Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › 14581458 - Wikipedia

    1585 or 1204 or 432. Year 1458 ( MCDLVIII) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar, the 1458th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 458th year of the 2nd millennium, the 58th year of the 15th century, and the 9th year of the 1450s decade.

  2. Loveday (1458) King Henry VI, who probably organized the Loveday in an attempt to pacify his nobility, which by 1458, had divided down clear partisan lines into armed camps. The Loveday of 1458 (also known as the Annunciation Loveday) [1] was a ritualistic reconciliation between warring factions of the English nobility that took place at St ...

  3. From currently unnecessary disambiguation: This is a redirect from a page name that has a currently unneeded disambiguation qualifier.Examples are: Paris, France Paris (unnecessary comma-separated qualifier)

  4. Jan 8, 2021 · William Wey, who was born in Devonshire in 1407, was a fellow of Exeter College, Oxford and at the time of his Santiago pilgrimage in 1456, a fellow of Henry VI’s new foundation of Eton College. Having obtained the express licence of “his king and founder” to make the pilgrimage, he left Eton on 27 March 1456 and reached Plymouth on 30 April.

  5. Events. January 24 – Matthias I Corvinus becomes King of Hungary. Start of Magdalen College, University of Oxford. George of Podebrady becomes King of Bohemia. Pope Pius II becomes pope. Turks issue a decree to protect the Acropolis after they conquer Athens. Category: 1458.

  6. Nov 23, 2018 · The Hidden Magic of Abramelin the Mage. Dated to AD 1458, 12 manuscripts compose The Book of Abramelin, pronounced Abra-Melin, and it tells the fascinating story of the journey of ‘Abraham of Worms’, a Jew residing in Worms, Germany sometime between 1362 and 1458 AD. Having met an Egyptian mage with an ancient system of magic, the book is ...

  7. Feb 7, 2018 · The second major epidemic to affect Mexico in the 16 th century, the focus of our study, occurred between AD 1545-1550 and was called ‘huey cocoliztli’ in Nahuatl, which translates to ‘great pestilence’ (Figure 5). Given its scope, this epidemic is better described as a pandemic, and it heavily affected Mexico’s population as a whole.

  1. People also search for