1472


title: "1472" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["1472"] topic_path: "general/1472" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1472" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::callout[type=note] 1472 ::

::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/06/Nuremberg_chronicles_f_254r_1_comet.jpg" caption="[[January 22]]: The "Great Comet", observed by astronomers around the world, comes within 6.5 million miles of Earth, the closest approach in modern history of any comet (picture from the [[1493]] [[Nuremberg Chronicle]])."] ::

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

Events

January–March

April–June

July–September

  • July 3 – The Cathedral and Metropolitical Church of Saint Peter in York, England, commonly known as York Minster, is declared complete and consecrated.
  • August 19 – King Edward IV summons the members of the English Parliament to assemble at Westminster on October 6.
  • September 11 – 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–December

Undated

  • The Kingdom of Fez ruling the modern nation of Morocco, is founded by the Wattasid dynasty with Sultan Abu Abd Allah al-Sheikh Muhammad ibn Yahya as its first ruler.

  • An extensive slave trade begins in modern Cameroon as the Portuguese sail up the Wouri River and Fernão do Po claims the central-African islands Bioko and Annobón for Portugal.

  • The first printing of Thomas à Kempis' The Imitation of Christ (De Imitatione Christi) is made in Augsburg after Kempis's death in 1471 it will reach 100 editions and translations by the end of the century.

  • Johannes de Sacrobosco's De sphaera mundi (written c. 1230) is first published in Ferrara, the first printed astronomical book.

  • Pietro d'Abano's medical texts Conciliator differentiarum quae inter philosophos et medicos versantur and De venenis eorumque remediis (written before 1315) are first published. ::figure[src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/d/d3/Pietro_-Conciliator_differentiarum_philosophorum_et_precipue_medicorum-_2989416.tif" caption="''Conciliator differentiarum philosophorum et precipue medicorum''"] ::

  • 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

References

  1. Seargeant, David A.. (2009). "The Greatest Comets in History". Springer.
  2. Royal Historical Society (Great Britain). (1939). "Guides and Handbooks". Royal Historical Society.
  3. (2014-03-04). "4 marzo 1472 – 4 marzo 2014 Buon compleanno, Banca Monte dei Paschi di Siena".
  4. Kleinhenz, Christopher. (2004). "Medieval Italy: An Encyclopedia". Routledge.
  5. (29 April 2014). "Histoire ecclésiastique et civile de Lorraine,Dom Augustin Calmet, Chez Jean-Baptiste Cusson, Nancy, 1728 , pages 892-894". Google livres.
  6. Ingo Materna, Wolfgang Ribbe, Kurt Adamy, ''Brandenburgische Geschichte'', Akademie Verlag, 1995, p.206, {{ISBN. 3-05-002508-5, {{ISBN. 978-3-05-002508-7
  7. William Miller, [https://books.google.com/books?id=Wcw7AAAAIAAJ&pg=PA508 ''Essays on the Latin Orient''] (Cambridge University Press, 1921) pp. 508–509
  8. Yinanç, Refet. (1989). "Dulkadir Beyliği". Turkish Historical Society Press.
  9. Cecil H. Clough, ''The Duchy of Urbino in the Renaissance'' (Variorum Reprints, 1981) p.136
  10. (2019-03-20). "Leonardo da Vinci: The Master's Master". The Eclectic Light Company.
  11. "York Minster FAQs".
  12. J. R. Lander, ''Government and Community: England, 1450-1509'' (Harvard University Press, 1980) p.284
  13. [{{GBurl. lKU3AAAAMAAJ
  14. Bell, Eric. "Taxus baccata: The English Yew Tree".
  15. (August 2025, p.772)
  16. (2011). "Concise History of Islam". Vij Books.
  17. (1977). "Foundations of the Portuguese Empire, 1415-1580". U of Minnesota Press.
  18. Tylenda, Joseph N.. (1998). "The Imitation of Christ". Vintage Spiritual Classics.
  19. Creasy, William C.. (2007). "The Imitation of Christ by Thomas a Kempis: A New Reading of the 1441 Latin Autograph Manuscript". [[Mercer University Press]].
  20. Russell LeRoi Bohr. (1958). "The Italian Drawings in the E.B. Crocker Art Gallery Collection, Sacramento, California". University of California, Berkeley.
  21. "Bianca Maria Sforza, regina dei Romani e imperatrice". Treccani.
  22. Sir James Henry Ramsay. (1892). "Lancaster and York: A Century of English History (A.D. 1399-1485)". Clarendon Press.
  23. Metropolitan Museum of Art (New York, N.Y.). (1984). "The Jack and Belle Linsky Collection in the Metropolitan Museum of Art". Metropolitan Museum of Art.
  24. (1 June 2018). "Solitudo: Spaces and Places of Solitude in Late Medieval and Early Modern Cultures". BRILL.
  25. (1907). "The Peerage, Baronetage, Knightage & Companionage of the British Empire".

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1472