Year 1552 (MDLII ) was a leap year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar .
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September 9 : The Siege of Eger begins .
Bartolomeo Eustachi completes his Tabulae anatomicae .
April– June
April 8 – Maurice, Elector of Saxony , liberates Augsburg and sets about to capture Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor .[2]
April 11 – Metz Cathedral is consecrated.[3]
April 15 – The Act of Uniformity is given royal assent and imposes use of the Protestant Book of Common Prayer on England .
April 16 – Pedro de Valdivia founds the city of La Imperial, Chile .
April 18 – King Henry II of France enters the city of Metz , ceded to France by Saxony by the January 15 Treaty of Chambord .
April 28 – The delegates to the Council of Trent adjourn for two years after learning that the Holy Roman Emperor is fleeing from Maurice of Saxony.[4]
May 20 – Learning of the rapid approach of the Elector Maurice, the Emperor Charles V flees from Innsbruck ahead of being captured.[5]
June 6 (14th waxing of Waso 914 ME ) – Minye Sithu is appointed as the Burmese Viceroy of Martaban by his older brother, Bayinnaung , King of Burma.[6]
June 16 – Yuri of Uglich , the only brother of the Russian Tsar Ivan the Terrible , is placed in charge of Russia's domestic affairs as Ivan departs Moscow to lead 150,000 troops in the Russo-Kazan War .
June 22 – Peter Ernst I von Mansfeld-Vorderort , the Spanish Governor of Luxembourg , is taken prisoner by France and remains captive for almost five years.
June 24 – The Portuguese ship São João is wrecked off of the coast of South Africa.[7] While 480 people survive initially, all but 25 of them die during the next 165 days while trying to reach the mouth of the Maputo River in what is now Mozambique .
Date unknown
Miguel de Buría leads the first African rebellion in South America's history. This may be because Buría has more slaves than other regions in Venezuela , of which most join Miguel, and is still being contested between the Europeans and the natives, who also join his side. During this insurrection he takes over the Gold mines de San Felipe de Buría, established within the area with the consent of the Spanish Crown, to pull out the ore that was discovered in the Buria river, a task that heavily depends on slave work.
In the Persian Gulf , the Ottoman Empire Red Sea Fleet attacks the Portuguese stronghold of Hormuz , but fails to capture it.[10]
In Italy , Bartolomeo Eustachi completes his Tabulae anatomicae , presenting his discoveries on the structure of the inner ear and heart ,[11] although, for fear of the Inquisition , it will not be published until 1714 .
King Edward VI of England founds 35 grammar schools by royal charter,[12] including Shrewsbury ; Leeds Grammar School is also established.
Walter Raleigh
Rudolph II
Vasili IV of Russia
Matteo Ricci
Simón de Rojas
January 14 – Alberico Gentili , Italian jurist (d. 1608 )
January 22 – Walter Raleigh , English explorer (d. 1618 )[13]
February 1 – Edward Coke , English colonial entrepreneur and jurist (d. 1634 )
February 8 – Agrippa d'Aubigné , French poet and soldier (d. 1630 )[14]
February 19 – Melchior Klesl , Austrian statesman and cardinal (d. 1630 )
February 20 – Sengoku Hidehisa , Japanese daimyō (d. 1614 )
February 25 – Magdalene of Lippe , Countess of Lippe by birth, and by marriage Landgravine of Hesse-Darmstadt (d. 1587 )
February 28 – Joost Bürgi , Swiss clockmaker and mathematician (d. 1632 )
March 1 – Anna of Cleves , Duchess of Jülich-Cleves-Berg by birth and by marriage Countess Palatine of Neuburg (d. 1632 )
March 18 – Polykarp Leyser the Elder , German theologian (d. 1610 )
March 20 – Christoph, Count of Hohenzollern-Haigerloch (d. 1592 )
April 20 – Frederick IV of Liegnitz , German noble (d. 1596 )
May 8 – Petrus Ryff , Swiss scientist (d. 1629 )
May 12 – Edmund Bowyer , English politician (d. 1627 )
June 2 – Raja Wodeyar I , King of Mysore (d. 1617 )
June 8 – Gabriello Chiabrera , Italian poet (d. 1638 )
June 17 – John George of Ohlau , Duke of Oława and Wołów (1586-1592) (d. 1592 )
June 29 – Elizabeth Spencer, Baroness Hunsdon , English baroness (d. 1618 )
July 18 – Rudolf II, Holy Roman Emperor (d. 1612 )[15]
July 22
August 14 – Paolo Sarpi , Italian writer (d. 1623 )
August 21 – Muhammad Qadiri , Founder of the Naushahia branch of the Qadri order (d. 1654 )
August 24 – Lavinia Fontana , Italian painter (d. 1614 )
September 12 – Andreas Schott , Flemish academic, linguist, translator, editor and a Jesuit priest (d. 1629 )
September 20 – Lorenz Scholz von Rosenau , German botanist (d. 1599 )
September 21 – Barbara Longhi , Italian painter (d. 1638 )
September 22 – Tsar Vasili IV of Russia (d. 1612 )
September 27 – Flaminio Scala , Italian playwright and stage actor (d. 1624 )
October 6 – Matteo Ricci , Italian Jesuit missionary to China (d. 1610 )
October 11 – Tsarevich Dmitry Ivanovich of Russia , Grand Prince of Moscow (d. 1553 )
October 18
October 23 – Odet de Turnèbe , French dramatist (d. 1581 )
October 28 – Simón de Rojas , Spanish saint (d. 1624 )
December 18 – Ahmad Ibn al-Qadi , Moroccan writer, judge and mathematician (d. 1616 )
November 20 – Gilbert Talbot, 7th Earl of Shrewsbury , English politician and Earl (d. 1616 )
November 26 – Seonjo of Joseon , King of Joseon (d. 1608 )
December 27 – William Cavendish, 1st Earl of Devonshire , English politician and Earl (d. 1626 )
December 29 – Henri I de Bourbon, prince de Condé (d. 1588 )
December 31 – Simon Forman , English occultist and astrologer (d. 1611 )
Date unknown:
Hans von Aachen , German mannerist painter (d. 1615 )
Thomas Aufield , English Catholic martyr (d. 1585 )
Jean Bertaut , French poet (d. 1611 )[16]
Philemon Holland , English translator (d. 1637 )
Prince Masahito , Japanese prince (d. 1586 )
Lady Saigō , Japanese concubine (d. 1589 )
Dom Justo Takayama , Japanese daimyo (d. 1615 )
Anthony Tyrrell , Roman Catholic renegade priest and spy (d. circa 1610 )
Jean Hotman, Marquis de Villers-St-Paul , French diplomat (d. 1636 )
Cvijeta Zuzorić , Croatian poet (d. 1648 )
probable
Henry of the Palatinate
Henry V, Duke of Mecklenburg
Saint Francis Xavier
January 3 – Henry of the Palatinate , bishop of Utrecht (b. 1487 )
January 10 – Johann Cochlaeus , German humanist and controversialist (b. 1479 )
January 22 – Edward Seymour, 1st Duke of Somerset , English politician (b. 1509 )
February 6 – Henry V, Duke of Mecklenburg (b. 1479 )
February 20 – Anne Parr, Countess of Pembroke , English countess (b. 1515 )
February 26 – Heinrich Faber , German composer (b. 1500 )
March 29 – Guru Angad , Indian religious leader (b. 1504 )
April 19 – Olaus Petri , Swedish clergyman (b. 1493 )
April 18 – John Leland , English historian (b. 1502 )[17]
April 21 – Petrus Apianus , German astronomer (b. 1495 )
May 26 – Sebastian Münster , German cartographer and cosmographer (b. 1488 )
June 10 – Alexander Barclay , British poet (b. 1476 )
July 9 – György Szondy , Hungarian soldier
August 15 – Hermann of Wied , German Catholic archbishop (b. 1477 )
September 23 – Barbara of Brandenburg-Ansbach-Kulmbach , Landgravine of Leuchtenberg (b. 1495 )
October 14 – Oswald Myconius , Swiss Protestant reformer (b. 1488 )
October 17 – Andreas Osiander , German Protestant theologian (b. 1498 )
November 10 – Günther XL, Count of Schwarzburg (b. 1499 )
December 3 – Francis Xavier , Spanish Jesuit missionary and saint (b. 1506 )[18]
December 20 – Katharina von Bora , wife of Martin Luther (b. 1499 )
Geoffrey Parker, Emperor: A New Life of Charles V (Yale University Press, 2019)
Ernst Wilhelm Möller, History of the Christian Church: A.D. 1517-1648, Reformation and Counter-reformation (S. Sonnenschein & Company, 1900) p.240
John S. C. Abbott, Austria : Its Rise and Present Power (P. F. Collier and Son, 1902) p.132
Kala, U (1724). Maha Yazawin (in Burmese). Vol. 2 (2006, 4th printing ed.). Yangon: Ya-Pyei Publishing. p. 210.
Further Selections from the Tragic History of the Sea, 1559-1565: Narratives of the Shipwrecks of the Portuguese East Indiamen (Taylor & Francis, 2017)
Hardwick, Charles (1851). A History of the Articles of Religion . Cambridge: John Deighton. pp. 74–79.
War and Peace in the Religious Conflicts of the Long Sixteenth Century (Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2022) pp.47-48
Fierro, Maribel , ed. (2010). "Chronology". The New Cambridge History of Islam, Volume 2: The Western Islamic World, Eleventh to Eighteenth Centuries . Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. xxxiii. ISBN 978-0-521-83957-0 . Failed Ottoman attempt to conquer Hormuz.