who wrote Gramática de la lengua castellana, the first extensive work on Spanish language grammar ) and editor of books such as Amadis de Gaula ( 1533 ), Celestina ( 1531-1534 ), Primaleon ( 1534 ) and some medical treatises like El modo de adoperare el legno de India ( about the use of leño de Indias in the treatment of syphilis ) and De consolatione infirmorum ( a work that is only mentioned at the end of Portrait of Lozana but of which no copies are known ).
Alonso de Ercilla y Zúñiga ( August 7, 1533 – November 29, 1594 ) was a Spanish nobleman, soldier and epic poet, born in Madrid.
From 1533 – 1535, Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés personally sponsored and financed exploratory sailing voyages north from Acapulco, in a search for legendary riches reported to be in the site of today's California.
The last official Sapa Inca was Atahualpa, who was executed by the Spanish in 1533, though several successors later claimed the title.
The name California is the fifth-oldest surviving European place-name in the U. S. and was applied to what is now the southern tip of Baja California as the island of California by a Spanish expedition led by Diego de Becerra and Fortun Ximenez who landed there in 1533 at the bequest of Hernán Cortés.

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