X-Nico

unusual facts about 1452


1452

September 21Girolamo Savonarola, Italian religious reformer and ruler of Florence (d. 1498)


Amalia of Saxony, Duchess of Bavaria

Amalia married on 21 March 1452 in Landshut Duke Louis IX of Bavaria-Landshut (1417–1479).

Anne of Savoy

On 11 September 1478 in Milan, she married Frederick of Aragon, Prince of Squillace, Altamura and Tarento (1452–1504), the future King Frederick IV of Naples.

Bhai Lalo

Bhai Lalo was born in 1452 at the village of Saidpur presently known as Eminabad in Pakistan.

Bolko V the Hussite

The dispute only ended in 1452 during the Polish Sejm in Piotrków, where Bolko V even offered the Polish King Casimir IV financial assistance for a war against the Teutonic Order in exchange for the district of Wieluń as a lien (the proposal wasn't accepted).

During 1444–1452 Bolko V led a fight against the Bishop of Kraków, Zbigniew Oleśnicki, over the buying of the Duchy of Siewierz.

Bouts

Aelbrecht Bouts (c. 1452-1549), An early Netherlandish painter, son of Dirk

Cardinals created by Eugene IV

# John Kempe, archbishop of York – cardinal-priest of S. Balbina, then cardinal-bishop of Santa Rufina (28 July 1452), † 22 March 1454

Château d'Échéry

In 1452, the Ribeaupierres entrusted the safety of their part of the castle to the knights of Andolsheim; the Hattstatts followed suit in 1463.

Ferdinand of Aragon

Ferdinand II of Aragon, who married Isabella of Castile to become king of Spain, (1452–1516)

Ilminster

Among the principal features are the Wadham tombs; those of Sir William Wadham and his mother, dated 1452 and Nicholas and Dorothy Wadham 1609 and 1618.

James Hamilton, 1st Lord Hamilton

A concord was reached between the King and the Douglas faction at Douglas Castle, in August 1452 that was to last until 1455.

John de Ralston

He appears to have died before 28 April 1452 when Ralston's successor Thomas Lauder is provided to a now vacant bishopric of Dunkeld.

John de Vere, 12th Earl of Oxford

John de Vere, 12th Earl of Oxford (23 April 1408 – 26 February 1462), was the son of Richard de Vere, 11th Earl of Oxford (1385?–15 February 1417), and his second wife, Alice Sergeaux (1386–1452).

Judah Messer Leon

According to tradition the honorific title Messer (a title of knighthood) was bestowed on him by the Emperor Frederick III, during the emperor's first visit to Italy in 1452, perhaps for work for him as a physician.

Margaret Frazer

The novels of the series are set from 1431 to 1452 (so far), during the reign of Henry VI of England; they overlap William Shakespeare's Henry VI, part 1 and part 2.

Martin Hundfeld

Martin Hundfeld (also Huntzfeld, possibly from Hundsfeld, a village some 20 km east of Würzburg) was an early 15th-century (died before 1452) German fencing master.

Master of the Playing Cards

Many of his engravings, especially the cards, contain compositional elements that also occur in the miniatures of the Giant Bible of Mainz of 1452-3 and other illuminations made in Mainz between then and 1482, including at least one illuminated copy of the Gutenberg Bible, the copy now in Princeton University library.

Northampton Castle

In 1452, thirty years into King Henry VI's reign, the castle was rented to Robert Caldecote for 20 years, at the annual rate of £5.

Sublimus Dei

In the bulls Dum diversas (1452) and Romanus Pontifex (1455) the right of taking pagans as perpetual slaves was granted to Christians.

Visual perception

Leonardo da Vinci (1452–1519) is believed to be the first to recognize the special optical qualities of the eye.

William II of Pernstein

In 1452 he was in Rome at the wedding of Frederick III with Eleanor of Portugal.


see also