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1270s

The 1270s is the decade starting January 1, 1270, and ending December 31, 1279.

Events

1270

Africa edit

The Eighth Crusade edit
Other events edit

Asia edit

Europe edit

1271

By place edit

Europe edit
Levant edit
Asia edit
  • September 12Nichiren, Japanese Buddhist priest, is arrested by a band of soldiers and nearly beheaded. This incident, known as Hosshaku Kenpon or "casting off the transient and revealing the true," is regarded as a turning point of Nichiren's teachings within the various schools, known as Nichiren Buddhism.[27]
  • December 18 – Kublai Khan renames his empire "Great Yuan" (大元; dà yuán), officially marking the start of the Yuan Dynasty in China.
  • The Nakhi Kingdom, of the northern Himalayan foothills, is annexed by the Yuan Dynasty (approximate date).

By topic edit

Religion edit

1272

By place edit

Europe edit
England edit
Levant edit
  • May 22 – King Hugh III (the Great) signs a peace with Sultan Baibars, Mamluk ruler of Egypt, at Caesarea. The Kingdom of Jerusalem is guaranteed for 10 years the possession of its present lands, which consists mainly of the narrow coastal plain from Acre to Sidon, together with the right to use without hindrance the pilgrim-road to Nazareth. The County of Tripoli is safeguarded by the peace treaty.[33]
  • June 16 – Edward (the Lord Edward) prevents an assassination attempt at Acre. A Syrian Nizari (or Assassin) supposedly sent by Baibars penetrates into the prince's chamber and stabs him with a poisoned dagger. The wound is not fatal, but Edward is seriously ill for some months. Baibars hastens to dissociate himself from the deed by sending his congratulations on the prince's escape.[34]
  • August 18 – Nubian forces sack the Egyptian Red Sea outpost of Aydhab and raid the southern frontier city of Aswan. In return, Baibars invades the kingdom of Makuria.[35]

By topic edit

Astronomy edit

1273

By place edit

Europe edit
  • January 22 – Sultan Muhammad I (or Ibn al-Ahmar) suffers fatal injuries after falling from his horse near the city of Granada during a minor military expedition. He is succeeded by his son Muhammad II, who becomes ruler of the Emirate of Granada. Muhammad enters negotiations with King Alfonso X ("the Wise") to make peace with Castile, but he refuses to grant a truce to the Banu governors (arraeces) of Málaga and Guadix in Andalusia.[37]
  • Autumn – Sultan Muhammad II of Granada sends an embassy to the court of Alfonso X in Seville, where it is received with honour. Alfonso agrees to Granada's demands, to end his support for the Banu Ashqilula, in exchange for the promise that Muhammad becomes Alfonso's vassal. Muhammad pays him 450,000 maravedis each year in tribute and grants the Banu rebels a truce for two years.[38]
  • October 1Rudolf I is elected King of Germany over the rival candidate Ottokar II, king of Bohemia, ending the Great Interregnum. He is the first of many Habsburgs to hold the throne and is crowned in Aachen Cathedral, on October 24. Ottokar refuses to acknowledge Rudolf as the new ruler and is placed under the imperial ban, leading to the outbreak of war in 1276.[39]
  • The Congregatio Regni totius Sclavonie Generalis, with its decisions (statuta et constitutiones), is the oldest surviving document written by the Croatian parliament (or Sabor).
Middle East edit
Asia edit

By topic edit

Art and Science edit
  • The Holy Redeemer khachkar, believed to be one of the finest examples of art, is carved in Haghpat (modern Armenia).
Economy edit
Religion edit

1274

By place edit

Europe edit
England edit
Africa edit
Asia edit
  • November 419Battle of Bun'ei: Forces of the Mongol-led Yuan Dynasty of China invade Japan. After conquering the Japanese settlements on Tsushima and Iki islands, Kublai Khan's fleet moves on to Japan and lands at Hakata Bay. Their landing is not unopposed: an old sea wall runs along much of the bay, and behind it are stationed the warriors of Hōjō Tokimune. The Japanese open combat with whistling arrows (kabura-ya), designed to unnerve and intimidate their foes. The Mongols use bombs against the Japanese forces and manage to break through at a few places, burning down the nearby town of Hakata (modern-day Fukuoka). The invaders are eventually repelled, and after inflicting heavy losses on the Japanese, a withdrawal is ordered. Credit for a great typhoon – called a kamikaze, or divine wind – the Mongol fleet is dashed on the rocks and destroyed. Some sources suggest that 200 warships are lost. Of the 30,000 strong invasion force, some 13,000 does not return.[45]
  • Nichiren, Japanese priest and philosopher, enters exile on Mount Minobu. He leads a widespread movement of followers in Kantō and Sado mainly through his prolific letter-writing.

By topic edit

Literature edit
Religion edit

1275

By place edit

Byzantine Empire edit
  • Battle of Neopatras: Emperor Michael VIII (Palaiologos) assembles a Byzantine expeditionary force (some 30,000 men), mostly mercenaries from Bulgaria, Serbia and the Sultanate of Rum. He places these forces under his own brother, John Palaiologos, and General Alexios Kaballarios. Michael sends them against Thessaly, and is supported by the Byzantine navy led by Admiral Alexios Doukas Philanthropenos, who is ordered to attack the Latin principalities and prevent them from aiding John I (Angelos), ruler of Thessaly. John is caught by surprise by the rapid advance of the Byzantine forces and is bottled up with a garrison in his capital of Neopatras, which the Byzantines proceed to lay siege. John manages to escape: he climbs down the walls of the fortress with a rope and walks through the Byzantine lines. After 3 days, John reaches Thebes, where he requests the aid of John I de la Roche, duke of Athens. He receives some 500 horsemen with whom he returns to Neopatras. Meanwhile, the Byzantine forces have been weakened, with several detachments sent off to capture other forts or plunder the region. The Byzantines panic under the sudden attack of a smaller but disciplined Latin force and breaks completely when a Cuman contingent switches sides. Despite John's attempt to rally his forces, they flee and scatter.[49]
  • Battle of Demetrias: Michael VIII (Palaiologos) sends a Byzantine fleet led by Alexios Philanthropenos, to harass the Latin coasts. A joint Latin fleet composed of Lombard and Venetian vessels from Negroponte (Euboea) and Venetian-held Crete, is variously given at 30 to 60 ships. The Latin fleet under Admiral Guglielmo II da Verona gets the Byzantines by surprise and their attack is so effective that they almost win. Their ships, on which high wooden towers have been erected, have the advantage, and many Byzantine seamen and soldiers are killed or drowned. Just as victory seem theirs, Greek reinforcements arrive, led by John I (Angelos). His arrival boosts the Byzantines' morale, and John's men, ferried on board the ships by small boats, begin to replenish their casualties and turn the tide. The Latin casualties are heavy, which also include Guglielmo. By nightfall, all but two Latin ships have been captured.[50]
Europe edit
England edit
Africa edit
  • Marinid forces take the city of Algiers, at that time independent.[56]
Asia edit
  • March – Mongol forces (some 200,000 men) under Bayan of the Baarin (Hundred Eyes) defeat a Chinese army of 130,000 men led by the Song chancellor Jia Sidao on the Yangtze River. Sidao sends an emissary to Bayan to discuss a truce, but he declines to negotiate. Dowager Empress Xie Daoqing strips Sidao of his rank and titles, and is later on her orders executed by one of his own guards, as he is sent to exile in Fujian.[57]
  • The 21-year-old Marco Polo together with his father and uncle, Niccolò and Maffeo Polo, arrives at Kublai Khan's opulent summer palace at Shangdu (or Xanadu), after a 4-year journey. They present the "Great Khan" sacred oil from Jerusalem and papal letters of Pope Gregory X. Kublai takes Marco into his royal court and appoints him as a 'special envoy' (possibly as a tax collector).[58]
  • The mountain fortress Alamut Castle (Eagle's Nest) is temporarily recaptured from the Mongols by a Nizari force under Shams al-Din Muhammad.[59][60]
  • April – The Japanese era Bun'ei ends and the Kenji era begins during the reign of the 8-year-old Emperor Go-Uda (until 1278).

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Art and Science edit
Markets edit
Technology edit
Religion edit

1276

By place edit

Europe edit
England edit
  • Spring – King Edward I (Longshanks) orders the people of Bayonne in Gascony (as part of the only English possessions in France) to provide Castile with warships "to resist the Saracens by sea", but he excuses himself from personal participation against the Marinid invasion in Spain because of his wars in Wales and his plan to lead a Crusade to the Holy Land.[66]
Africa edit
Asia edit
The Americas edit

By topic edit

Cities and Towns edit
Culture edit
Economy edit
  • Henry of Ghent (or Henricus) becomes the last major theologian to openly consider annuities as a usurious contract. The end of the debate allows for the expansion of the budding practice of renten emission, to become a staple of public finance in northwestern Europe.[72]
Religion edit

1277

By place edit

Byzantine Empire edit
  • March 19Byzantine–Venetian Treaty: Emperor Michael VIII (Palaiologos) concludes an agreement with the Republic of Venice. Stipulating a two-year truce, and renewing Venetian commercial privileges in the Byzantine Empire. Michael keeps the Venetians and their fleet from participating in the attempts of Charles I, king of Sicily, to organize an anti-Byzantine crusade, while the Venetians can retain their access to the Byzantine market.[73]
  • Battle of Pharsalus: Michael VIII (Palaiologos) sends a Byzantine expeditionary army under John Synadenos to invade Thessaly. The Byzantines are ambushed and defeated by Greek forces under John I (Doukas), Latin ruler of Thessaly, near Pharsalus (or Old Pharsalus). During the battle, Synadenos is captured and Michael Kaballarios, commander of the Latin mercenaries, dies shortly afterward of his wounds.[74]
  • Summer – Uprising of Ivaylo: A uprising under Ivaylo breaks out in northeastern Bulgaria against Emperor Constantine I Tikh to cope with the constant Mongol invasions which devastated the country for years. He confronts and defeats the plundering Mongols, and by autumn all Mongols are driven out of Bulgarian territory. In return, Constantine gathers a small army and tries unsuccessfully to suppress the revolt.
Europe edit
England edit
Levant edit
Asia edit

By topic edit

Religion edit

1278

By place edit

Europe edit
England edit
  • November 17 – King Edward I (Longshanks) raises the penalty for coin clipping from banishment to execution. All Jews are subjected to arrest and search of their homes on suspicion of coin clipping. Some 680 Jews are imprisoned in the Tower of London, with more than 300 subsequently executed. At this time, the Jewish population is believed to have been some 3,000.[90]
Levant edit
Asia edit

By topic edit

Art and Culture edit
  • The earliest known written copy of the Avesta, a collection of ancient sacred Persian Zoroastrian texts previously passed down orally, is produced.
Markets edit
  • Giles of Lessines writes his De usuris. He estimates that some credit contracts need not to be usurious, as "future things are not estimated to be of such value as those collected in the instant". The prevalence of this view in the usury debate allows for the development of the financial industry in Roman Catholic Europe.[92]
Religion edit

1279

By place edit

Byzantine Empire edit
  • July 17Battle of Devina: Emperor Michael VIII (Palaiologos) sends a Byzantine expeditionary force (some 10,000 men) to Bulgaria, to impose his ally (and son-in-law) Ivan Asen III on the throne. Tsar Ivaylo, former rebel leader (see Uprising of Ivaylo), attacks the Byzantines in the Kotel Pass, completely routing them. Many of them perish in the battle – while the rest are captured and later killed by orders from Ivaylo. Later, Michael sends another army of some 5,000 men, but this is also defeated by Ivaylo before reaching the Balkan Mountains. Without support, Ivan Asen has to flee to Constantinople and the turmoil in Bulgaria continues.
Europe edit
England edit
Levant edit
Africa edit
Asia edit

By topic edit

Cities and Towns edit
Literature edit

Significant people edit

Births

1270

1271

1272

1273

1274

1275

1276

1277

1278

1279

Deaths

1270

1271

1272

1273

1274

1275

1276

1277

1278

1279

References edit

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1270s, decade, starting, january, 1270, ending, december, 1279, contents, events, 1270, africa, eighth, crusade, other, events, asia, europe, 1271, place, europe, levant, asia, topic, religion, 1272, place, europe, england, levant, topic, astronomy, 1273, plac. The 1270s is the decade starting January 1 1270 and ending December 31 1279 Contents 1 Events 1 1 1270 1 1 1 Africa 1 1 1 1 The Eighth Crusade 1 1 1 2 Other events 1 1 2 Asia 1 1 3 Europe 1 2 1271 1 2 1 By place 1 2 1 1 Europe 1 2 1 2 Levant 1 2 1 3 Asia 1 2 2 By topic 1 2 2 1 Religion 1 3 1272 1 3 1 By place 1 3 1 1 Europe 1 3 1 2 England 1 3 1 3 Levant 1 3 2 By topic 1 3 2 1 Astronomy 1 4 1273 1 4 1 By place 1 4 1 1 Europe 1 4 1 2 Middle East 1 4 1 3 Asia 1 4 2 By topic 1 4 2 1 Art and Science 1 4 2 2 Economy 1 4 2 3 Religion 1 5 1274 1 5 1 By place 1 5 1 1 Europe 1 5 1 2 England 1 5 1 3 Africa 1 5 1 4 Asia 1 5 2 By topic 1 5 2 1 Literature 1 5 2 2 Religion 1 6 1275 1 6 1 By place 1 6 1 1 Byzantine Empire 1 6 1 2 Europe 1 6 1 3 England 1 6 1 4 Africa 1 6 1 5 Asia 1 6 2 By topic 1 6 2 1 Art and Science 1 6 2 2 Markets 1 6 2 3 Technology 1 6 2 4 Religion 1 7 1276 1 7 1 By place 1 7 1 1 Europe 1 7 1 2 England 1 7 1 3 Africa 1 7 1 4 Asia 1 7 1 5 The Americas 1 7 2 By topic 1 7 2 1 Cities and Towns 1 7 2 2 Culture 1 7 2 3 Economy 1 7 2 4 Religion 1 8 1277 1 8 1 By place 1 8 1 1 Byzantine Empire 1 8 1 2 Europe 1 8 1 3 England 1 8 1 4 Levant 1 8 1 5 Asia 1 8 2 By topic 1 8 2 1 Religion 1 9 1278 1 9 1 By place 1 9 1 1 Europe 1 9 1 2 England 1 9 1 3 Levant 1 9 1 4 Asia 1 9 2 By topic 1 9 2 1 Art and Culture 1 9 2 2 Markets 1 9 2 3 Religion 1 10 1279 1 10 1 By place 1 10 1 1 Byzantine Empire 1 10 1 2 Europe 1 10 1 3 England 1 10 1 4 Levant 1 10 1 5 Africa 1 10 1 6 Asia 1 10 2 By topic 1 10 2 1 Cities and Towns 1 10 2 2 Literature 2 Significant people 3 Births 4 Deaths 5 ReferencesEvents1270 This section is transcluded from 1270 edit history Africa edit The Eighth Crusade edit Before August King Louis IX of France launches the Eighth Crusade in an attempt to recapture the Crusader States from the Mamluk sultan Baibars the opening engagement is a siege of Tunis 1 August 25 King Louis IX of France dies while besieging the city of Tunis possibly due to poor quality drinking water 2 October 30 The siege of Tunis and the Eighth Crusade end through an agreement between Charles I of Sicily Louis IX s brother and Muhammad I al Mustansir Khalif of Tunis 3 Other events edit August 10 10 Nehase 1262 Yekuno Amlak overthrows the Ethiopian Zagwe dynasty claims the imperial throne and establishes the Solomonic Dynasty which will last until 1974 4 Asia edit In Korea the Sambyeolcho Rebellion begins against the Goryeo dynasty a vassal state of the Yuan dynasty 5 The ancient city of Ascalon is captured from the Crusader States and utterly destroyed by the Mamluk sultan Baibars who goes so far as to fill in its important harbor leaving the site desolate and the city never to be rebuilt 6 The city of Tabriz in present day Iran is made capital of the Mongol Ilkhanate Empire approximate date 7 The independent state of Kutch is founded in present day India 8 A census of the Chinese city of Hangzhou establishes that some 186 330 families reside within it not including visitors and soldiers Historian Jacques Gernet argues that this means a population of over 1 million inhabitants making Hangzhou the most populous city in the world 9 December 15 The Nizari Ismaili garrison of Gerdkuh Persia surrender after 17 years to the Mongols 10 Europe edit February 16 Livonian Crusade Battle of Karuse The Grand Duchy of Lithuania defeats the Livonian Order decisively on the frozen surface of the Baltic Sea 11 September 1 King Stephen V of Hungary writes his walk to the antiquum castellum near Miholjanec where the Sword of Attila has been recently discovered citation needed December Crucial aspects of the philosophy of Averroism itself based on Aristotle s works are banned by the Roman Catholic Church in a condemnation enacted by papal authority at the University of Paris 12 The Summa Theologica a work by Thomas Aquinas that is considered within the Roman Catholic Church to be the paramount expression of its theology is completed year uncertain 13 Witelo translates Alhazen s 200 year old treatise on optics Kitab al Manazir from Arabic into Latin bringing the work to European academic circles for the first time 14 The Sanskrit fables known as the Panchatantra dating from as early as 200 BCE are translated into Latin from a Hebrew version by John of Capua 15 Construction of the Old New Synagogue in Prague is completed 16 The cathedral on the Rock of Cashel in Ireland is completed 17 Edmund 2nd Earl of Cornwall donates to the Cistercian Hailes Abbey in England his father s foundation a phial held to contain the Blood of Christ acquired in the Holy Roman Empire this becomes such a magnet for pilgrimage that within 7 years the monks are able to rebuild their abbey on a magnificent scale 18 The Chronicle of Melrose is ended 19 1271 This section is transcluded from 1271 edit history By place edit Europe edit July 2 Peace of Pressburg Kings Ottokar II and Stephen V sign a peace agreement at Pressburg settling territorial claims following the failed invasion of Hungary by Ottokar in April In the agreement Stephen promises not to support Ottokar s opponents in Carinthia and Ottokar renounces the castles he and his partisans occupy in Hungary 20 The 17 year old Marco Polo departs from Venice with his father and uncle Niccolo and Maffeo Polo to set off for Asia to meet the Mongolian emperor Kublai Khan the grandson of Genghis Khan at his court in Beijing in China They sail across the Mediterranean Sea and travel overland crossing Armenia Persia and the Pamir Mountains 21 August 21 The counties of Poitou and Toulouse are absorbed into the French domains following the death of Alphonse of Poitiers son of the late King Louis VIII the Lion 22 Construction of the Tower of Kamyenyets or the White Tower in Belarus begins Later it becomes a frontier stronghold on the northern border of Volhynia Levant edit February Mamluk forces led by Sultan Baibars continue their territorial expansion in western Syria and appear before Safita Castle called the White Castle built by the Knights Templar After a heroic defense the small garrison is advised by Grand Master Thomas Berard to surrender The survivors are allowed to withdraw to Tortosa 23 April 8 Siege of Krak des Chevaliers Mamluk forces under Baibars capture the strategically important castle Krak des Chevaliers from the Knights Hospitaller During the siege the defenders receive a letter supposedly from Grand Master Hugues de Revel to surrender the castle Under safe conduct the Hospitallers retreat to Tripoli 24 May June Baibars conducts an unsuccessful siege of Tripoli and also fails in an attempted naval invasion of Cyprus He sends an Egyptian fleet some 20 ships to Limassol while King Hugh III the Great has left for Acre Due to bad weather and seamanship 11 ships run aground and the crews fall into the hands of the Cypriots 25 May 9 Prince Edward the Lord Edward and King Charles I of Anjou arrive in Acre with a fleet of 30 galleys starting the Ninth Crusade against Baibars During the Crusade they are unable to capture any territory and peace is quickly negotiated with the Mamluk Sultanate Baibars consolidates his occupation in Syria 25 October Abaqa Khan Mongol ruler of the Ilkhanate detaches some 10 000 horsemen from Anatolia to support Edward I the Lord Edward in his war against Baibars They invade Syria and defeat Mamluk forces who protect the region around Aleppo The Mongols plunder the cities of Maarat al Numan and Apamea 26 Asia edit September 12 Nichiren Japanese Buddhist priest is arrested by a band of soldiers and nearly beheaded This incident known as Hosshaku Kenpon or casting off the transient and revealing the true is regarded as a turning point of Nichiren s teachings within the various schools known as Nichiren Buddhism 27 December 18 Kublai Khan renames his empire Great Yuan 大元 da yuan officially marking the start of the Yuan Dynasty in China The Nakhi Kingdom of the northern Himalayan foothills is annexed by the Yuan Dynasty approximate date By topic edit Religion edit September 1 Pope Gregory X succeeds late Clement IV as the 184th pope of the Catholic Church as the compromise candidate between French and Italian cardinals ending a three year conclave the longest ever 1272 This section is transcluded from 1272 edit history By place edit Europe edit February Charles I of Anjou king of Sicily occupies the city of Durres and establishes the Angevin Kingdom of Albania A delegation of Albanian nobles and citizens from Durres make their way to Charles court February 21 Charles signs a treaty and is proclaimed King of Albania He promises to protect the nobles and to honor the privileges they have from the Byzantine Empire The treaty declares the union between the Kingdom of Albania Latin Regnum Albanie and the Kingdom of Sicily under Charles rule He appoints Gazo Chinard as his vicar general and sends his Sicilian fleet to Achaea to defend the principality against Byzantine attacks 28 June Marinid forces land in Spain and ravage the countryside They kill and capture many and plunder livestock The Marinids attack the castle of Vejer de la Frontera in Andalusia On hearing the news King Alfonso X the Wise abandons his meeting with Sultan Muhammad I and orders an all out war against Granada 29 August 6 King Stephen V falls ill and is taken to Csepel Island He dies and is succeeded by his 10 year old son Ladislaus IV the Cuman who is being held captive in the fortress of Koprivnica in northern Croatia His mother Queen Elizabeth becomes regent during the minority of her son until 1277 30 November Charles I orders his officials to take all Genoese prisoner within his territories except for the Guelphs and to seize their property The Sicilian fleet occupies Ajaccio on Corsica Pope Gregory X condemns the aggressive policy of Charles and proposes that the Genoese elect Guelph officials 31 Floris V count of Holland makes an unsuccessful attack on Frisia in an attempt to recover the body of his father William II who was killed 16 years ago by the Frisians near Hoogwoud modern Netherlands Reconquista King Afonso III the Boulonnais eliminates the last Moorish community in Portugal at Faro Completing the reconquest of the West of the Iberian Peninsula England edit The Worshipful Company of Cordwainers and Curriers are granted rights to regulate the leather trade in the City of London The Fishmongers Company receive its first Royal Charter November 16 King Henry III dies at the palace Westminster Hall after a 56 year reign He is succeeded by his son Edward I who slowly returns from the Holy Land via Gascony 32 Levant edit May 22 King Hugh III the Great signs a peace with Sultan Baibars Mamluk ruler of Egypt at Caesarea The Kingdom of Jerusalem is guaranteed for 10 years the possession of its present lands which consists mainly of the narrow coastal plain from Acre to Sidon together with the right to use without hindrance the pilgrim road to Nazareth The County of Tripoli is safeguarded by the peace treaty 33 June 16 Edward the Lord Edward prevents an assassination attempt at Acre A Syrian Nizari or Assassin supposedly sent by Baibars penetrates into the prince s chamber and stabs him with a poisoned dagger The wound is not fatal but Edward is seriously ill for some months Baibars hastens to dissociate himself from the deed by sending his congratulations on the prince s escape 34 August 18 Nubian forces sack the Egyptian Red Sea outpost of Aydhab and raid the southern frontier city of Aswan In return Baibars invades the kingdom of Makuria 35 By topic edit Astronomy edit In astronomy the recording of the Alfonsine tables is completed 36 1273 This section is transcluded from 1273 edit history By place edit Europe edit January 22 Sultan Muhammad I or Ibn al Ahmar suffers fatal injuries after falling from his horse near the city of Granada during a minor military expedition He is succeeded by his son Muhammad II who becomes ruler of the Emirate of Granada Muhammad enters negotiations with King Alfonso X the Wise to make peace with Castile but he refuses to grant a truce to the Banu governors arraeces of Malaga and Guadix in Andalusia 37 Autumn Sultan Muhammad II of Granada sends an embassy to the court of Alfonso X in Seville where it is received with honour Alfonso agrees to Granada s demands to end his support for the Banu Ashqilula in exchange for the promise that Muhammad becomes Alfonso s vassal Muhammad pays him 450 000 maravedis each year in tribute and grants the Banu rebels a truce for two years 38 October 1 Rudolf I is elected King of Germany over the rival candidate Ottokar II king of Bohemia ending the Great Interregnum He is the first of many Habsburgs to hold the throne and is crowned in Aachen Cathedral on October 24 Ottokar refuses to acknowledge Rudolf as the new ruler and is placed under the imperial ban leading to the outbreak of war in 1276 39 The Congregatio Regni totius Sclavonie Generalis with its decisions statuta et constitutiones is the oldest surviving document written by the Croatian parliament or Sabor Middle East edit July Mamluk forces under Baibars capture the last remaining stronghold of the Order of Assassins Hashashin sect Al Kahf Castle 40 August Mongol forces surround the castle of Al Bira Baibars skirts around the enemy with camels and wagons He launches a devastating attack and routes the Mongols 41 December Followers of Persian poet and mystic Rumi establish the Mevlevi Order whirling dervishes in the city of Konya approximate date Asia edit March 14 Battle of Xiangyang Chinese forces surrender to Kublai Khan s general Aju or Achu after a 6 year siege The battle is the first in which firearms are used in combat In Korea the Sambyeolcho Rebellion against the Goryeo dynasty a vassal state of the Yuan dynasty ends as rebel forces are defeated By topic edit Art and Science edit The Holy Redeemer khachkar believed to be one of the finest examples of art is carved in Haghpat modern Armenia Economy edit Alfonso X creates and grants privileges to the Mesta to promote the wool industry protecting livestock owners and their animals in the Crown of Castile Religion edit October 6 Thomas Aquinas Italian priest and theologian writes Summa Theologica a master work of Catholic theology leaving it unfinished after having a mystical experience during mass 1274 This section is transcluded from 1274 edit history By place edit Europe edit May 7 Second Council of Lyon Pope Gregory X convenes a council at Lyon after Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos gives assurances that the Orthodox Church is prepared to reunite with Rome The council agrees to a settlement between the Catholic Church and the Orthodox Church over several key issues Orthodox acceptance of papal primacy and the acceptance of the Nicene Creed with the Filioque clause Gregory approves a tithe to support efforts to liberate the Holy Land from Muslims and reaches apparent resolution of the schism which ultimately proves unsuccessful All but four mendicant orders of friars are suppressed Catholic teaching on Purgatory is defined for the first time 42 November The Imperial Diet at Nuremberg orders that all crown estates seized since the death of Emperor Frederick II be restored to King Rudolf I Almost all European rulers agree with the exception of Ottokar II king of Bohemia who has benefited greatly by conquering or otherwise coming into possession of many of those lands England edit August 2 Prince Edward the Lord Edward finally returns from the Holy Land to be crowned king of England two years after his father King Henry III s death on August 19 September 21 Walter de Merton English chancellor and regent retires from royal service in favour of Robert Burnell who becomes a strong ally of the Edwardian regime 43 The first main survey of the Hundred Rolls an English census seen as a follow up to the Domesday Book completed in 1086 is begun it lasts until 1275 Africa edit Abu Yusuf Yaqub ibn Abd al Haqq Marinid ruler enters peacefully into Ceuta putting an end to some 40 years of the city s independence 44 Asia edit November 4 19 Battle of Bun ei Forces of the Mongol led Yuan Dynasty of China invade Japan After conquering the Japanese settlements on Tsushima and Iki islands Kublai Khan s fleet moves on to Japan and lands at Hakata Bay Their landing is not unopposed an old sea wall runs along much of the bay and behind it are stationed the warriors of Hōjō Tokimune The Japanese open combat with whistling arrows kabura ya designed to unnerve and intimidate their foes The Mongols use bombs against the Japanese forces and manage to break through at a few places burning down the nearby town of Hakata modern day Fukuoka The invaders are eventually repelled and after inflicting heavy losses on the Japanese a withdrawal is ordered Credit for a great typhoon called a kamikaze or divine wind the Mongol fleet is dashed on the rocks and destroyed Some sources suggest that 200 warships are lost Of the 30 000 strong invasion force some 13 000 does not return 45 Nichiren Japanese priest and philosopher enters exile on Mount Minobu He leads a widespread movement of followers in Kantō and Sado mainly through his prolific letter writing By topic edit Literature edit Bonvesin da la Riva Italian poet writes the didactic allegoric poem Liber di Tre Scricciur Book of the Three Scriptures The text is in the Western Lombard language similar to other Gallo Italic languages The poem is one of the first great literary works in Italy It tells about Hell the Passion of Jesus and Paradise the plot later prefigures Dante Alighieri in his Divine Comedy or La Divina Commedia 46 May 1 In Florence the 9 year old Dante first sees the 8 year old Beatrice his lifelong muse She appears later as one of his guides in the Divine Comedy Paradiso and Purgatorio 47 Religion edit Pope Gregory X decrees that conclaves gatherings of the College of Cardinals where the elections of a bishop of Rome are convened should be used for papal elections reforming the electoral process which had taken over 3 years to elect him Gregory X obtains the region of Romagna from Rudolf I in exchange for acknowledging him as Holy Roman Emperor With this important acquisition the Papal States become the second largest power block in Italy after the Kingdom of Sicily 48 1275 This section is transcluded from 1275 edit history By place edit Byzantine Empire edit Battle of Neopatras Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos assembles a Byzantine expeditionary force some 30 000 men mostly mercenaries from Bulgaria Serbia and the Sultanate of Rum He places these forces under his own brother John Palaiologos and General Alexios Kaballarios Michael sends them against Thessaly and is supported by the Byzantine navy led by Admiral Alexios Doukas Philanthropenos who is ordered to attack the Latin principalities and prevent them from aiding John I Angelos ruler of Thessaly John is caught by surprise by the rapid advance of the Byzantine forces and is bottled up with a garrison in his capital of Neopatras which the Byzantines proceed to lay siege John manages to escape he climbs down the walls of the fortress with a rope and walks through the Byzantine lines After 3 days John reaches Thebes where he requests the aid of John I de la Roche duke of Athens He receives some 500 horsemen with whom he returns to Neopatras Meanwhile the Byzantine forces have been weakened with several detachments sent off to capture other forts or plunder the region The Byzantines panic under the sudden attack of a smaller but disciplined Latin force and breaks completely when a Cuman contingent switches sides Despite John s attempt to rally his forces they flee and scatter 49 Battle of Demetrias Michael VIII Palaiologos sends a Byzantine fleet led by Alexios Philanthropenos to harass the Latin coasts A joint Latin fleet composed of Lombard and Venetian vessels from Negroponte Euboea and Venetian held Crete is variously given at 30 to 60 ships The Latin fleet under Admiral Guglielmo II da Verona gets the Byzantines by surprise and their attack is so effective that they almost win Their ships on which high wooden towers have been erected have the advantage and many Byzantine seamen and soldiers are killed or drowned Just as victory seem theirs Greek reinforcements arrive led by John I Angelos His arrival boosts the Byzantines morale and John s men ferried on board the ships by small boats begin to replenish their casualties and turn the tide The Latin casualties are heavy which also include Guglielmo By nightfall all but two Latin ships have been captured 50 Europe edit May 13 Marinid forces led by Sultan Abu Yusuf Yaqub ibn Abd al Haqq land in Spain upon a call from Muhammad II ruler of Granada With a fleet of 20 ships organized at Ceuta some 5 000 men are transported from Alcazar Seguir to Tarifa Without meeting any significant Christian opposition The Maranids raid as far as the towns of Vejer de la Frontera and Jerez 51 June 14 Battle of Hova King Valdemar Birgersson is defeated by his brother Magnus in the forest of Tiveden July 22 Magnus III deposes Valdemar Birgersson and is elected new king of Sweden at the Stones of Mora September 8 Battle of Ecija A Castilian army led by Nuno Gonzalez de Lara is defeated by Marinid forces 52 October 21 Battle of Martos A Castilian army under Sancho of Aragon is defeated by the Moors at Martos 53 October 27 Floris V count of Holland grants the city of Amsterdam freedom from taxes called a road toll December 12 Battle of Roccavione Ghibelline forces defeat a Neapolitan army at Roccavione Piedmont England edit Spring King Edward I Longshanks demands a meeting with Llywelyn ap Gruffudd prince of Wales at Chester to pay homage but Llywelyn refuses In an attempt to stir up internal problems Llywelyn seeks to marry the 23 year old Eleanor of Montfort daughter of Simon de Montfort But Eleanor is captured by English pirates employed by Edward on the journey from France to meet Llywelyn She is held prisoner at Windsor Castle and used as a bargaining chip over the coming years in Edward s attempts to subjugate Llywelyn and Wales April 22 The first Statute of Westminster drawn up between Parliament and Edward I Longshanks defines the legal privileges that landowners are allowed These are based on the investigations carried out in 1274 into the landowner s rights to own their land Establishing a series of laws into 51 chapters including equal treatment of rich and poor free and fair elections and definition of Bailable and non bailable offenses September 11 1275 British earthquake The earthquake struck the south of Great Britain The epicentre is unknown although it may have been in the Portsmouth Chichester area on the south coast of England 54 or in Glamorgan Wales 55 October 8 Battle of Ronaldsway Scottish forces under John de Vesci defeat the Manx of the Isle of Man in a decisive battle firmly establishing Scottish rule of the island The first main survey of the Hundred Rolls an English census seen as a follow up to the Domesday Book completed in 1086 is finished it began in 1274 Africa edit Marinid forces take the city of Algiers at that time independent 56 Asia edit March Mongol forces some 200 000 men under Bayan of the Baarin Hundred Eyes defeat a Chinese army of 130 000 men led by the Song chancellor Jia Sidao on the Yangtze River Sidao sends an emissary to Bayan to discuss a truce but he declines to negotiate Dowager Empress Xie Daoqing strips Sidao of his rank and titles and is later on her orders executed by one of his own guards as he is sent to exile in Fujian 57 The 21 year old Marco Polo together with his father and uncle Niccolo and Maffeo Polo arrives at Kublai Khan s opulent summer palace at Shangdu or Xanadu after a 4 year journey They present the Great Khan sacred oil from Jerusalem and papal letters of Pope Gregory X Kublai takes Marco into his royal court and appoints him as a special envoy possibly as a tax collector 58 The mountain fortress Alamut Castle Eagle s Nest is temporarily recaptured from the Mongols by a Nizari force under Shams al Din Muhammad 59 60 April The Japanese era Bun ei ends and the Kenji era begins during the reign of the 8 year old Emperor Go Uda until 1278 By topic edit Art and Science edit Jean de Meun completes the French allegorical work of fiction Roman de la Rose with a second section the first section was written by Guillaume de Lorris in 1230 Markets edit In Ghent the first instance is recorded of emission of life annuities by a town in the Low Countries this event confirms a trend of consolidation of local public debt in northwestern Europe initiated in 1218 by Reims 61 Technology edit The verge escapement a simple type of escapement used in clocks is invented approximate date Religion edit August Gregory X persuades King Alfonso X the Wise to give up his claim to the title of King of the Romans Gregory gains support in northern Italy through Rudolf I king of Germany 62 Ramon Llull Spanish scholar and theologian establishes a school in Majorca to teach Arabic to preachers in an attempt to aid proselytizing to Moors He also discovers diethyl ether Rabban Bar Sauma Chinese Nestorian monk embarks on a pilgrimage from China to Jerusalem He travels to Hotan Kashgar Taraz and Khorasan modern Afghanistan 63 The era of the tosafot medieval commentators on the Talmud ends it began in 1100 1276 This section is transcluded from 1276 edit history By place edit Europe edit Spring Sultan Abu Yusuf Yaqub ibn Abd al Haqq and Muhammad II ruler of Granada agree to a truce with King Alfonso X the Wise for two years Before Abu Yusuf leaves Muhammad s secretary addresses a poem to Abu Yusuf expressing fear of Castile s power and appealing for Marinid s continued support Later Abu Yusuf lands at Alcazar Seguir on January 19 This ending the first Marinid invasion in Al Andalus modern Spain 64 June King Rudolf I declares war on his rival Ottokar II After 6 months of campaigning Ottokar surrenders all his lands including Austria and Styria except Bohemia and Moravia Rudolf makes Vienna his capital marking the beginning of the Habsburg Dynasty which will last until 1918 65 England edit Spring King Edward I Longshanks orders the people of Bayonne in Gascony as part of the only English possessions in France to provide Castile with warships to resist the Saracens by sea but he excuses himself from personal participation against the Marinid invasion in Spain because of his wars in Wales and his plan to lead a Crusade to the Holy Land 66 Africa edit Battle of Dongola Mamluk forces led by Sultan Baibars gain a decisive victory against the Kingdom of Makuria They capture the Makurian capital of Dongola and force King David of Makuria to flee upstream on the Nile He seeks refuge in the Kingdom of Al Abwab but is handed over to Baibars who has him executed Later Baibars conquers Al Maris Lower Nubia previously a part of Makuria and annexes it into Egypt 67 Asia edit Spring The court of the Southern Song Dynasty of China and hundreds of thousands of its citizens flee from Hangzhou to Fujian and then Guangdong in an effort to escape a Mongol invasion under Kublai Khan June 15 Remnants of the Chinese Song court in Fuzhou province conduct the coronation ceremony for Prince Zhao Shi to become Emperor Duan Zong until 1278 The mountain fortress Alamut Castle Eagle s Nest is again captured by the Mongols from a Nizari force under Shams al Din Muhammad 68 69 The Americas edit A severe 23 year drought begins to affect the Grand Canyon area eventually forcing the agriculture dependent Puebloans or Anasazi to migrate out of the region 70 By topic edit Cities and Towns edit March 9 Augsburg is granted the status of an Imperial Free City Later Ravensburg also receives the status in the same year Culture edit Merton College Oxford is first recorded as having a collection of books making its Library the world s oldest in continuous daily use 71 Economy edit Henry of Ghent or Henricus becomes the last major theologian to openly consider annuities as a usurious contract The end of the debate allows for the expansion of the budding practice of renten emission to become a staple of public finance in northwestern Europe 72 Religion edit January 10 Pope Gregory X dies after a 4 year pontificate at Arezzo He is succeeded by Innocent V as the 185th pope of the Catholic Church June 22 Innocent V dies after a 5 month reign at Rome He is succeeded by Adrian V or Hadrian as the 186th pope of the Catholic Church August 18 Adrian V or Hadrian dies after a 2 month reign at Viterbo He is succeeded by John XXI as the 187th pope of Rome until 1277 The foundation stone of the Minoritenkirche in Vienna is laid by Ottokar II 1277 This section is transcluded from 1277 edit history By place edit Byzantine Empire edit March 19 Byzantine Venetian Treaty Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos concludes an agreement with the Republic of Venice Stipulating a two year truce and renewing Venetian commercial privileges in the Byzantine Empire Michael keeps the Venetians and their fleet from participating in the attempts of Charles I king of Sicily to organize an anti Byzantine crusade while the Venetians can retain their access to the Byzantine market 73 Battle of Pharsalus Michael VIII Palaiologos sends a Byzantine expeditionary army under John Synadenos to invade Thessaly The Byzantines are ambushed and defeated by Greek forces under John I Doukas Latin ruler of Thessaly near Pharsalus or Old Pharsalus During the battle Synadenos is captured and Michael Kaballarios commander of the Latin mercenaries dies shortly afterward of his wounds 74 Summer Uprising of Ivaylo A uprising under Ivaylo breaks out in northeastern Bulgaria against Emperor Constantine I Tikh to cope with the constant Mongol invasions which devastated the country for years He confronts and defeats the plundering Mongols and by autumn all Mongols are driven out of Bulgarian territory In return Constantine gathers a small army and tries unsuccessfully to suppress the revolt Europe edit January 21 Battle of Desio Lombard forces under Archbishop Ottone Visconti defeat the Della Torre family troops for the rule of Milan Later Ottone enters the city in triumph and imprisons Napoleone della Torre in the Castello Baradello at Como Northern Italy March Siger of Brabant Dutch teacher and philosopher is condemned by the French Inquisition for his advocacy of the Averroist doctrine that reason is separate from Christian faith 75 March 18 Charles I king of Sicily buys the title to the Kingdom of Jerusalem from Maria of Antioch for 1 000 bezants and an annual payment of 4 000 livres tournois 76 77 May 12 Mehmet I of Karaman Seljuk vizier issues a firman decree ordering the Turkish language to be used instead of Arabic or Persian in government offices August Marinid forces led by Sultan Abu Yusuf cross the Strait of Gibraltar and marches north ravaging the districts of Jerez de la Frontera Seville and Cordoba 78 England edit November 10 Treaty of Aberconwy Prince Llywelyn ap Gruffudd and Edward I Longshanks sign a peace treaty which leaves Llywelyn only with the western part of Gwynedd Roger Bacon Franciscan friar and University of Oxford lecturer is arrested for spreading anti Church views specifically the Church s stance on Greek philosopher Galen 79 Levant edit April 15 Battle of Elbistan A Mamluk army some 14 000 men under Sultan Baibars marches from Syria into the Mongol dominated Sultanate of Rum and attacks the Mongol occupation force at Elbistan Baibars with at least 10 000 horsemen defeats and overwhelms the Mongol forces After the battle he marches unopposed to Kayseri in the heart of Anatolia in triumph and enters the city on April 23 80 Asia edit Battle of Ngasaunggyan A Burmese army some 80 000 men led by King Narathihapate or Sithu IV invades Mongol territory in Yunnan The invasion is repelled by the Mongol forces who counterattack reaching as far south as the fortress city of Kaungsin Gold Teeth which guards the Bhamo Pass in northern Myanmar Later the Burmese Pagan Empire begins to disintegrate after several Mongol invasions under Kublai Khan 81 Migration of the Southern Song Dynasty Some 50 000 citizens of the Song Dynasty in China become the first recorded inhabitants of Macau as they seek refuge from the invading armies of the Yuan Dynasty They also stay for a short period in Kowloon or New Kowloon 82 In Japan a 20 kilometer stone wall defending the coast of Hakata Bay at Fukuoka on the island of Kyushu is completed it is built in response to the attempted invasion by the Mongol Yuan Dynasty see 1274 By topic edit Religion edit March 7 Condemnation of 1277 Pope John XXI instructs Etienne Tempier bishop of Paris to investigate the complaints of theologians in France By order 219 propositions of philosophical and theological doctrines such as Averroism are prohibited from discussion in the University of Paris under a decree promulgated by Tempier 83 April John XXI sends a papal embassy to Constantinople to force Michael VIII Palaiologos his 18 year old son and heir Andronikos and Patriarch John XI Bekkos to reaffirm their allegiance to the Union of Lyon in the Palace of Blachernae Michael refuses to accept a religious union of the Greek Orthodox Church with Rome 84 May 20 John XXI dies after an 8 month pontificate at Viterbo He is succeeded by Nicholas III as the 188th pope of the Catholic Church until 1280 1278 This section is transcluded from 1278 edit history By place edit Europe edit May 1 William II of Villehardouin prince of Achaea dies By the terms of the Treaty of Viterbo his lands passed under the direct control of Charles I king of Sicily Charles appoints a bailiff to rule the Latin principality 85 In response Charles swears fealty to the new pope Nicholas III on May 24 He promises not to attack or invade the Byzantine Empire because Nicholas has hopes to unify the Orthodox Church with the Catholic Church 86 August 5 Siege of Algeciras Castilian forces some 30 000 men led by King Alfonso X the Wise besiege Algeciras at this time under control of the Marinids A fleet of 24 ships and some 80 galleys is placed in the Bay of Gibraltar to prevent the supply of the city from nearby Gibraltar The fleet is made up of most of the members of the Order of Saint Mary of Spain a military religious order which is concentrated in naval warfare 87 August 26 Battle on the Marchfeld German Hungarian forces some 9 000 men led by King Rudolf I in alliance with King Ladislaus IV the Cuman defeat and kill Ottokar II ruler of Bohemia The battle ends the power struggle between Rudolf and Ottokar over the fate of Central Europe Rudolf s House of Habsburg will continue to rule Austria and other captured territories until the end of World War I in 1918 88 September 29 Aragonese forces led by King Peter III take the Muslim stronghold of Montesa putting an end to two years of Mudejar rebellion The defeated Muslims are expelled from the realm and go into exile 89 England edit November 17 King Edward I Longshanks raises the penalty for coin clipping from banishment to execution All Jews are subjected to arrest and search of their homes on suspicion of coin clipping Some 680 Jews are imprisoned in the Tower of London with more than 300 subsequently executed At this time the Jewish population is believed to have been some 3 000 90 Levant edit January Charles I is crowned King of Jerusalem and is recognized by the kingdom s barons at Acre He surrenders the vicariate of Tuscany to Nicholas III His bailiff Roger of San Severino appoints various Frenchmen from Charles court as his chief officers Bohemond VII count of Tripoli and nominal Prince of Antioch acknowledges Roger as lawful bailiff 91 Asia edit May 8 The 7 year old Emperor Duan Zong or Zhao Shi dies of illness He is succeeded by his brother Zhao Bing who becomes the last ruler of the Song dynasty Meanwhile Mongol forces under the control of Mongol leader Kublai Khan Great Khan draw closer to the remnants of the Song imperial court November 8 Trần Thanh Tong second emperor of Vietnam s Trần dynasty takes up the post of Retired Emperor but continues for 11 years to co rule with his son Trần Kham By topic edit Art and Culture edit The earliest known written copy of the Avesta a collection of ancient sacred Persian Zoroastrian texts previously passed down orally is produced Markets edit Giles of Lessines writes his De usuris He estimates that some credit contracts need not to be usurious as future things are not estimated to be of such value as those collected in the instant The prevalence of this view in the usury debate allows for the development of the financial industry in Roman Catholic Europe 92 Religion edit September 8 Pere d Urtx Catalan bishop of Urgell becomes the first Episcopal Co Prince of Andorra when he signs the pareage establishing joint sovereignty over the territory with Roger Bernard III count of Foix 1279 This section is transcluded from 1279 edit history By place edit Byzantine Empire edit July 17 Battle of Devina Emperor Michael VIII Palaiologos sends a Byzantine expeditionary force some 10 000 men to Bulgaria to impose his ally and son in law Ivan Asen III on the throne Tsar Ivaylo former rebel leader see Uprising of Ivaylo attacks the Byzantines in the Kotel Pass completely routing them Many of them perish in the battle while the rest are captured and later killed by orders from Ivaylo Later Michael sends another army of some 5 000 men but this is also defeated by Ivaylo before reaching the Balkan Mountains Without support Ivan Asen has to flee to Constantinople and the turmoil in Bulgaria continues Europe edit March 5 Battle of Aizkraukle Lithuanian forces led by Grand Duke Traidenis defeat an army of Teutonic Knights of the Livonian Order at Aizkraukle During the battle the order suffers a great defeat some 70 knights are killed including Grand Master Ernst von Ratzeburg or Rassburg The Semigallians allies of the Livonian Order revolt but later submit to Traidenis for protection 93 July 20 Siege of Algeciras Castilian forces led by King Alfonso X the Wise abandon the siege begun in 1278 after their fleet some 400 ships is destroyed by the Marinids led by Sultan Abu Yaqub Yusuf an Nasr All prisoners are decapitated except the officers who are taken hostage For the second time the entire Castilian fleet is lost and Alfonso is forced to sign a new truce 94 November Alfonso X the Wise grants the cities of Medina Sidonia and Alcala de los Gazules to the Order of Saint Mary of Spain He also donates the town of Moron de la Frontera to the Order of Alcantara 95 England edit November The first of the Statutes of Mortmain are passed during the reign of King Edward I Longshanks which prevents land from passing into the possession of the Church The second of two main surveys of the Hundred Rolls a census seen as a follow up to the Domesday Book completed in 1086 is begun it lasts until 1280 The Royal Mint is moved into the Tower of London Mints outside London are reduced with only a few local and episcopal mints continuing to operate 96 Levant edit Spring Mamluk forces led by the 19 year old Sultan Al Said Barakah and Qalawun the Thousander invade Cilician Armenia a revolt in Egypt while they are away force Barakah to abdicate In August Qalawun takes over the government in Cairo and proclaims himself sultan He sends Solamish youngest son of former Sultan Baibars into exile Meanwhile Sunqur al Ashqar Mamluk viceroy of Damascus refuses to accept Qalawun s authority and begins a rebellion in Syria 97 Africa edit Abu Ishaq uncle of the Hafsid caliph Abu Ishaq Ibrahim I sides with the Almohad rebels of Bejaia and takes Tunis 98 Asia edit March 19 Battle of Yamen Kublai Khan s Mongol Yuan fleet attacks the Chinese Song fleet some 1 000 ships under Admiral Zhang Shijie at Yamen The Mongols send fireships but this is not effective as the Song fleet is coated with fire resistant mud Zhang Hongfan commander of the Mongol forces orders the Song fleet to be cut off from its base depriving it of its supplies He splits the Yuan fleet into four squadrons and again attacks the Song The ill and weakened Song soldiers are no match for the Mongols in close combat and the chaotic environment makes battle command impossible The chained Song ships can neither support or maneuver This marks the end of the Song Dynasty after three centuries Kublai Khan becomes sole emperor of China The Mongol Empire reaches its largest extent although it has already partially fragmented April 17 Thawun Gyi settles at Taungoo modern day Myanmar and becomes the first ruler of the Toungoo Dynasty until 1317 October 12 The Dai Gohonzon supreme object of veneration of Nichiren Shōshu Buddhism is said to be inscribed by Nichiren A Mongol Yuan embassy sent by Kublai Khan to Japan is killed by orders from Hōjō Tokimune leading to a second invasion Ram Khamhaeng becomes the third king of the Phra Ruang Dynasty ruling the Sukhothai Kingdom modern day Thailand The Chola Dynasty of South India falls due to attacks by the Hoysala Empire and Pandya Kingdom By topic edit Cities and Towns edit The town of Haapsalu in Estonia is founded and later becomes the centre of the Bishopric of Osel Wiek Literature edit Abu Bakr al Razi s or Rhazes medical writings are translated into Latin by Faraj ben Salim some 350 years after al Razi s death Significant people editThis section is empty You can help by adding to it March 2016 BirthsTranscluding articles 1270 1271 1272 1273 1274 1275 1276 1277 1278 and 1279 1270 March 12 Charles Count of Valois son of Philip III of France d 1325 99 Theodore Metochites Byzantine statesman and author 100 Michael of Cesena Franciscan theologian d 1342 101 Cino da Pistoia Italian poet d 1336 102 Isabella of Burgundy Queen of Germany d 1323 103 Ma Zhiyuan Chinese poet 104 Namdev Marathi saint and poet d 1350 105 approximate William Wallace Scottish patriot 106 1271 March 13 Judith of Habsburg queen of Bohemia d 1297 March 14 Stephen I German nobleman and regent d 1310 May 25 Shah Jalal Indian Sufi leader and mystic d 1346 June 20 John de Ferrers English nobleman d 1312 September 8 Charles Martel king of Hungary d 1295 September 27 Wenceslaus II king of Poland d 1305 November 2 Gong of Song Chinese emperor d 1323 November 5 Mahmud Ghazan Mongol ruler d 1304 Awhadi Maraghai Persian poet and mystic d 1338 Blanche of Brittany French noblewoman d 1327 Cheng Duanli Chinese scholar and poet d 1345 Cormac MacCarthy Mor king of Desmond d 1359 Eifuku Mon in Japanese empress consort d 1342 Elizabeth of Aragon queen of Portugal d 1336 Gerlach I German nobleman and knight d 1361 Maurice de Berkeley English nobleman d 1326 Mikhail Yaroslavich Kievan Grand Prince d 1318 Nijō Tamemichi Japanese poet and writer d 1299 Sargis II Georgian nobleman and prince d 1334 Sunbi Heo wife of Chungseon of Goryeo d 1335 1272 January 14 Hōjō Sadatoki Japanese regent d 1311 January 31 William Ferrers English nobleman d 1235 February 12 Zhao Bing Chinese emperor d 1279 May 10 Bernardo Tolomei Italian theologian d 1348 December 13 Frederick III king of Sicily d 1337 Amalric of Tyre Outremer nobleman and prince d 1310 Badr al Din Solamish Mamluk ruler of Egypt d 1291 Berthold VII German nobleman and regent d 1340 Eric Erikson Longlegs Danish nobleman d 1310 Fath al Din ibn Sayyid Egyptian theologian d 1334 Guy de Beauchamp English nobleman d 1315 Isabel Bruce queen consort of Norway d 1358 Joan of Acre daughter of Edward I d 1307 Louis I French nobleman and knight d 1322 Margaret of Anjou French noblewoman d 1299 Otto I of Hesse German nobleman d 1328 Shiwu or Stonehouse Chinese poet d 1352 1273 January 14 Joan I of Navarre queen of Navarre d 1305 107 March 25 Henry Percy English nobleman and knight d 1314 July 22 Ewostatewos Ethiopian religious leader d 1352 November 24 Alphonso English prince and heir d 1284 Abulfeda Ayyubid prince geographer and historian d 1331 Adam de Gordon Scottish statesman and knight d 1333 David VIII king of Georgia House of Bagrationi d 1311 Geoffrey I of Vianden Luxembourgian nobleman d 1310 Henry VII of Luxembrug Holy Roman Emperor d 1313 Ibn Adjurrum Marinid scholar and grammarian d 1323 Kujō Moronori Japanese nobleman and regent d 1320 Robert Bertrand Norman nobleman and knight d 1348 Yolande of Aragon Spanish princess infanta d 1302 1274 February 9 Louis of Toulouse French archbishop d 1297 July 11 Robert I the Bruce king of Scotland d 1329 July 25 John Beauchamp English nobleman d 1336 October 4 Rudolf I German nobleman d 1319 November 24 Catherine I Latin empress d 1307 Adam Murimuth English priest and chronicler d 1347 Al Dhahabi Syrian scholar and encyclopedist d 1348 Anastasia de Montfort Italian noblewoman d 1345 Eric VI king of Denmark House of Estridsen d 1319 Ibn al Jayyab Andalusian scholar and poet d 1349 Marino Faliero or Falier doge of Venice d 1355 Nasiruddin Chiragh Dehlavi Indian Sufi poet d 1337 Rizzardo IV Italian nobleman and military leader d 1312 Robert Clifford English nobleman and knight d 1314 Sancho I the Peaceful king of Majorca d 1324 Seisetsu Shōchō Chinese missionary d 1339 1275 August 18 Bartholomew Badlesmere English nobleman d 1322 September 27 John II the Peaceful Dutch nobleman d 1312 October 20 Chungseon or Wang Jang Korean ruler d 1325 Andrew Horn English scholar chamberlain and writer d 1328 Aymer de Valence Anglo French nobleman and knight d 1324 Dnyaneshwar Indian Hindu poet philosopher and writer d 1296 Eleanor of Brittany Anglo Norman Benedictine abbess d 1342 Fernando de la Cerda Spanish nobleman and prince d 1322 Fujiwara no Tamefuji Japanese nobleman and poet d 1324 Gasan Jōseki Japanese Sōtō Zen monk and disciple d 1366 Gerard of Lunel French nobleman monk and hermit d 1298 Gregory of Raska Serbian copyist bishop and writer d 1321 Gueraula de Codines Spanish folk healer and occultist d 1340 Hōjō Morotoki Japanese nobleman and regent shikken d 1311 Hugues de Bouville French nobleman and chamberlain d 1331 Jon Halldorsson Norwegian cleric priest and bishop d 1339 Musō Soseki Japanese Rinzai Zen monk and teacher d 1351 Peter of Zittau Bohemian abbot historian and writer d 1339 Takatsukasa Fuyuhira Japanese nobleman and regent d 1327 William of Alnwick English friar bishop and theologian d 1333 1276 February 21 Thomas de Multon English nobleman d 1313 May 3 Louis of Evreux son of Philip III the Bold d 1319 September 14 Hugh de Courtenay English nobleman d 1340 September 29 Christopher II king of Denmark d 1332 October 4 Margaret of Brabant queen of Germany d 1311 October 19 Hisaaki Japanese prince and shogun d 1328 Agnes of Bavaria German noblewoman and regent d 1345 Diederik II German count of Limburg Hohenlimburg d 1364 Humphrey de Bohun English nobleman and knight d 1322 Ichijō Uchisane Japanese nobleman and regent d 1304 Margaret of Lusignan queen of Cilician Armenia d 1296 Matilda of Brunswick Luneburg German co ruler d 1318 Maurice de Moravia or Moray Scottish nobleman d 1346 Najm ad Din al Tufi Persian scholar and theologian d 1316 Robert of Anjou king of Naples House of Capet d 1343 Thomas Dagworth English nobleman and knight d 1350 Vakhtang III king of Georgia House of Bagrationi d 1308 1277 January 7 Kanzan Egen Japanese monk d 1360 January 21 Galeazzo I Italian nobleman d 1328 March 26 Christina Ebner German mystic d 1356 April 17 Michael IX Byzantine emperor d 1320 Akamatsu Enshin Japanese governor shugo d 1350 Bernard V German bishop House of Lippe d 1341 George I Subic of Bribir Croatian nobleman d 1302 Gerhard IV German nobleman and knight d 1323 Ingeborg Magnusdotter queen of Denmark d 1319 Isabella of Mar wife of Robert I the Bruce d 1296 Martha of Denmark queen consort of Sweden d 1341 Meihō Sotetsu Japanese Zen Buddhist monk d 1350 Smbat I or Sempad king of Cilician Armenia d 1310 Wei Yilin Chinese physician and surgeon d 1347 1278 March 11 Mary of Woodstock English princess d 1332 May 9 Kokan Shiren Japanese Zen patriarch d 1347 September 8 Theobald II English nobleman d 1316 November 10 Philip I or II Neapolitan prince d 1331 Christopher Seton Scottish nobleman and knight d 1306 Constantine I or III co ruler of Cilician Armenia d 1310 Ferdinand of Majorca Aragonese prince infante d 1316 Hōjō Sadaaki Japanese nobleman and regent d 1333 Jean van Hocsem Belgian monk and historian d 1348 John de Graham Scottish nobleman and knight d 1337 Philip I of Piedmont Latin prince of Achaea d 1334 Rita of Armenia Byzantine empress consort d 1333 Safi al Din al Hilli Persian poet and writer d 1349 Thomas of Lancaster English nobleman d 1322 1279 March 3 Ismail I Nasrid ruler of Granada d 1325 April 5 Al Nuwayri Egyptian encyclopedist d 1333 Abu Asida Muhammad II Hafsid ruler of Tunis d 1309 Anthony Bek English chancellor and bishop d 1343 Hōjō Hirotoki Japanese nobleman and regent d 1315 John I German nobleman House of Hohenzollern d 1300 Louis I the Lame French nobleman and knight d 1341 Muktabai or Mukta Indian religious leader d 1297 Nigel de Brus Scottish nobleman and knight d 1306 Otto I Polish nobleman House of Griffin d 1344 Zahida Abbasiyah Abbasid poet and writer d 1328DeathsTranscluding articles 1270 1271 1272 1273 1274 1275 1276 1277 1278 and 1279 1270 January 18 Saint Margaret of Hungary b 1242 108 February 23 Saint Isabelle of France French princess and saint b 1225 109 March 17 Philip of Montfort Lord of Tyre 110 May 3 Bela IV of Hungary b 1206 111 July 9 Stephen Bancsa Hungarian cardinal b c 1205 112 July 18 Boniface of Savoy Archbishop of Canterbury 113 August 25 King Louis IX of France b 1214 114 Alphonso of Brienne b c 1225 115 September 24 Philip of Montfort Lord of Castres 116 December 4 Theobald II of Navarre Theobald V of Champagne b c 1238 117 David VII Ulu King of Georgia b 1215 118 Ibn Abi Usaibia Syrian Arab medical historian b 1203 119 Isaac ben Moses of Vienna Jewish rabbi and scholar b 1200 120 Roger Bigod 4th Earl of Norfolk b 1212 121 Uli I of Mali second mansa of the Mali Empire 122 1271 January 17 Joan of Chiny French noblewoman b 1205 January 28 Isabella of Aragon queen of France b 1248 February 9 Beatrix of Merania German princess b 1210 March 13 Henry of Cornwall English nobleman b 1235 March 21 Ibn Sab in Andalusian philosopher and mystic April 17 Isabella of France queen of Navarre b 1241 July 1 Bartholomew of Braganca Italian friar and bishop July 28 Walter de Burgh or Bourke Norman nobleman August 21 Alphonse son of Louis VIII the Lion b 1220 August 25 Joan of Toulouse French noblewoman b 1220 September 1 Annibaldo degli Annibaldi Italian theologian September 9 Yaroslav III Kievan Grand Prince b 1230 October 17 Steinvor Sighvatsdottir Icelandic female poet October 19 Philip Basset English chief justiciar b 1185 Al Mansur al Hasan Yemeni imam and politician b 1199 Arnaldo de Peralta Aragonese archbishop and statesman Constantine Palaiologos Byzantine nobleman and co ruler Ghiyas ud din Baraq Mongol ruler of the Chagatai Khanate Haji Bektash Veli Persian philosopher and mystic b 1209 Henry of Segusio Italian jurist and cardinal bishop b 1200 Lauretta of Saarbrucken German noblewoman and regent Maria of Chernigov Kievan princess and regent b 1212 Marsilio Zorzi Venetian statesman Count of Curzola and Meleda 123 Richard de Grey English nobleman constable and knight Roger de Leybourne English nobleman and High Sheriff Stephen the Posthumous Hungarian pretender b 1236 Vardan Areveltsi Armenian historian and writer b 1198 1272 January 6 Alfonso of Molina Leonese prince b 1202 March 14 Enzo of Sardinia king of Sardinia b 1218 March 17 Go Saga emperor of Japan b 1220 March 18 John FitzAlan English nobleman b 1246 April 2 Richard of Cornwall English nobleman b 1209 April 27 Zita or Sitha Italian maid and saint b 1212 May 15 Thomas of Cantimpre Flemish priest b 1201 May 20 Guy de Bourgogne French abbot and cardinal May 27 Eric I Abelson Danish nobleman and knight June 10 Berchtold von Falkenstein German abbot August 6 Stephen V king of Hungary b 1239 August 7 Richard Middleton English Lord Chancellor September 18 Peter III de Brus English nobleman October 10 Yolande of Brittany French noblewoman October 27 Hugh IV French nobleman b 1213 November 16 Henry III king of England b 1207 November 19 David of Augsburg German friar and mystic December 18 Philip Turje Hungarian archbishop b 1218 Amanieu VII French nobleman and knight House of Albret Bartholomeus Anglicus English monk and encyclopedist Berthold of Ratisbon German monk and preacher b 1210 Gerard of Abbeville French monk and theologian b 1220 Guido Guerra V Italian nobleman and politician b 1220 James Audley or Aldithel English high sheriff b 1220 Maud de Prendergast Norman Irish noblewoman b 1242 Nikephoros Blemmydes Byzantine theologian b 1197 William of Saint Amour French philosopher and writer William of Sherwood English philosopher and logician1273 January 22 Muhammad I Nasrid ruler of Granada b 1195 January 25 Odo of Chateauroux French bishop b 1190 April 29 Al Qurtubi Moorish scholar and writer b 1214 June 13 Hōjō Masamura Japanese nobleman b 1205 July 8 Anno von Sangershausen German Grand Master September 15 Henry of Sandwich English bishop b 1204 September 30 Arsenios Autoreianos Byzantine patriarch October 9 Elisabeth of Bavaria queen of Germany b 1227 October 11 Hildebold of Wunstorf German archbishop October 18 George de Cantilupe English nobleman October 23 Adelaide of Burgundy French noblewoman December 17 Rumi Persian scholar and mystic b 1207 Akos Hungarian cleric priest chancellor and chronicler Albert Suerbeer German archbishop and prince bishop Baldwin of Courtenay emperor of the Latin Empire b 1217 George Elmacin Egyptian historian and writer b 1205 Ottaviano degli Ubaldini Italian bishop and cardinal b 1214 Robert de Keldeleth Scottish monk abbot and chancellor Robert Walerand English nobleman seneschal and judge1274 February 18 Jakob Erlandsen Danish cleric and archbishop February 19 Lal Shahbaz Qalandar Afghan Sufi poet b 1177 February 21 Ibn Malik Moorish grammarian and writer b 1205 March 7 Thomas Aquinas Italian friar and theologian b 1225 April 26 Heinrich von Wartenberg Swiss nobleman and abbot June 3 Lawrence of St Martin English archdeacon and bishop June 26 Nasir al Din al Tusi Persian scientist and writer b 1201 July 15 Bonaventure Italian theologian and philosopher b 1221 July 22 Henry I or Henry III king of Navarre House of Blois July 23 Wonjong of Goryeo Korean prince and ruler b 1219 August 4 Robert Stitchill or Stichel English prior and bishop August 12 Du Zong or Zhao Qi Chinese emperor b 1240 August 15 Robert de Sorbon French chaplain and theologian September 2 Munetaka Japanese prince and shogun b 1242 October 14 Henry English prince and son of Edward I b 1268 November 4 Sō Sukekuni Japanese governor jitodai b 1207 November 8 Fujiwara no Akiuji Japanese nobleman b 1207 November 10 Aveline de Forz English noblewoman b 1259 November 28 Philip of Castile son of Ferdinand III b 1231 Arnold Fitz Thedmar English merchant and chronicler b 1201 Beatrice of Montferrat Italian noblewoman and regent b 1210 Gilbert of Preston English nobleman and chief justice b 1209 Henry I Koszegi the Great Hungarian nobleman b 1210 124 Liu Bingzhong Chinese court advisor and architect b 1216 Sadr al Din al Qunawi Seljuk philosopher and writer b 1207 William of Douglas Longleg Scottish nobleman b 1220 1275 January 6 Raymond of Penyafort Spanish priest b 1175 January 26 Ulrich von Liechtenstein German poet b 1200 February 8 Paio Peres Correia Portuguese Grand Master February 11 Urania of Worms German Jewish precentress February 26 Margaret of England queen of Scotland b 1240 March 5 Shi Tianze Chinese general and politician b 1202 March 9 Fujiwara no Chōshi Japanese empress b 1218 March 24 Beatrice of England countess of Richmond b 1242 April 13 Eleanor of England countess of Leicester b 1215 May 6 Marie of Brienne Latin empress and regent b 1224 May 21 Cecile of Baux Savoyan noblewoman and regent May 29 Sophie of Thuringia duchess of Brabant b 1224 June 17 Arghun Aqa the Elder Mongol nobleman b 1210 August 15 Lorenzo Tiepolo or Theupolo doge of Venice September 8 Nuno Gonzalez de Lara Spanish nobleman September 24 Humphrey IV de Bohun English nobleman October 21 Sancho of Aragon archbishop of Toledo b 1250 October 23 Ferdinand de la Cerda Spanish prince b 1255 November 23 Margaret of Bar French noblewoman b 1220 December 17 Eric Birgersson Swedish nobleman b 1250 Beatrice of Sicily Latin empress of Constantinople b 1252 Bernard IV of Lippe German nobleman and knight b 1230 Bohemond VI the Fair Outremer prince and knight b 1237 Dietrich VI of Meissen German nobleman and knight b 1226 Fujiwara no Tameie Japanese waka poet and writer b 1198 Geoffrey of Briel or Bruyeres Achaean nobleman b 1223 Jia Sidao Chinese politician and Grand Chancellor b 1213 John FitzJohn English nobleman and rebel leader b 1240 Kujō Tadaie Japanese nobleman and chancellor b 1229 Luca Grimaldi Genoese troubadour politician and diplomat Paul Balog Hungarian vice chancellor and bishop b 1227 William of Luxi priest preacher theologian and biblical exegete DOB unknown 125 Xueting Fuyu Chinese Buddhist monk and abbot b 1203 1276 January 10 Gregory X pope of the Catholic Church b 1210 126 January 24 Walram II of Nassau German nobleman b 1220 March 26 Margaret of Holland Dutch noblewoman b 1234 May 11 Zaynaddin ibn al Ajami Ayyubid scholar b 1195 June 22 Innocent V pope of the Catholic Church b 1220 June 27 Henry of Antioch Outremer nobleman b 1217 July 27 James I the Conqueror king of Aragon b 1208 August 18 Adrian V pope of the Catholic Church b 1215 September 6 Vicedomino de Vicedominis Italian cardinal November 30 Hōjō Sanetoki Japanese nobleman b 1224 Ahmad al Badawi Almohad Sufi scholar and mystic b 1200 Benedict III Hungarian priest vice chancellor and archbishop Ela Longespee English noblewoman and co heiress b 1244 Gerardo of Borgo San Donnino Italian friar scholar and writer Guido Guinizelli Italian poet and founder of Dolce Stil Novo Louis of France French prince and heir apparent b 1264 Hamuro Mitsutoshi Japanese nobleman and poet b 1203 Mathilde of Saarbrucken German noblewoman and regent Najm al Din al Qazwini al Katibi Persian scholar and writer Rolandino of Padua Italian scholar jurist and writer b 1200 Vasily of Kostroma Grand Prince of Vladimir Suzdal b 1241 1277 January 12 Philippe de Toucy French nobleman January 17 Chen Wenlong Chinese general b 1232 February 14 Ulrich von Guttingen German abbot May 1 Stefan Uros I the Great king of Serbia May 14 Nicholas I of Werle German nobleman May 20 John XXI pope of the Catholic Church July 1 Baibars or Abu al Futuh Mamluk sultan July 14 Humbert of Romans French friar and writer August 2 Mu in al Din Parwana Seljuk statesman September 29 Balian of Arsuf Cypriot nobleman October 17 Beatrice of Falkenburg German queen October 26 Mastino I della Scala Italian nobleman October 27 Walter de Merton bishop of Rochester December 21 Al Nawawi Seljuk scholar b 1233 December 13 John I German nobleman b 1242 Constantine I Tikh Bulgarian nobleman and ruler Folke Johansson Angelus Swedish archbishop Frederick II German nobleman House of Isenburg Frederick of Castile Spanish prince infante b 1223 Guo Kan Chinese general and politician b 1217 Jacopo da Leona Italian secretary jurist and poet Joachim Gutkeled Hungarian nobleman and knight 127 Licoricia of Winchester English businesswoman Madog II ap Gruffydd Welsh prince and nobleman Mehmet I of Karaman Seljuk nobleman and vizier Muhammad I al Mustansir Hafsid sultan and writer Muhaqqiq al Hilli Persian scholar poet and writer Paolo Navigajoso Venetian nobleman megadux Philip of Sicily king of Sardinia House of Anjou Savakanmaindan Malayan ruler of Tambralinga Simone Paltanieri Italian archpriest and cardinal Squarcino Borri or Scarsini Italian condottiero Ulrich of Strasburg German monk and theologian William of Saliceto Italian scholar and physician1278 January 3 Ladislaus II Kan Hungarian nobleman and knight January 22 Roger de Skerning English monk and bishop March 16 William IV German nobleman and knight b 1210 May 1 William II of Villehardouin prince of Achaea b 1211 May 8 Duan Zong or Zhao Shi Chinese emperor b 1270 June 30 Pierre de la Broce French nobleman and councilor August 16 Napoleone della Torre or Napo Italian nobleman August 26 Ottokar II Bohemian nobleman and king b 1233 November 13 Barnim I German nobleman House of Griffin Andrew Hungarian nobleman and prince House of Arpad Bertrand de Saint Martin French cardinal and archbishop Boleslaw II the Horned Polish nobleman House of Piast Geoffrey Chauderon Latin nobleman and Grand Constable Lancelot de Saint Maard French nobleman and marshal Lanxi Daolong Chinese monk and calligrapher b 1213 Ly Chieu Hoang Vietnamese empress consort b 1218 Martin of Opava or Poland Polish bishop and chronicler Robert de Chauncy English cleric bishop and high sheriff Sambor II of Tczew German nobleman prince and knight Stephen II Bancsa Hungarian prelate and bishop b 1240 Tudur ap Ednyfed Fychan Welsh nobleman and politician Ubertino Pallavicini Italian nobleman House of Pallavicini 1279 February 16 Afonso III the Boulonnais king of Portugal b 1210 March 5 Ernst von Ratzeburg German knight and Grand Master March 16 Joan of Dammartin Spanish queen consort b 1220 128 March 19 Lu Xiufu or Junshi Chinese Grand Chancellor b 1236 Zhao Bing Chinese emperor House of Zhao b 1272 March 24 Rinchen Gyaltsen Tibetan imperial preceptor b 1238 April 2 Abel Abelson Danish nobleman and landowner b 1252 May 7 Alberto da Bergamo Italian Dominican friar b 1214 May 28 William Wishart or Wischard Scottish bishop b 1225 July 15 William Langton or Rotherfield English archdeacon July 22 Philip of Spanheim German archbishop and patriarch August 15 Albert I the Great German nobleman b 1236 September 3 Etienne Tempier French bishop and chancellor September 11 Robert Kilwardby English archbishop b 1215 September 18 Ulrich II German nobleman and ruler b 1254 December 7 Boleslaus V the Chaste Polish nobleman b 1226 December 18 Richard of Gravesend English priest and bishop Ajall Shams al Din Omar Persian governor and ruler b 1211 David de Lindsay Scottish nobleman and Lord Chamberlain Gilla in Choimded o Cerbaillain or Germanus Irish bishop Li Ye or Li Zhi Chinese mathematician and writer b 1192 Robert de Ferrers English nobleman and landowner b 1239 Walter Giffard English Lord Chancellor and archbishop b 1225 References edit Conte Joseph J 2008 The 14th and Final Crusade to the Middle East Crusades from the 11th Century to the 21st Century Bloomington IN AuthorHouse p 14 ISBN 9781452055466 of Beaulieu Geoffrey of Chartres William 2013 Gaposchkin M Cecilia Field Sean L eds The Sanctity of Louis IX Early Lives of Saint Louis by 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p 72 ISBN 9781465316998 Aydin Sami 2016 1996 A History of Medicine Byzantine and Islamic medicine Aristoteles Semitico Latinus Vol 24 Leiden Boston Horatius Press p 200 ISBN 9781888456042 Fishman Talya 2011 Becoming the People of the Talmud Oral Torah as Written Tradition in Medieval Jewish Cultures Philadelphia University of Pennsylvania Press p 156 ISBN 9780812222876 Fairclough John 2008 Bigods at Walton Hall and their Successors PDF Proceedings of the Suffolk Institute of Archaeology and History 41 4 418 Babb J 2018 A World History of Political Thought Cheltenham and Northampton MA Edward Elgar Publishing ISBN 9781786435538 Mazzon Martino 2020 ZORZI Marsilio Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani Volume 100 Vittorio Emanuele I Zurlo in Italian Rome Istituto dell Enciclopedia Italiana ISBN 978 8 81200032 6 Szucs Jeno 2002 Az utolso Arpadok The Last Arpads in Hungarian Osiris Kiado ISBN 963 389 271 6 Luxi Postilla super Baruch pp xiii xiv Blessed Gregory X pope Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 10 May 2022 Marko Laszlo 2006 A magyar allam fomeltosagai Szent Istvantol napjainkig Eletrajzi Lexikon Great Officers of State in Hungary from King Saint Stephen to Our Days A Biographical Encyclopedia in Hungarian Helikon Kiado p 356 ISBN 963 547 085 1 Douglas Richardson Kimball G Everingham Plantagenet Ancestry A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families page 192 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1270s amp oldid 1185455504, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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