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History Magazine coverThe World of 1700-1709:
Tania Henvey looks back to a decade of violence and change.

The Poor Man's Telegram:
David A. Norris takes a look at the history of the postcard.

Coffeehouses:
Melody Packman sifts through the rise and decline of early coffeehouses.

The Coast Guard:
Edwin M. Knights explores the history of the Coast Guard.

The Secret of Locks:
Jeff Chapman picks through the story behind one of the world's essential machines.

Who Were the Huguenots?:
Xenia Stanford relates the history of this troubled group.

Roller Coasters:
Tania Henvey goes over the ups and downs of a favorite pastime.

The Garment Industry:
Barbara Krasner-Khait describes the development of the clothing industry.

Flappers:
Julie Bedford looks back at the party girls of the 1920s.

A Little Fun on the Prairie:
Shirley Gilfert reports on what early western pioneers did for a good time.
The 1580s

Suzanne Rent paints a picture of this volatile decade.

Though a Catholic himself, French King Henry III opposed the association of French Catholics known as the Holy League.

THE 1580s were years of disharmony. Struggles between Catholics and Protestants continued throughout Europe. Catholic Spain continued as the dominant power during this period. The Spanish military fought Protestant rebels in Spanish-controlled Netherlands and Spanish King Philip II wanted a return to Catholicism in England. Philip sent the Spanish Armada, the largest fleet of its kind at the time, to invade England. The defeat of the Spanish Armada caused Spanish power in Europe and around the world to suffer a serious blow from which it never fully recovered.

In England, many Catholics were executed for their beliefs. Several plots failed to rescue the Catholic Mary, Queen of Scots from her English captivity. Francis Throckmorton, who conspired with Spain’s Phillip II, was executed after a failed attempt to rescue the queen. Anthony Babington, after whom one plot was named, was executed after he exchanged letters with the imprisoned queen. These letters were intercepted by spies of Queen Elizabeth I, who forged a postscript to one of Mary’s letters that gave Babington permission to assassinate Elizabeth. These letters were enough proof to have Mary executed.

In France, the struggles between the Catholic Church and the Protestant Church flared when Catholic Henry III declared the Huguenot Henry of Navarre the heir presumptive to the French throne. The Holy League, a French association of Roman Catholics led by Henri, Duke of Guise, protested the proclamation. This resulted in The War of the Three Henries. Henry III had the Duke of Guise assassinated in an attempt to reduce the power of the League. Henry III was himself assassinated in 1589, making Henry of Navarre king. The League only accepted his kingship after he converted to Catholicism.

Christian missionaries continued to pour into Asia during this period. Matteo Ricci became well known for spreading Christianity in China, for his skills in mathematics and art and for his love of Chinese culture. Japanese leader Toyotmi Hideyoshi expelled Christians from Japan but missionaries continued to enter.

Also at this time, some of the first English settlements were established in North America. Sir Humphrey Gilbert established the first English settlement in North America on the island of Newfoundland, and shortly afterward Roanoke Island became the site of the first English colony in what is now the US. Roanoke was not a success at first. After one year, the first inhabitants left after they ran out of supplies and were attacked by Indians. The settlers of a second colony, including the first child born to English parents in the present-day US, disappeared within three years. This did not prevent Walter Raleigh from establishing Virginia, named after the Virgin Queen, Elizabeth I.

Sir Francis Drake was one of the decade’s most vicious and most successful adventurers. He circumnavigated the globe and plundered numerous Spanish ships returning with treasures from the New World. Drake was also the second-in-command for the English fleet that defeated the Spanish Armada in 1588.

Events of this decade would continue to resound for years to come.

This article originally appeared in our October/November 2001 issue.

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