Home / Trending / April 4 – Francis Drake Becomes *Sir* Francis Drake!

April 4 – Francis Drake Becomes *Sir* Francis Drake!

 Posted on April 4, 2022

This is an update of my post published on April 4, 2011:




On this date in 1581, Francis Drake was knighted on board his ship, the Golden Hind, by Queen Elizabeth I. He was then called “Sir Francis Drake.”


A year earlier, he was just “Francis Drake,” an English sea captain who had become the first expedition leader to travel all the way around the world. (Ferdinand Magellan is famous for being the first to circle the globe, in 1522, but although some of the ships and men in his expedition did succeed in the task, he died in the Philippines.)


Seven years after being knighted, Sir Francis Drake helped save the British navy from the Spanish Armada.
Sir Francis Drake was a hero—that is, to the English people he was a hero. He can also be described as a ruthless, thieving pirate and a slave trader. He was such an enemy of Spain that King Philip II offered the equivalent of six and a half MILLION (U.S.) dollars as a reward for his capture or death.
Explore some more here. Remember, the view is likely to be slanted pro-Drake if it is written from a British point of view!
See a photo gallery of Drake’s replicated ship the Golden Hind here.

 

Did you know…?
We know that, during Drake’s trip around the world, he landed somewhere in Northern California—probably in what we now call Drake’s Bay, near Point Reyes. In 1936, a brass plate claiming “this kingdome” for “Herr Maiesty Qveen Elizabeth of England” came to the attention of the world. Historians immediately doubted whether this plate was real—the wording, spelling, and manufacture of the plate seemed doubtful to experts. However, when one study concluded it was real, many people assumed that it was a genuine sixteenth century artifact. This conclusion was believed for about forty years.


However, in the 1970s the plate was looked at again. Scientists ran tests and concluded that it was a modern creation—and therefore a hoax—and historians came up with a theory as to who made the fake plate, and why: It was apparently created for a prank that several Californian historians meant to play on a member of their historian society—meant to be kept private, meant to be revealed as a prank almost immediately. A series of unfortunate events conspired to spin the prank out of the pranksters’ control!

I spotted this fun amateur video about two kids searching for the Drake’s Plate. Check it out! 


See also  April 25 - DNA Day

Also on this date:



Anniversary of the cancellation of the Smothers Brothers  







World Rat Day




Sonia Kovalevsky Mathematics High School Day (held on different dates by different institutions)





Birthday of lock-and-key inventor Linus Yale, Jr.


Anniversary of Square Root Day









Anniversary of the first paleontological lecture



National Walking Day


Anniversary of a record-breaking series of hits records





Anniversary of an anti-woman prank resulting in the first U.S. mayor who was a woman 







Birthday of architect Mary Colter




Independence Day in Senegal


Birthday of reformer Dorothea Dix



See also  February 9 – Toothache Day



Plan ahead:


Check out my Pinterest boards for:

  • April holidays
  • April birthdays
  • Historical anniversaries in April

And here are my Pinterest boards for:

  • May holidays
  • May birthdays
  • Historical anniversaries in May



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