February 9 – At
Dublin, acting in his capacity as
Lord of Ireland, King Edward II of England (as Éadbhard II Shasana, Tiarna Éireann) opens the first session of the
Parliament of Ireland during his administration. The Irish Parliament will hold 14 sessions before being dismissed in
1326.
March 5 –
Baybars II, Sultan of the Mamluks in Egypt, is driven from office by an angry mob consisting of supporters of his predecessor,
An-Nasir Muhammad. Baybars is located and turned over to Sultan Nasir.
April 13 – In Burma,
Athinkhaya, one of the three brothers serving as
regents of the
Kingdom of Myinsaing in present-day central Burma (Myanmar), dies at the age of 49, leaving his brothers
Thihathu and
Yazathingyan in control. Thihathu will soon be the sole ruler of Burma.
April 15 – Sultan An-Nasir Muhammad of Egypt has his predecessor, the former Sultan
Baybars II, executed.
May 9 –
Nephon I of Constantinople becomes the new Patriarch of the Eastern Orthodox Church in
Byzantium, now at Turkey. He is elected after his predecessor, the 80-year-old
Athanasius I, is forced to retire.
May 12 – In
France, 54 members of the
Knights Templar are burned at the stake for
heresy at
Paris, on orders of King
Philip IV of France (Philip the Fair). Pope
Clement V attempts to take control of the situation by issuing a papal bull, to assert the Church's authority over the matter and demands Philip turn over the Templars and their property to ecclesiastical officials, who will then try the Templars for charges themselves.[4]
May 26 –
Siege of Algeciras: Castilian forces abandon the siege as King
Ferdinand IV of Castile ("Ferdinand the Summoned") sign a seven-year peace treaty with
Abu al-Juyush Nasr, Sultan of Granada. Nasr agrees to pay an indemnity of 150,000 gold
doblas and an annual tribute of 11,000 doblas to
Castile. He yields some frontier towns, including
Quesada and
Bedmar. In accordance with the terms, Nasr becomes a vassal of Castile and provides up to 3 months of military service per year if summoned. Markets will be opened between Castile and Granada – Ferdinand appoints a "judge of the frontiers" (juez de la frontera) to adjudicate disputes between Christians and Muslims in the border regions.[5]
June 14 – Leading Venetian nobles led by
Bajamonte Tiepolo organise a conspiracy against Doge
Pietro Gradenigo. Their plot fails due to treachery and the rebels are defeated near
Piazza San Marco by forces faithful to the doge on
June 15. During their retreat to the
San Polo sestiere, the
Rialto Bridge is burnt down. Later, Tiepolo surrenders himself and is exiled to
Istria.
June 23 – General
Malik Kafur arrives at
Delhi and presents to Sultan Alauddin the treasures captured from Warrangal.[6]
July 10 – The
Council of Ten (or simply "the Ten"), Il Consiglio dei Dieci is created to govern the
Republic of Venice, by decree of
Pietro Gradenigo, Doge of Venice. The council, the inner circle of oligarchical
patricians, initially investigates the conspiracy of Bajamonte Tiepolo.[8]
Spring – Castilian forces abandon the
siege of Algeciras after six months and begin negotiations with
Granada. Ferdinand and Sultan sign a peace treaty for seven years on
May 26.
February 12 –
Milan Uprising: German forces under
Baldwin of Luxembourg (brother of Henry VII) crush the Italian Guelph troops, led by
Guido della Torre in Milan. A contingent of
Teutonic Knights kills and disperses most of the rebels in a single cavalry charge. Guido della Torre escapes, and is condemned to death in absence by Henry.[11]
In Asia,
Ayurbarwada Buyantu Khan is proclaimed as the Mongol Emperor Renzong of Yuan Dynasty China, 10 weeks after the death of his brother,
Külüg Khan.
Bolad, who had served as the Mongol Empire's representative in the Middle East as Ikhanate, is appointed as the Duke of Ze by the Mongol Emperor of Yuan dynasty China, Ayurbarwada Buyantu Khan
July 13 –
Matteo I Visconti is restored to rule over the
Duchy of Milan after purchasing the title of imperial vicar from the new King of Italy, Henry VII.
July 25 – At Algeciras a fleet of Marinid ships, arrives after being sent by Morocco's Sultan
Abu Sa'id Uthman II, who was attempting to restore the Muslim presence.[16]
September 16 – After a four-month siege, Guelph rebels in the Italian city of
Brescia surrender to
Cangrande I della Scala, Lord of Verona and officer of King Henry VII.
October – December
October 3 – Peace is restored in northeastern Hungary as the envoys of King Charles I arbitrate and agreement between the rebels at
Košice and the two sons of the late
Amadeus Aba, Amadeus II and Dominic.
October 16 –
Council of Vienne:
Pope Clement V convokes the 15th Ecumenical Council at
Vienne, France, in the presence of 20 cardinals, about 100 archbishops and bishops, and a number of abbots and priors. The main item on the agenda of the council is the Order of the
Knights Templar. Clement passes papal bulls to dissolve the Templar Order, confiscate their lands, and label them as
heretics.[19]
October 28 – King Ferdinand IV of Castile signs the Concord of Palencia with the principal magnates of the rest of the kingdom (including his brother, Prince John of Castile), promising to respect the customs and privileges of the subjects of his towns, and as well as to not deprive the nobles of the rents and lands that belong to the Crown.
November 5 – Eight days after the signing of the Concord of Palencia, John of Castile violates his promise to his nephew Ferdinand IV and enters into an alliance with Juan Núñez II de Lara.
November 13 – (1 Ocho, 22nd day of 9th month) Munenobu Hojo becomes the regent for the Kamakura Shogunate.
January 13 – English royal favourite
Piers Gaveston, having returned secretly from two months exile on the continent, is reunited, probably at
Knaresborough Castle, with King
Edward II, who on January 18 restores all Gaveston's confiscated lands to him. They plan to travel to
Scotland to seek help from King
Robert the Bruce.
February 7 – In Scotland,
Dungal MacDouall is forced to surrender
Dumfries Castle to the forces of King Robert the Bruce.[20] Despite having helped in the murder of King Robert's brothers in 1308, Dungal is allowed to go into exile rather than being put to death.
February 20 –
Öljaitü, the Ikhanate of the Mongol Empire's territory in the Middle East, carries out a purge of corrupt officials, with the arrest and execution of his vizier, Sa'd al-Din Savaji and one of Sa'd al-Din's closest aides, Taj al-Din Avaji,
February 29 – The division of
Greater Poland (Wielkopolska) is carried out by the sons of
Henry III, Duke of Silesia-Glogau, with Konrad I and Bolesław receiving the eastern portion of Henry III's lands, and Henry IV, Jan and Przemko II retaining the rest.
April 4 – At the
Council of Vienne in France,
a future Christian Crusade against a Muslim nation is approved by the 180 participants in the 15th Roman Catholic ecumenical council (including 20 cardinals and 122 bishops), convened by Pope
Clement V. While agreeing that a Crusade should take place within one year, the parties disagree over where it should take place, with suggestions of attacking the Spanish
Emirate of Granada, the
Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia, or the Sultanate of Egypt. Although
tithes will be collected from Catholic churches to support the venture, the proposed crusade never takes place.[22]
April 10 – The threat of a takeover by the Kingdom of France against the sovereign French
Archdiocese of Lyon is ended when the
Archbishop Pierre de Savoie signs a treaty granting King Philip the Fair the authority to administer the Lyon courts and law enforcement system.[23]
May 6 – The
Council of Vienne (convened in the southeastern French town of
Vienne, in the modern-day département of
Isère) is closed by
Pope Clement V almost seven months after opening on October 16. During its session, the
Knights Templar organization was outlawed, the matter of a posthumous trial against the late Pope Boniface VIII was tabled and forgotten about, and a pledge was made to raise tithes and offerings for a new crusade to someday be made against the Muslims. A medieval historian, John of Saint-Victor, writes later that "It was said by many that the council was created for the purpose of extorting money."[25]
May 19 – Scarborough Castle is captured by English forces under the command of
Aymer de Valence, 2nd Earl of Pembroke after a two week siege with the surrender of
Piers Gaveston, after Aymer gives his word that Gaveston will not be harmed.
June 15 –
Battle of Rozgony: Hungarian forces led by King
Charles I defeat the family of Palatine
Amadeus Aba near
Rozgony. During the battle, Charles losses his royal standard, but is reinforced by German mercenaries from
Košice (now part of the
Republic of Slovakia). The rebel army is routed, and Charles extends his power base in
Hungary. His position is secured and resistance (reduced by the magnates' opposition) against Charles' rule comes to an end.[28]
July 6 (1
Showa, 2nd day of 6th month) – Hirotoki Hojo becomes the regent for the Kamakura Shogunate in Japan.
July 8 – In Italy,
Francesco I Pico, Lord of
Mirandola, is captured at Baggiovara by Guelph rebels in
Bologna, while on his way home to Mirandola after being invested by the
Holy Roman Emperor, Henry VII as imperial vicar. Pico is imprisoned for the next nine months before being released to resume his Lordship.
King
Ferdinand IV of Castile leaves his palace at
Ávila for the last time, placing his son Prince Alfonso in charge, and arrives in
Toledo before proceeding to the
province of Jaén to join his younger brother.
October 13 –
Özbeg Khan, the Mongol ruler of much of Russia, demands that the Middle East Mongol ruler Öljaitü cede to him the
Azerbaijan territory of modern-day
Iran.
November 13 – Four years after the marriage of King
Edward II of England and Queen consort
Isabella, an heir to the throne is born at
Windsor Castle, and will be christened four days later.
Prince Edward. Upon the death of Edward II in 1327, his son will be crowned King Edward III at the age of 14.
December 23 – At
Avignon in France,
Pope Clement V elevates nine bishops, all French, to the position of Roman Catholic cardinals. The nine include Jacques d'Euse, Bishop of Avignon, who will be elected
Pope John XXII as Clement's successor in 1316.[31]
January 8 – King
Robert the Bruce of Scotland recaptures
Perth Castle from the English, then orders the walls and the building to be destroyed in order to prevent it from ever being used by the English again as a garrison.
February 7 – (12th waxing of Tabaung, 674 ME) In what is now the Mandalay Region of central
Myanmar in Asia, Burmese King
Thihathu proclaims the
Pinya Kingdom, to separate the area from the Myinsaing Kingdom.[32] Thihathu appoints his son,
Kyawswa I of Pinya, to replace him as the Viceroy of Pinle in Myinsaing.
April 22 – On the first Sunday after
Easter, the French ship Ste Marie is shipwrecked on England's
Isle of Wight at
Chale Bay. Residents nearby loot the ship of its cargo, casks of wine belonging to Regimus de Depe of Aquitaine.[33] As an act of
penance, the Lord of Chale, Walder de Godeton, builds the
St Catherine's Oratory.
May 17 –
Robert the Bruce, King of Scotland, leads an invasion of the
Isle of Man, landing at
Ramsey with a multitude of ships and captures it within five days. The only resistance is presented by the lord of
Castle Rushen, and King Robert concentrates his efforts on a siege of the castle starting on May 22.
June 21 – In Germany, peace is made between
Rudolf I, Duke of Bavaria, and his younger brother,
Louis the Bavarian, with Rudolf having control of the Electoral Palatinate, in return for supporting the election of Louis as the next Holy Roman Emperor.
June 24 – From the English garrison at
Stirling Castle in Scottish territory, Sir
Philip Mowbray proposes a truce with
Edward Bruce, brother of King Robert the Bruce of Scotland, after a siege of "many months".[39] Edward Bruce agrees to what Scottish historian
Patrick Fraser Tytler will describe five centuries later as "a truce involving conditions which ought on no account to have been accepted." As Tytler notes, the effect "was to check the ardour of the Scots in that career of success, which was now rapidly leading to the complete deliverance of their country; it gave the King of England a whole year to assemble the strength of his dominions... We need not wonder, then, that Bruce was highly incensed, on hearing that, without consulting him, his brother had agreed to Mowbray's proposals."[40][41]
August 8 – Emperor
Henry VII begins a campaign against
King Robert of Naples ("Robert the Wise"). Henry's allies are loath to join him and his 15,000-man army, supported by 4,000 knights, while the imperial fleet is prepared to attack King Robert's realm directly.
August 24 – A week after contracting
malaria during the siege of the Neapolitan city of
Siena, the Holy Roman Emperor Henry VII dies of
malaria at
Buonconvento. His 17-year-old son,
John of Bohemia, will succeed him and will become one of the seven
prince-electors of the
Holy Roman Empire.[43] Upon learning of the Henry's death,
Louis, Duke of Bavaria goes to war against his cousin,
Frederick the Fair, Duke of Austria and Styria, as both compete to be elected the new Emperor, a competition which will eventually be resolved in favour of Louis.
September 23 – The
English Parliament is called into session for the fourth time in less than 12 months, after three unsuccessful attempts to assemble members. King Edward II persuades the session to pass a tax bill for revenues to be collected by the following June in order to finance a new campaign against Scotland.
October – December
October 21 –
Robert the Bruce,
King of Scotland delivers an ultimatum at a meeting of the Scottish nobles at an assembly in
Dundee, giving Scots who have not yet come into his peace agreement a year to swear fealty to him or lose all their estates.[44][45] The Scottish nobles of
Lothian appeal to Edward II for protection, who promises to bring an English expeditionary force by midsummer in 1314.[46]
December 26 – Three days after receiving authorization from the English Parliament for a feudal levy, King Edward II issues a summons for eight earls and 87 barons to muster their troops at
Berwick-upon-Tweed by June 10 for an invasion of Scotland.[49]
By place
Asia
Tran Anh Tong, emperor of
Annam (Northern
Vietnam), occupies
Champa (Southern Vietnam) and establishes the Cham royal dynasty as puppet rulers.[50]
By topic
Literature
Wang Zhen, Chinese agronomist, government official and inventor of wooden-based
movable type printing, publishes the Nong Shu ("Book of Agriculture").[51]
January 17 – Queen Oljath, who had been the Queen consort of the
Kingdom of Georgia as wife of
King Vakhtang II (d. 1292), and then his cousin,
King David VIII (d. 1302), marries a third time, taking as her husband Qara Sonqur, Governor of
Maragheh (now in the East Azerbaijan province of Iran), in exchange for a
dowry of 30,000 dinars.[53]
January 21 – (3 Shawwal 713 AH)
Muhammad III of Granada, who had been the Sultan from 1302 to 1309, is murdered by being drowned in the pool of the Dar al-Kubra, on orders of his brother, the Sultan Nasr.[54] Nasr himself is forced to abdicate 18 days later.
February 27 – Walter de Godeton, Lord of Chale, is convicted of theft arising from the April 20, 1313 incident of the plundering of wine from a ship wrecked on the
Isle of Wight, and fined 287 marks.
March –
Tour de Nesle Affair: After confirmation that two of his sons' wives are engaged in
adultery, King Philip IV the Fair of France orders the arrest of his daughters-in-law,
Margaret of Burgundy (the wife of
Prince Louis X);
Blanche of Burgundy (wife of
Prince Charles of Valois), and
Joan II, Countess of Burgundy (wife of
Prince Philip V). The arrests come after the accusations of King Philip's daughter,
Isabella, Queen consort of England, and surveillance of the Tower of Nesle.[56] The two knights arrested for adultery,
Philip of Aunay and Walter of Aunay, are imprisoned as well. Joan II is charged with being an accessory for being aware of the crime and not reporting it, and put under house arrest until after King Philip's death later in the year. Blanche is imprisoned at the
Château Gaillard until 1322. Margaret will die of illness in prison a year later, and five months after technically becoming Queen consort of France.[57] Philip of Aunay and Walter of Aunay will be tortured and executed.[58]
April 19 –
Philip of Aunay and his older brother Walter de Aunay, convicted of adultery with Margaret of Burgundy and Blanch of Burgundy, respectively, both of whom are two daughters-in-law of King Philip IV of France, are executed. The manner of their execution is particularly brutal, following torture at the Place du Grand Martroy in
Pontoise.[59]
May 1 – The
papal conclave to elect a successor to Pope Clement V begins at the
Carpentras Cathedral with 23 Roman Catholic cardinals in attendance, of whom the votes of 16 are necessary to elect a new Pontiff. The cardinals are divided into three factions, none of which have more than eight people, with a group from
Italy (led by Guillaume de Mandagot), who want to move the papacy back to
Rome; nine from
Gascony, most of whom are relatives of Pope Clement (led by
Arnaud de Pellegrue); and five from
Provence (led by
Berengar Fredol). The Italian cardinals walk out three months later after being harassed and threaten to elect their own Pope. The conclave will not meet again for two years, during which time there is no Pope.
May 14 – In Italy, more than 50 of the
Fraticelli spiritualists of the Franciscan order of Tuscany are
excommunicated from the Roman Catholic Church by the Archbishop of Genoa after refusing to return to obedience to the Pope.[61]
June 19 – English forces march to the environs of
Edinburgh, here Edward II waits for the wagon train of over 200 baggage and supply wagons – which straggle behind the long columns, to catch up. At the nearby port of
Leith, English supply ships land stores for the army – who will be well rested before the 35-mile march that will bring them to Stirling Castle, before the deadline of
June 24.[63]
June 23 – English forces approach the Scottish positions at
Torwood, mounted troops under
Gilbert de Clare are confronted by Scottish forces and repulsed. During the fierce fighting,
Henry de Bohun is killed in a duel by King
Robert the Bruce. Edward II and forward elements, mainly cavalry, encamp at
Bannockburn. The baggage train and the majority of the forces arrive in the evening.[64]
June 24 –
Battle of Bannockburn: Scottish forces (some 8,000 men) led by
Robert the Bruce defeat the English army at Bannockburn. During the battle, the Scottish pikemen formed in
schiltrons (or
phalanx) repulses the English cavalry (some 2,000 men). Edward II flees with his bodyguard (some 500 men), while panic spreads among the remaining forces, turning their defeat into a rout.[65][66]
July 14 – The Italian cardinals participating in the
papal conclave in France walk out after weeks of harassment by supporters of a French candidate for pope. The rest of the College of Cardinals disperse to
Avignon, seat of the Papacy;
Orange, now in the
département of
Vaucluse, and
Valence in the now in the département of
Drôme.
Amda Seyon I, known as "the Pillar of Zion" begins his reign as
Emperor of Ethiopia, during which he expands into Muslim territory to the southeast. He enlarges his kingdom by incorporating a number of smaller states.[73]
January 20 – The English Parliament is convened at Lincoln to hear the reading of the Articuli Cleri, the list of grievances against the church in England. The parliament ends on March 9.
February 12 – Italian sculptor
Tino di Camaino is commissioned by the
Republic of Pisa to create the statue of the late
Enrico VII di Lussemburgo (Henry VII, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Italy), to be finished in less than six months for the August 24 dedication of Henry's tomb. Camaino delivers the work by July 26. [75]
February 15 –
John of Argyll reports to King Edward II of England that he and his army have recovered the
Isle of Man and expelled the Scottish occupiers. Archibald A. M. Duncan, ed., Acts of Robert I (1306-1329) (Edinburgh University Press, 1988) p.378
March 4 – (4 Dhu al-Hijjah 714 AH) The
Emir of Mecca,
Abu al-Ghayth, is defeated in a battle near Mecca by his brother
Humaydah ibn Abi Numayy. [76] Wounded in battle, then captured by the enemy, Abu al-Ghayth is executed by order of his brother at Khayf Bani Shadid.
Margaret of Burgundy, technically the
Queen consort of France as the wife of
King Louis X, dies in the
Château Gaillard prison after a year of incarceration, due to her 1314 conviction for adultery. Unable to have the marriage nullified because a new Pope had not been installed, King Louis left Margaret imprisoned. [80]
July 24 –
Otto II, Prince of Anhalt-Aschersleben, dies without leaving any heirs, bringing an end to the Principality. His assets are seized by his cousin and creditor, Bishop Albert of Halberstadt.[84]
July 28 – King Louis X of France issues a charter in allowing expelled Jews to come back to France, but under strict conditions. The French Jews will be allowed to stay in the country for 12 years, after which their right to remain will be reviewed. For identification, Jewish people are required to wear armbands in public, can only live in designated communities and are forbidden from
usury. Through this, the Jewish community will depend upon the king for their right to protection.[85] In December, Sultan
Ismail I of Granada implements similar rules for the Jews in the Spanish kingdom, directing Jews to wear a
yellow badge in public.[86]
July 31 – King Louis X mobilizes an army along the Flemish border. He prohibits the export of grain and other goods to
Flanders – which proves challenging to enforce. [87] Louis pressures officers of the Church at the borderlands, as well as King
Edward II, to support his effort to prevent Spanish merchant vessels from trading with the embargoed Flemish cities.[88]
August 10 – As the
Great Famine of 1315–1317 spreads through England and much of western Europe, King Edward II witnesses the full extent when he and his entourage stop at
St Albans and find bread and other food unavailable. A combination of heavy rains and unseasonably cold weather had led to crop failure when grain could not ripen for harvest, followed by the death of livestock from starvation, and the sharp increase of food prices. [90]
August 24 – The coronation of Louis the Quarrelsome as
King Louis X of France takes place at
Reims, nine months after Louis ascended the throne upon the death of his father, Philip IV.
September 3 – (3 Jumada II 715 AH)
Rumaythah ibn Abi Numayy, the former emir of Mecca, arrives at the court of the Mamluk Sultan of Egypt,
al-Nasir Muhammad in
Cairo. He receives pardon from the Sultan and seeks support against the new Emir,
Humaydah ibn Abi Numayy, who had killed his brother and predecessor,
Abu al-Ghayth. Al-Nasir sends Rumaythah back to
Mecca with an Egyptian army. However, six days before the relief army's arrival, Humaydah pillages and burns the castle at Wadi Marr, and destroys 2,000 date palm trees.
November 17 – The marriage of King
James II of Aragon to Marie of Lusignan is performed in person after Marie has traveled to Spain, with the ceremony taking place at
Girona.
(3 Jumada II 715 AH)
Rumaythah ibn Abi Numayy arrives at Mecca with an Egyptian Army, led by the emirs Najm al-Din Damurkhan ibn Qaraman and Sayf al-Din Taydamur al-Jamadar, then spends two weeks in making plans to drive out the Emir
Humaydah ibn Abi Numayy. They loot Humaydah's castle at al-Khalf wal-Khulayf, plunder the wealth inside and capture his 12-year-old son, but Humaydah himself escapes to Iraq.
January 28 –
Llywelyn Bren leads a revolt against
English rule in Wales. After disregarding an order to appear before King
Edward II, Llywelyn Bren raises a rebel army and lays siege to
Caerphilly Castle. [96] The revolt spreads throughout the south
Wear Cove (the Wales valley), and other castles are attacked. Edward sends an expeditionary force led by
Humphrey de Bohun to suppress the rebellion. In March, after a battle at
Morgraig Castle Llywelyn Bren is forced to break off the Caerphilly siege after six weeks and surrenders on March 18. [97]
February 22 –
Battle of Picotin: Catalan forces led by Prince
Ferdinand of Majorca, claimant to the
Principality of Achaea, defeat the army of Princess
Matilda of Hainaut, on the
Peloponnese. During the battle, the Catalans kill 500 Burgundians and 700 native troops. The remnants of the Princess's army withdraw in haste, pursued by the Catalan cavalry; before they turn back to loot the abandoned Achaean camp.[101]
August 5 –
Battle of Gransee: A North German-Danish alliance, led by
Henry II, Lord of Mecklenburg ("Henry the Lion"), decisively defeats the forces under
Waldemar the Great at
Schulzendorf. [107] During the battle, Waldemar escapes the battlefield, but his army – which consists largely of knights in armor — is massacred. Later, the victorious alliance negotiates a peace treaty at
Zehdenick.
October 30 – A papal court in
Avignon, with Cardinal
Berengar Fredol the Elder presiding, rules that
Juan Fernández was properly elected Bishop of
León (now in Spain), dismissing a challenge by Juan García. Fernández had been elected a year before, but his confirmation by the Pope was delayed because of the challenge. Before Fernández can travel to Avignon, however, he passes away on December 17.
November 16 –
John of the House of Capet is born four months after the death of his father, King
Louis X of France and, as the eldest (and only) son of King Louis, becomes King John I of France from the moment of his birth, with his uncle,
Prince Philip the Tall, serving as regent. John dies, four days after his birth, on November 20. [109]
November 20 – Upon the death of the infant John I, Philip the Tall, eldest surviving brother of King Louis X of France, becomes
King Philip V
January 9 – The 23-year-old
Philip the Tall, younger brother of the late King
Louis X of France, is hastily crowned
King of France, as King Philip V, at
Rheims. The only son of King Louis X had been born posthumously, but died after four days. Supporters of King Louis felt that his eldest daughter,
Joan II of Navarre, should have been crowned as the monarch. Mass protests follow in
Artois,
Champagne and
Burgundy. The coronation of a brother, instead of the eldest daughter, as the successor to the throne sets the precedent for the
Salic law, providing that the eldest male heir inherits the throne.[111][112] Philip V reorganizes the French army by extending the military obligations of the realm. Each town and castellany is responsible for providing a specified number of fully equipped troops – such as sergeants and infantry militias, while towns in economically advanced areas like
Flanders become a major source of men and money. At the same time, the arriére ban (military recruitment) is generally commuted in favour for taxation.[113]
February 1 –
Manuel Pessanha of
Genoa is appointed as the first Chief
Admiral of Portugal (Almirante-mor) by
King Denis, and charged with organizing a permanent navy for the kingdom, with 20 warships and hiring Genoese captains to recruit sailors. The organization of the
Portuguese Royal Navy is completed by December 12.
February 16 – (10th day of 1st month of 6
Shōwa) An earthquake of estimated 7.0 magnitude strikes
Kyoto. On February 22, an aftershock of 6.0 magnitude follows the first quake.
March 23 – In France,
Hugues Géraud, the Roman Catholic Bishop of
Cahors, is arrested along with plotting to assassinate Pope John XXII (with poisoned bread) and to use evil magic against him and two of his advisors,
Bertrand du Pouget and
Gaucelme de Jean. Following a trial, Géraud is convicted of witchcraft and sacrilege, and executed on August 30.
May 22 – Pursuant to the papal order of April 27, the first of the Spiritual Franciscans (Fraticelli) appear before Pope John XXII to be confronted over their disobedience.[119]
June 13 – Cardinal
Jacques de Via, Bishop of Avignon and nephew of Pope John XXII, is found dead. A court will conclude on August 30 that de Via was murdered by
witchcraft.
August 21 –
Hugues Géraud, the Catholic Bishop of Cahors who is implicated in a plot to assassinate
Pope John XXII, is personally questioned by the Pope. Géraud is convicted on August 30 of witchcraft, sacrilege and the June 13 murder of Cardinal
Jacques de Via, and is burned at the stake as punishment.
October 7 – Pope John XXII issues the bull Quorundam exigit, imposing a more lenient treatment of supporters of the Franciscan cause of "unconditional poverty".[116]
A Hungarian document mentions for the first time
Basarab I as leader of
Wallachia (historians estimate he was on the throne since about
1310). Basarab will become the first
voivode of Wallachia as an independent state, and founder of the
House of Basarab (until
1352).[124]
The
Great Famine of 1315–1317 comes to an end. Crop harvests return to normal – but it will be another five years before food supplies are completely replenished in
Northern Europe. Simultaneously, the people are so weakened by diseases such as
pneumonia,
bronchitis, and
tuberculosis. Historians debate the toll, but it is estimated that 10–25% of the population of many cities and towns dies.[125]
January 23 –
Pope John XXII issues the papal bull Gloriosam ecclesiam, excommunicating the
Fraticelli, or Spiritual Franciscans from the Roman Catholic Church. The group is known for pursuing strictly the Franciscan ideal of Apostolic poverty and attempting to force others to do so. The Pope cites as reasons for the excommunication that the adherents are guilty of making accusations of corruption, against the Church, denial of the authority of priests, refusal to take oaths to the church, teaching that priests could not confer sacraments, and claiming to be the only group to be true observers of the Gospel. [126]
March 29 – (Bunpō 2, 26th day of 2nd month) Japan's
Emperor Hanazono abdicates the throne after a 9-year reign. He is succeeded by his cousin,
Go-Daigo, who will rule until
1339).[129]
Pope John XXII creates the
Archdiocese of
Soltaniyeh (now located in northwestern Iran), bringing the Roman Catholic hierarchy to the Ilkhanate in Persia, with the Dominican missionary Francesco da Perugia (Francon de Perouse) as the first Archbishop. [130][131] Francesco and six bishops arrive on August 1.
After the appointment of Guglielmo di Balaeto as rector by Pope John XXII with broad powers before the city of Benevento, the inhabitants rise against the Pope and demand some political autonomy. Finally, the rebellion is crushed by papal forces. [132][133]
May 7 – At the marketplace in the French city of
Marseilles, four of the most defiant members of the
Fraticelli (or Spiritual Franciscans) are found guilty of heresy and burned at the stake. [135][136]
June 18 – The arranged marriage of 6-year-old
Joan of Burgundy and 12-year-old
Philip of Navarre is held as part of a contract for Joan and Philip to eventually become the co-monarchs of Navarre. The two will succeed to the monarchy in
1328.
June 27 – The reign of King Birger of Sweden ends as supporters of his late brothers, Valdemar and Eric, storm the
Nyköping Castle. Birger and his wife flee to
Stegeborg Castle, then flee again when the rebels capture the stronghold in August.
July – September
July 13 –
Rashid al-Din Hamadani, the Grand Vizier of the Ilkhanate in Iran during the reign of the Mongol Ilkhan
Öljaitü, is convicted of the 1316 murder of the Ilkhan, and is executed (along with his son Ibrahim Izzaddin). [140]
July 25 – In Italy,
Jacopo I da Carrara becomes the first
Lord of Padua, founding the
Carraresi dynasty that will rule the independent city state for almost 90 years before its conquest and annexation by the Republic of Venice following a war in
1405.
September 13 –
Pope John XXII appoints a commission of three members (Uberto d'Ormont, Bishop of Naples; Angelo Tignosi, Bishop of Viterbo; and notary Pandulpho de Sabbello) to take evidence on the matter of the
canonization of Thomas Aquinas. Testimony is taken of 42 witnesses between July 21 and September 18, 1319. [142]
January 20 – A convocation at York is held by order of the
Archbishop,
William Melton, after orders sent by him to the Bishops of Durham and of Carlisle on November 28, 1318 to bring all abbots, priors, archdeacons and convents in their jurisdiction to appear before him "in octabis Sancti Hilarii proxime futuris" (on the next octave of Saint Hillary).[144]
February 6 – (14 Dhu al-Hijjah 718 AH)
Rumaythah ibn Abi Numayy and Sayf al-Din Bahadur al-Ibrahimi, both former
Emirs of Mecca, are arrested by the incumbent Emir, Shams al-Din Aq Sunqur al-Nasiri and taken from Mecca to Cairo for imprisonment. Rumaythah is charged with having provided support to his brother, Humaydah ibn Abi Numayy and al-Ibrahimi is accused of allowing Humaydah to escape. Rumaythah is pardoned a month later after arriving in Cairo.
March 14 – The
Military Order of Christ (Ordem Militar de Cristo) is established in Portugal by
King Denis of Portugal after Pope John XXII issues the papal bull Ad ea ex quibus. The new Order is the revival of former
Knights Templar who had aided the Kingdom of Portugal in its post-war reconstruction.[145]
April – June
April 19 –
Philip I, Prince of Taranto, in his capacity as King of Albania, gives the title of
Philip, Despot of Romania to his second eldest son Prince Philip II. Despite the mention of Romania, the despotate is a part of Albania, and the title gives rights of Philip II to
Epirus in Greece.
May 8 –
King Haakon V Magnusson of
Norway dies at the age of 49 with no sons, leaving the throne empty until the nobles can agree on his successor. Havtore Jonsson manages a guardianship government until the nobles choose
Magnus VII Eriksson, son of Haakon's daughter Ingeborg.[146]
June 20 – Within the Mongol Empire,
Özbeg Khan of the
Golden Horde (the Mongol-controlled area of what is now Uzbekistan and Russia) fights a battle against the
Ilkhanate (the Mongol-controlled Middle East) in an attempt to expand the Golden Horde's territory, with a confrontation in Ilkhanate territory at
Mianeh (now in Iran).[147] The troops of
Özbeg Khan are supplemented with rebels led by an Ilkhanate prince,
Yasa'ur. The Ilkhan Sultan,
Abu Sa'id Bahadur Khan and his general,
Amir Chupan, lead the defenders to victory and take many of the rebel officers prisoner. Afterward, 36 emirs and seven viceroys are executed for treason, including
Qurumushi of Georgia and
Irinjin of Anatolia.
June 25 –
Battle of the Vega of Granada: Castilian forces of 12,000 troops, led by the regents
Don Pedro of Castile and
Don Juan of Castile are defeated by a Moorish relief army at
Granada during their attempt . Both regents are killed in the fighting. Pedro and Juan had summoned their Catilian vassals to assemble an expeditionary army in
Córdoba, as part of an attempt to restore the deposed Sultan Nasr to the Granadan throne.[148]
July 21 –
Canonization of Thomas Aquinas: The taking of testimony from more than 40 witnesses is started by Bishop Uberto d'Ormont of Naples, Bishop Angelo Tignosi of Viterbo, and notary Pandulpho de Sabbello, and will continue until September 18. [142]
September 6 – As a reward for his victory at the Battle of Mianeh, General Chupan of the Ilkhanate is allowed to marry
Sati Beg, the sister of the Ilkhanate Sultan Abu Sa'id.[149]
September 13 –
Pope John XXII issues the
papal bull "Imminente Nobis", declaring that the Pope has the right of appointment to all clerical offices (archbishops, bishops, abbots, priors and collegiate and monasterial leaders) in the Roman Catholic Church, ending the right of the individual chapters to elect their own leaders.[150]
September 20 –
Battle of Myton: Scottish forces (some 15,000 men) led by
James the Black, Lord Douglas, defeat an English army in an encounter known as the "Chapter of Myton" because of the large number of clergymen involved.
David Dalrymple, Lord Hailes, writes 460 years later, "The English were instantly routed. Three thousand were left dead on the field, and great part of fugitives drowned in
the Swale. In this action there fell three thousand ecclesiastics, [20th September.] According to the savage peasantry of those times, this rout was termed by the Scots, the Chapter of Mitton."[151] After the battle, King
Edward II is forced to raise the siege at
Berwick Castle and retreats south of the
River Trent, allowing the Scots to ravage
Cumberland and
Westmorland unmolested. Queen
Isabella, who is in
York at this time, manages to escape to safety at
Nottingham.[152]
October – December
October 17 – Prince
Jaime of Aragon marries the 12-year-old Princess
Leonor of Castile at Gandesa, but announces at the conclusion of the mass that "his decision was to never rule" the
Kingdom of Aragon as a sovereign or even to remain in secular life, but to instead enter a monastery to pursue a life "under a religious rule."[153]King Jaime II informs Leonor's grandmother (Queen Maria de Molina) of the situation on October 22, and Queen Maria demands the return of Leonor immediately. Having renounced his royal rights, Prince Jaime finds afterward that he will not be allowed to enter a monastery either.
October 29 – (Gen'ō 1, 15th day of 9th month) Nichiin of Japan's
Daimoku sect refutes all other sects of Buddhism during an interrogation by the
Kamakura shogunate, permitting the sect to continue.
November 13 – King
Eric VI of Denmark dies after a 33-year reign at
Roskilde, leaving a vacancy that will not be filled until the January election of his brother
Christopher II. During his rule, he attempts to control the routes of the
Hanseatic League. The Hanse, an association of Baltic merchants, expels the English and Scots, and gains a monopoly of trade with Norway.[154]
December 21 – Representatives of England's King Edward II and Scotland's King
Robert the Bruce sign a two-year truce.[151] Hostilities are to cease until Christmas Day, 1321, with the Scots to build no new castles in the sheriffdoms of Berwick , Roxburgh, and Dumfries, and the English were to either transfer the Harbottle garrison in Northumberland to Scotland, or to destroy it.[155] A long-term peace is still far off because of Edward's arrogant refusal to relinquish his claims of sovereignty over the Scots.[152]
^R.M.Haines, King Edward II: His Reign, His Life, and his Aftermath, 1284-1330 (McGill University Press, 2003), p.75
^"The Khaljis: Alauddin Khalji", by Banarsi Prasad Saksena, in A Comprehensive History of India (volume 5): The Delhi Sultanat (A.D. 1206-1526); (People's Publishing House, 1992) p.410
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abPál Engel, The Realm of St Stephen: A History of Medieval Hungary, 895–1526 (I.B. Tauris Publishers, 2001) p. 130
^Martin, Sean (2005). The Knights Templar: The History & Myths of the Legendary Military Order, p. 122. New York: Thunder's Mouth Press.
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^Joseph F. Callaghan (2011). The Gibraltar Crusade: Castile and the Battle for the Strait, p. 133. University of Pennsylvania Press.
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^Kishori Saran Lal, History of the Khaljis (1290-1320) (The Indian Press, 1950) p.200
^René Grousset, The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia (Rutgers University Press, 1310) p. 157
^Paolo Preto, I servizi segreti di Venezia: Spionaggio e controspionaggio ai tempi della Serenissima ("The secret services of Venice: Espionage and counter-espionage in the time of the Serenissima") (il Saggiatore Tascabili, 2010) p. 51
^Evan Macleod Barron, The Scottish War of Independence: A Critical Study (James Nisbet & Co., 1914) p. 380
^Cynthia Talbot (2001). Precolonial India in Practice: Society, Region, and Identity in Medieval Andhra, p. 135. Oxford University Press.
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^
abJones, Michael, The New Cambridge Medieval History, Vol. VI: c. 1300-c. 1415, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Page 533ff
^The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 6, c.1300-c.1415, ed. by Michael Jones (Cambridge University Press, 2000) p. 443
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abAlvise Zorzi (1983). Venice, 697-1797: City, Republic, Empire. Sidgwick & Jackson. p. 258.
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^Joseph F. O'Callaghan, The Gibraltar Crusade: Castile and the Battle for the Strait (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011) p.133
^John Julius Norwich, A History of Venice (Knopf Doubleday, 1989) p.200
^
abPalmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 95–98.
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^Barber, Malcolm (2012a). The Trial of the Templars. Cambridge University Press. p. 259.
^Michael Penman, Robert the Bruce: King of the Scots (Yale University Press, 2014) pp.130-131
^Martin, Sean (2005). The Knights Templar: The History & Myths of the Legendary Military Order, p. 142. New York: Thunder's Mouth Press.
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^Sophia Menache, Clement V (Cambridge University Press, 1998) p.115
^"Lyons", by Pierre-Louis-Théophile-Georges Goyau, in The Catholic Encyclopedia, ed. by Charles Herbermann (Robert Appleton Company, 1910)
^Karl Friedrich von Klöden, Diplomatische Geschichte des Markgrafen Waldemar von Brandenburg vom Jahre 1295 bis 1323 ("Diplomatic History of Margrave Waldemar of Brandenburg from 1295 to 1323") (M. Simion, 1844) p. 109
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abMalcolm Barber, The Trial of the Templars (Cambridge University Press, 2012a) pp. 259-271
^Maddicot, J. R. (1970). Thomas of Lancaster, 1307–1322, pp. 123–124. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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^Joseph F. O'Callaghan, The Gibraltar Crusade: Castile and the Battle for the Strait (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011)
^Rady, Martyn C. (2000). Nobility, land and service in medieval Hungary, p. 51. University of London.
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^Hamilton , J. S. (1988). Piers Gaveston, Earl of Cornwall, 1307–1312: Politics and Patronage in the Reign of Edward II, pp. 92-93. Detroit; London: Wayne State University Press.
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abBarsoum, Ephrem (2003). The Scattered Pearls: A History of Syriac Literature and Sciences. Translated by Matti Moosa (2nd ed.). Gorgias Press. p. 488.
^"Blessed Mary", Historic England Research Records, HeritageGateway.org
^Ronald C. Finucane, Contested Canonizations: The Last Medieval Saints, 1482–1523 (Catholic University of America Press, 2011) p.19
^Kishori Saran Lal, History of the Khaljis (1290–1320) (The Indian Press, 1950) p.214
^E. B. Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology (Cambridge University Press, 1996) p. 233
^Michael Brown, Bannockburn: The Scottish Wars and the British Isles, 1307–1323 (Edinburgh University Press, 2008) p.46
^Fleck, Cathleen A. (2016). The Clement Bible at the Medieval Courts of Naples and Avignon, p. 129. Routledge.
^Stewart Dick, The Pageant of the Forth (A. C. McClurg & Company, 1911) p.107
^Patrick Fraser Tytler, History of Scotland (William Tait, 1845) p. 270
^Fawcett, Richard (1995). Stirling Castle, p. 23. B. T. Batsford/Historic Scotland.
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^"The Morea, 1311–1364", by Peter Topping, in A History of the Crusades, Volume III: The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries, ed. by Kenneth M. Setton and Harry W. Hazard (University of Wisconsin Press, 1975) pp.104–140.
^Jones, Michael (2000). The New Cambridge Medieval History, Volume VI: c. 1300–1415, p. 536. Cambridge University Press.
^Regesta Regum Scottorum: The Acts of Robert I, King of Scots, 1306-1329, ed. by Archibald A. M. Duncan (Edinburgh University Press, 1988) p.113
^John Barbour, The Bruce (Canongate Books, 2010) p.376
^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's great victory, p. 35.
ISBN1-85532-609-4
^Rogers, Clifford J. (2010). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology, Volume 1, p. 190. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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^Joseph F. Callaghan (2011). The Gibraltar Crusade: Castile and the Battle for the Strait, p. 137. University of Pennsylvania Press.
ISBN978-0-8122-2302-6.
^Michael Penman, Robert the Bruce: King of the Scots (Yale University Press, 2014) p.137
^Hywel Williams (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History, p. 156.
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^Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 6, Part 2, p. 59. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
^Tomašević, Nebojša (1983). Treasures of Yugoslavia: An Encyclopedic Touring Guide, p. 449. Yugoslaviapublic.
^W.B. Fisher, The Cambridge History of Iran (Cambridge University Press, 1968) p.403
^"Muhammad III", by Francisco Vidal Castro, in Diccionario Biográfico electrónico (Real Academia de la Historia (ed.)
^Elizabeth A. R. Brown (2015). "Philip the Fair, Clement V, and the end of the Knights Templar: The execution of Jacques de Molay and Geoffroi de Charny in March". Viator. 47 (1): 229–292.
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^Alison Weir, Isabella: She-Wolf of France, Queen of England (Pimlico, 2006) p.92,99
^Jacqueline Broad and Karen Green, Virtue, Liberty, and Toleration: Political Ideas of European Women, 1400–1800 (Springer, 2007) p.8
^Gillmeister, Heiner (1998). Tennis: A Cultural History, pp. 17–21. London: Leicester University Press.
ISBN978-0-7185-0147-1.
^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's great victory, p. 79.
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^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's great victory, p. 83.
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^Helle, Knut (1964). Norge blir en stat, 1130–1319 (Universitetsforlaget).
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^Barrow, Geoffrey W. S. (1988). Robert Bruce and the Community of the Realm of Scotland, p. 231. Edinburgh University Press.
^Gerhard Heitz and Henning Rischer, Geschichte in Daten: Mecklenburg-Vorpommern ("History in Data: Mecklenburg-West Pomerania") (Koehler & Amelang, 1995) p.177
^Gábor Ágoston (2021). The Last Muslim Conquest: The Ottoman Empire and Its Wars in Europe. Princeton University Press. p. 543.
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^Brian L. Fargher (1996). The Origins of the New Churches Movement in Southern Ethiopia, 1927-1944. University of Aberdeen. p. 11.
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^"Sienese and Pisan Trecento Sculpture", by W. R. Valentiner, in The Art Bulletin (March 1927) p.192
^al-Najm Ibn Fahd, Itḥāf al-wará bi-akhbār Umm al-Qurá, p. 152–153
^Martin Abraham Meyer, History of the City of Gaza: from the earliest times to the present day (Columbia University Press, 1907) p.150
^Sarah Crome, Scotland's First War of Independence (Auch Books, 1999) p.127
^"Malatya", in İslâm Ansiklopedisi, Volume 27 (Türk Diyanet Vakfı', 2003) pp. 468–473
^Jim Bradbury, The Capetians: Kings of France, 987-1328 (Continuum Books, 2007)
^"Lettres portant que les serfs du Domaine du Roy seront affranchis, moyennant finance, Imprimerie nationale, 3 juillet 1315", in Recueil général des anciennes lois françaises, vol. 3, p. 583
^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's Great Victory, p. 86.
ISBN1-85532-609-4.
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abMcNamee, Colin (2010). Rogers, Clifford J. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Ttechnology, Volume 1, pp. 127–128. Oxford University Press.
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^ Jan Gyllenbok, Encyclopaedia of Historical Metrology, Weights, and Measures Volume 2 (Springer, 2018) p.1146
^ Robert Chazan, Church, State, and Jews in the Middle Ages (Behrman House, 1979) pp.79–80
^Ulysse R. (1891). Les Signes d'Infamie. Translated by Adler C. and Jacobs J. in the Jewish Encyclopedia: The unedited full-text of the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia.
^Carl Jacob Kulsrud, Maritime Neutrality to 1780: A History of the Main Principles Governing Neutrality and Belligerency to 1780 (Little, Brown and Company, 1936) p.213
^Jordan, William Chester (2005). Unceasing Strife, Unending Fear: Jacques de Therines and the Freedom of the Church in the Age of the Last Capetians, pp. 151–152. Princeton University Press.
^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's great victory, p. 83.
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^"Edward II: The Great Famine, 1315 to 1317", by Kathryn Warner (2009)
^Routledge Revivals: Medieval France (1995): An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. 2017. p. 568.
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^Kelly, Samantha (2003). The New Solomon: Robert of Naples (1309–1343) and Fourteenth Century Kingship, p. 228. Brill.
^Art Cosgrove, ed., Art, ed., A New History of Ireland (Oxford University Press, 2008) pp.286–288
^Kishori Saran Lal (1950). History of the Khalijis (1290–1320), pp. 56–57. Allahabad: The Indian Press.
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^"Llywelyn ab Rhys", in Dictionary of National Biography, Vol. 34, ed. by Sidney Lee. (Smith, Elder & Co, 1893) pp.21–22
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abDavies, R. R. (2000). The Age of Conquest: Wales, 1063–1415, p. 436. St. Martin's Press.
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^"The Khaljis: Alauddin Khalji", by Banarsi Prasad Saksena, in A Comprehensive History of India: The Delhi Sultanate (A.D. 1206-1526), Vol. ed. by Mohammad Habib and Khaliq Ahmad Nizami (People's Publishing House, 1970)
^. W. S. Barrow, Robert Bruce and the Community of the Realm of Scotland (Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1964, reissued by Edinburgh University Press, 2013)
^David Hume (1996). The History of the House of Douglas, p. 488.
^Topping, Peter (1975). "The Morea, 1311–1364". In Setton, Kenneth M.; Hazard, Harry W. (eds.). A History of the Crusades, Volume III: The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries, p. 112. Madison and London: University of Wisconsin Press.
ISBN0-299-06670-3.
^Peter Jackson (2003). The Delhi Sultanate: A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press. .
^Hywel Williams (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History, p. 156.
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^Rose, Hugh James (1857). A New General Biographical Dictionary, p. 89. Volume 11. London: Fellows.
^Gillmeister, Heiner (1998). Tennis: A Cultural History, pp. 17–21. London: Leicester University Press.
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^
ab Housley, Norman (1992). The Later Crusades, 1274–1580: From Lyons to Alcazar, p. 165. Oxford University Press.
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^Jussi Nuorteva and Päivi Happonen, Suomen Arkistolaitos 200 vuotta/Arkivverket i Finland 200 år ("200 Years of Finnish Archive Services"] (in Finnish and Swedish) (Edita Publishing, 2016) p.9
^"El episcopado de don García Miguel de Ayerbe y el conflictivo período de las tutorías de Alfonso XI para la catedral de León (1318–1332)", by Pablo Ordás Díaz, in La España Medieval 41 (2018), p. 258
^Jordan, William Chester (2005). Unceasing Strife, Unending Fear: Jacques de Therines and the Freedom of the Church in the Age of the Last Capetians, p. 69. Princeton University Press.
^Wagner, John. A. (2006). Encyclopedia of the Hundred Years War, p. 250. Westport: Greenwood Press.
^David Nicolle (2000). Osprey: Crécy 1346 – Triumph of the Longbow, p. 22.
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^Hywel Williams (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History, p. 157.
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abTomasz Gałuszka and Pawel Kras, The Beguines of Medieval Świdnica: The Interrogation of the Daughters of Odelindis (York Medieval Press, 2023) p.45, citing "Arnau de Vilanova and the Franciscan Spirtiuals in Sicily", by C. R. Backman, Franciscan Studies 50 (1990), pp.3-29
^O'Shea, Stephen (2011). The Friar of Carcassonne, p. 184. Vancouver, BC, Canada: Douglas & McIntyre.
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^G. E. Cokayne, ed., The Complete Peerage of England, Scotland, Ireland, Great Britain and the United Kingdom: Eardley to Spalding to Goojerat (St. Catherine Press, 1926) p.715
^N. R. Havely, Dante and the Franciscans: Poverty and the Papacy in the 'Commedia (Cambridge University Press, 2004) pp.164-165
^Julian Raby and Teresa Fitzherbert, The Court of the Il-Khans, 1290-1340 (University of Oxford, 1996) p.201
^
abc"Middleton, Sir Gilbert", by Michael Prestwich, in Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford University Press, 2004)
^Wolf-Dieter Mohrmann (1972). Der Landfriede im Ostseeraum während des späten Mittelalters, p. 95. Lassleben.
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^Siegfried Schwanz (2002). Kleinzerlang 1752–2002, p. 15. Edition Rieger.
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^Djuvara, Neagu (2014). A Brief Illustrated History of Romanians, p. 74. Humanitas.
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^Ruiz, Teofilo F. "Medieval Europe: Crisis and Renewal". An Age of Crisis: Hunger. The Teaching Company.
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^"Fraticelli", in Historical Dictionary of Radical Christianity, by William H. Brackney (Scarecrow Press, 2012) p.131
^A. M. Allen, A History of Verona (Methuen & Co., 1910)
^Elena Woodacre, The Queens Regnant of Navarre: Succession, Politics, and Partnership, 1274-1512 (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013) p.55
^Varley, H. Paul (1980). Jinnō Shōtōki: A Chronicle of Gods and Sovereigns, p. 240. New York: Columbia University Press.
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^Robin E. Waterfield, Christians in Persia: Assyrians, Armenians, Roman Catholics and Protestants (Taylor & Francis, 2018) p.53
^Norman P. Zacour and Harry W. Hazard, A History of the Crusades: The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East (University of Wisconsin Press, 1985) p.495
^Le Pergamene di Sezze (1181–1347): Documenti (Società romana di storia patria, 1989) p.371
^Uginet, F. (1968). "La vie à l'abbaye de Sainte-Sophie de Bénévent dans la première moitié du XIVe siècle". Mélanges d'archéologie et d'histoire. 80. 80 (2): 681–704.
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^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's great victory, p. 83.
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^David Burr, Olivi and Franciscan Poverty: The Origins of the Usus Pauper Controversy (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2017) p. ix
^Hywel Williams (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History, p. 157.
ISBN0-304-35730-8.
^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's great victory, p. 86.
ISBN1-85532-609-4.
^E. B. Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology (Cambridge University Press, 1996) p. 86
^"The Morea, 1311–1364", by Peter Topping, in A History of the Crusades, Volume III: The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries, ed. by Kenneth M. Setton and Harry W. Hazard (University of Wisconsin Press, 1975) p.115
^Bernard Lewis, The Jews of Islam (Princeton University Press, 2014) p.101
^"Abū Ḥammu I", by A. Bel, in Encyclopaedia of Islam, 2nd. Edition, ed. by C.E. Bosworth, et al. (Brill, 1960) p.122
^
ab"The Canonization of Saint Thomas Aquinas", by Leonardas Gerulaitis, Vivarium 5:25–46 (1967)
^J. R. S. Phillips, Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke, 1307-1324: Baronial Politics in the Reign of Edward II (Clarendon Press, 1972) p. 182
^Gerald Lewis Bray, ed., Records of Convocation (Boydell Press,, 2006) pp. 15-18
^"Dinis, King of Portugal", by F. A. Dutra, in Medieval Iberia: An Encyclopedia (Routledge, 2003), p. 285
^"Abu Sa'id and the revolt of the amirs in 1319", by Charles P. Melville, L'Iran Face a la Domination Mongole (, ed. by Denise Aigle (Institut Franqaise de recherche en Iran, 1997) pp. 89-120
^Joseph F. O'Callaghan (2011). The Gibraltar Crusade: Castile and the Battle for the Strait, p. 143. University of Pennsylvania Press.
ISBN978-0-8122-2302-6.
^"ČOBĀN", by Charles Melville, Encyclopedia Iranica (1992)
^Guillaume Mollat, Les papes d'Avignon ("The Popes of Avignon") (Victor Lecoffre 1912), pp. 386-399
^
abSir David Dalrymple, Annals of Scotland from the Accession of Robert I, Volume 2 (Balfour and Shellie, 1779) pp. 91-92
^
abArmstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's great victory, p. 88.
ISBN1-85532-609-4.
^Paulette Lynn Pepin,María de Molina, Queen and Regent: Life and Rule in Castile-León, 1259–1321 (Lexington Books, 2016) p.124
^Hywel Williams (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History, p. 157.
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^J. R. S. Phillips, Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembroke 1307-1324: Baronial Politics in the Reign of Edward II (Oxford University Press, 2018) p.187
^Keene, Donald (1993: 726). Seeds in the heart : Japanese literature from earliest times to the late sixteenth century. New York : Henry Holt & Co.
ISBN978-0-8050-1999-5
^Heers, Jacques (2016). "Bourbon table". Louis XI. Perrin.
^Boase, T. S. R. (1978). The Cilician Kingdom of Armenia. Edinburgh: Scottish Academic Press.
ISBN0-7073-0145-9.
^The Life of Dante, translated by Vincenzo Zin Bollettino (1990). New York: Garland.
ISBN1-84391-006-3.
^Knysh, Alexander (2000). Ibn al-Khatib: The Literature of Al-Andalus, pp. 358–372.
ISBN978-0-521-47159-6.
^Mote, Frederick W. (1999). Imperial China, 900-1800, p. 550. Harvard University Press.
ISBN978-0-674-01212-7.
^Tuchman, Barbara Wertheim (1978). A Distant Mirror: The Calamitous 14th Century, p. 127. Knopf.
ISBN978-0-394-40026-6.
^Richardson, Douglas (2011). Everingham, Kimball G. (ed.). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, p. 471. Vol III (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City.
ISBN978-1449966386.
^Weir, Alison (1995). Britain's Royal Families: The Complete Genealogy Revised edition, p. 92. Random House.
ISBN0-7126-7448-9.
^Mangone, Gerard J. (1997). United States Admiralty Law, p. 9. Leiden, Netherlands: Martinus Nijhoff Publishers.
ISBN9041104178.
^Babinsky, Ellen L. (1993). "Introduction". The Mirror of Simple Souls. Mahwah: Paulist Press. p. 30.
ISBN0-8091-3427-6.
^David Williamson (1988). Debrett's Kings and Queens of Europe. Salem House. p. 39.
ISBN9780881623642.
^G W S Barrow (1965). Robert Bruce. University of California Press. p. 497.
^Fraser "Bek, Antony (I) (c.1245–1311)" Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
^Perry, Guy (2018). The Briennes: The Rise and Fall of a Champenois Dynasty in the Age of the Crusades, c. 950–1356. Cambridge University Press. p. 139.
ISBN978-1-107-19690-2.
^John Wyndham Pope-Hennessy (1996). Italian Gothic Sculpture. Phaidon Press. p. 237.
^Wachtang Z Djobadze (1992). Early Medieval Georgian Monasteries in Historic Tao, Klarjet'i, and Šavšet'i. F. Steiner. p. 84.
ISBN9783515056243.
^Pablo Ordás Díaz (2018), "El episcopado de don García Miguel de Ayerbe y el conflictivo período de las tutorías de Alfonso XI para la catedral de León (1318–1332)", En la España Medieval, 41: 257–275, at 258,
doi:10.5209/ELEM.60011,
hdl:10347/19923.
^Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology, p. 258. (Third revised ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
ISBN0-521-56350-X.
^Fraser, Sir William, The Douglas Book IV Vols. Edinburgh 1885.
^Iqtidar Alam Khan (2008). Historical Dictionary of Medieval India, p. 84. Scarecrow.
ISBN9780810864016.
^Ahmad, A. Samad (1979). Sulalatus Salatin (Sejarah Melayu), p. 28. Dewan Bahasa dan Pustaka.
ISBN983-62-5601-6.
^Kishori Saran Lal (1950). History of the Khaljiis (1290–1320), pp.56–57. Allahabad: The Indian Press.
OCLC685167335.
^Richardson, Douglas (2011). Magna Carta Ancestry: A Study in Colonial and Medieval Families, ed. Kimball G. Everingham, pp. 448–51. Vol. III (2nd ed.). Salt Lake City.
ISBN144996639X.
^Attwater, Donald and Catherine Rachel John (1993). The Penguin Dictionary of Saints. 3rd edition. New York: Penguin Books.
ISBN0-14-051312-4.
^Ponsonby-Fane, Richard Arthur Brabazon (1959). The Imperial House of Japan, p. 422. Kyoto: Ponsonby Memorial Society.
OCLC194887.
^Varley, H. Paul (1980). Jinnō Shōtōki: A Chronicle of Gods and Sovereigns, p. 241. New York: Columbia University Press.
ISBN978-0-231-04940-5.
^Parsons, John Carmi (2004). "Margaret (1279–1318". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. Retrieved 15 January 2008.
^Lewis Spence (1999). "The Magical Arts in Celtic Britain", p. 81.
^Wispelwey, Berend (2013). Japanese Biographical Index. Walter de Gruyter.
ISBN978-3110947984.
^Cazzani, Eugenio (1996). Vescovi e arcivescovi di Milano (in Italian), pp. 183–185. Milano: Massimo.
ISBN88-7030-891-X.
^Maddicott, John (1970). Thomas of Lancaster, 1307–1322: A Study in the Reign of Edward II, p. 205. Oxford University Press.
^Helle, Knut (1964). Norge blir en stat, 1130–1319, Universitetsforlaget.
ISBN82-00-01323-5.
^Kurt Engelbert (1969). Heinrich I. v. Würben in the New German Biography (NDB), p. 354. Vol 8, Duncker & Humblot, Berlin.
ISBN3-428-00189-3.
^Cokayne, George Edward (1936). The Complete Peerage, edited by H.A. Doubleday and Lord Howard de Walden, p. 80. Vol. IX. London: St. Catherine Press.
^Armstrong, Edward (1932). "Italy in the Time of Dante". In Gwatkin: Henry Melvill; Whitney, James Pounder; Tanner, Joseph Robson; Previté-Orton, Charles William; Brooke, Zachary Nugent (eds.). The Cambridge Medieval History, Vol. 7: Decline of Empire and Papacy. Cambridge University Press.
^Fryde, E. B.; Greenway, D. E.; Porter, S.; Roy, I. (1996). Handbook of British Chronology, p. 86 (Third revised ed.). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
ISBN0-521-56350-X.
^Lee, Lily; Wiles, Sue eds. (2015). Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women, p. 609. Vol. II. Routledge.
ISBN978-1-317-51562-3.
^Stanisław A. Sroka (1999). Genealogia Andegawenów węgierskich, pp. 14–16 Kraków.
^Dunbabin, Jean (2000). France in the making, 843–1180, pp. 87–88. Oxford University Press.
February 9 – At
Dublin, acting in his capacity as
Lord of Ireland, King Edward II of England (as Éadbhard II Shasana, Tiarna Éireann) opens the first session of the
Parliament of Ireland during his administration. The Irish Parliament will hold 14 sessions before being dismissed in
1326.
March 5 –
Baybars II, Sultan of the Mamluks in Egypt, is driven from office by an angry mob consisting of supporters of his predecessor,
An-Nasir Muhammad. Baybars is located and turned over to Sultan Nasir.
April 13 – In Burma,
Athinkhaya, one of the three brothers serving as
regents of the
Kingdom of Myinsaing in present-day central Burma (Myanmar), dies at the age of 49, leaving his brothers
Thihathu and
Yazathingyan in control. Thihathu will soon be the sole ruler of Burma.
April 15 – Sultan An-Nasir Muhammad of Egypt has his predecessor, the former Sultan
Baybars II, executed.
May 9 –
Nephon I of Constantinople becomes the new Patriarch of the Eastern Orthodox Church in
Byzantium, now at Turkey. He is elected after his predecessor, the 80-year-old
Athanasius I, is forced to retire.
May 12 – In
France, 54 members of the
Knights Templar are burned at the stake for
heresy at
Paris, on orders of King
Philip IV of France (Philip the Fair). Pope
Clement V attempts to take control of the situation by issuing a papal bull, to assert the Church's authority over the matter and demands Philip turn over the Templars and their property to ecclesiastical officials, who will then try the Templars for charges themselves.[4]
May 26 –
Siege of Algeciras: Castilian forces abandon the siege as King
Ferdinand IV of Castile ("Ferdinand the Summoned") sign a seven-year peace treaty with
Abu al-Juyush Nasr, Sultan of Granada. Nasr agrees to pay an indemnity of 150,000 gold
doblas and an annual tribute of 11,000 doblas to
Castile. He yields some frontier towns, including
Quesada and
Bedmar. In accordance with the terms, Nasr becomes a vassal of Castile and provides up to 3 months of military service per year if summoned. Markets will be opened between Castile and Granada – Ferdinand appoints a "judge of the frontiers" (juez de la frontera) to adjudicate disputes between Christians and Muslims in the border regions.[5]
June 14 – Leading Venetian nobles led by
Bajamonte Tiepolo organise a conspiracy against Doge
Pietro Gradenigo. Their plot fails due to treachery and the rebels are defeated near
Piazza San Marco by forces faithful to the doge on
June 15. During their retreat to the
San Polo sestiere, the
Rialto Bridge is burnt down. Later, Tiepolo surrenders himself and is exiled to
Istria.
June 23 – General
Malik Kafur arrives at
Delhi and presents to Sultan Alauddin the treasures captured from Warrangal.[6]
July 10 – The
Council of Ten (or simply "the Ten"), Il Consiglio dei Dieci is created to govern the
Republic of Venice, by decree of
Pietro Gradenigo, Doge of Venice. The council, the inner circle of oligarchical
patricians, initially investigates the conspiracy of Bajamonte Tiepolo.[8]
Spring – Castilian forces abandon the
siege of Algeciras after six months and begin negotiations with
Granada. Ferdinand and Sultan sign a peace treaty for seven years on
May 26.
February 12 –
Milan Uprising: German forces under
Baldwin of Luxembourg (brother of Henry VII) crush the Italian Guelph troops, led by
Guido della Torre in Milan. A contingent of
Teutonic Knights kills and disperses most of the rebels in a single cavalry charge. Guido della Torre escapes, and is condemned to death in absence by Henry.[11]
In Asia,
Ayurbarwada Buyantu Khan is proclaimed as the Mongol Emperor Renzong of Yuan Dynasty China, 10 weeks after the death of his brother,
Külüg Khan.
Bolad, who had served as the Mongol Empire's representative in the Middle East as Ikhanate, is appointed as the Duke of Ze by the Mongol Emperor of Yuan dynasty China, Ayurbarwada Buyantu Khan
July 13 –
Matteo I Visconti is restored to rule over the
Duchy of Milan after purchasing the title of imperial vicar from the new King of Italy, Henry VII.
July 25 – At Algeciras a fleet of Marinid ships, arrives after being sent by Morocco's Sultan
Abu Sa'id Uthman II, who was attempting to restore the Muslim presence.[16]
September 16 – After a four-month siege, Guelph rebels in the Italian city of
Brescia surrender to
Cangrande I della Scala, Lord of Verona and officer of King Henry VII.
October – December
October 3 – Peace is restored in northeastern Hungary as the envoys of King Charles I arbitrate and agreement between the rebels at
Košice and the two sons of the late
Amadeus Aba, Amadeus II and Dominic.
October 16 –
Council of Vienne:
Pope Clement V convokes the 15th Ecumenical Council at
Vienne, France, in the presence of 20 cardinals, about 100 archbishops and bishops, and a number of abbots and priors. The main item on the agenda of the council is the Order of the
Knights Templar. Clement passes papal bulls to dissolve the Templar Order, confiscate their lands, and label them as
heretics.[19]
October 28 – King Ferdinand IV of Castile signs the Concord of Palencia with the principal magnates of the rest of the kingdom (including his brother, Prince John of Castile), promising to respect the customs and privileges of the subjects of his towns, and as well as to not deprive the nobles of the rents and lands that belong to the Crown.
November 5 – Eight days after the signing of the Concord of Palencia, John of Castile violates his promise to his nephew Ferdinand IV and enters into an alliance with Juan Núñez II de Lara.
November 13 – (1 Ocho, 22nd day of 9th month) Munenobu Hojo becomes the regent for the Kamakura Shogunate.
January 13 – English royal favourite
Piers Gaveston, having returned secretly from two months exile on the continent, is reunited, probably at
Knaresborough Castle, with King
Edward II, who on January 18 restores all Gaveston's confiscated lands to him. They plan to travel to
Scotland to seek help from King
Robert the Bruce.
February 7 – In Scotland,
Dungal MacDouall is forced to surrender
Dumfries Castle to the forces of King Robert the Bruce.[20] Despite having helped in the murder of King Robert's brothers in 1308, Dungal is allowed to go into exile rather than being put to death.
February 20 –
Öljaitü, the Ikhanate of the Mongol Empire's territory in the Middle East, carries out a purge of corrupt officials, with the arrest and execution of his vizier, Sa'd al-Din Savaji and one of Sa'd al-Din's closest aides, Taj al-Din Avaji,
February 29 – The division of
Greater Poland (Wielkopolska) is carried out by the sons of
Henry III, Duke of Silesia-Glogau, with Konrad I and Bolesław receiving the eastern portion of Henry III's lands, and Henry IV, Jan and Przemko II retaining the rest.
April 4 – At the
Council of Vienne in France,
a future Christian Crusade against a Muslim nation is approved by the 180 participants in the 15th Roman Catholic ecumenical council (including 20 cardinals and 122 bishops), convened by Pope
Clement V. While agreeing that a Crusade should take place within one year, the parties disagree over where it should take place, with suggestions of attacking the Spanish
Emirate of Granada, the
Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia, or the Sultanate of Egypt. Although
tithes will be collected from Catholic churches to support the venture, the proposed crusade never takes place.[22]
April 10 – The threat of a takeover by the Kingdom of France against the sovereign French
Archdiocese of Lyon is ended when the
Archbishop Pierre de Savoie signs a treaty granting King Philip the Fair the authority to administer the Lyon courts and law enforcement system.[23]
May 6 – The
Council of Vienne (convened in the southeastern French town of
Vienne, in the modern-day département of
Isère) is closed by
Pope Clement V almost seven months after opening on October 16. During its session, the
Knights Templar organization was outlawed, the matter of a posthumous trial against the late Pope Boniface VIII was tabled and forgotten about, and a pledge was made to raise tithes and offerings for a new crusade to someday be made against the Muslims. A medieval historian, John of Saint-Victor, writes later that "It was said by many that the council was created for the purpose of extorting money."[25]
May 19 – Scarborough Castle is captured by English forces under the command of
Aymer de Valence, 2nd Earl of Pembroke after a two week siege with the surrender of
Piers Gaveston, after Aymer gives his word that Gaveston will not be harmed.
June 15 –
Battle of Rozgony: Hungarian forces led by King
Charles I defeat the family of Palatine
Amadeus Aba near
Rozgony. During the battle, Charles losses his royal standard, but is reinforced by German mercenaries from
Košice (now part of the
Republic of Slovakia). The rebel army is routed, and Charles extends his power base in
Hungary. His position is secured and resistance (reduced by the magnates' opposition) against Charles' rule comes to an end.[28]
July 6 (1
Showa, 2nd day of 6th month) – Hirotoki Hojo becomes the regent for the Kamakura Shogunate in Japan.
July 8 – In Italy,
Francesco I Pico, Lord of
Mirandola, is captured at Baggiovara by Guelph rebels in
Bologna, while on his way home to Mirandola after being invested by the
Holy Roman Emperor, Henry VII as imperial vicar. Pico is imprisoned for the next nine months before being released to resume his Lordship.
King
Ferdinand IV of Castile leaves his palace at
Ávila for the last time, placing his son Prince Alfonso in charge, and arrives in
Toledo before proceeding to the
province of Jaén to join his younger brother.
October 13 –
Özbeg Khan, the Mongol ruler of much of Russia, demands that the Middle East Mongol ruler Öljaitü cede to him the
Azerbaijan territory of modern-day
Iran.
November 13 – Four years after the marriage of King
Edward II of England and Queen consort
Isabella, an heir to the throne is born at
Windsor Castle, and will be christened four days later.
Prince Edward. Upon the death of Edward II in 1327, his son will be crowned King Edward III at the age of 14.
December 23 – At
Avignon in France,
Pope Clement V elevates nine bishops, all French, to the position of Roman Catholic cardinals. The nine include Jacques d'Euse, Bishop of Avignon, who will be elected
Pope John XXII as Clement's successor in 1316.[31]
January 8 – King
Robert the Bruce of Scotland recaptures
Perth Castle from the English, then orders the walls and the building to be destroyed in order to prevent it from ever being used by the English again as a garrison.
February 7 – (12th waxing of Tabaung, 674 ME) In what is now the Mandalay Region of central
Myanmar in Asia, Burmese King
Thihathu proclaims the
Pinya Kingdom, to separate the area from the Myinsaing Kingdom.[32] Thihathu appoints his son,
Kyawswa I of Pinya, to replace him as the Viceroy of Pinle in Myinsaing.
April 22 – On the first Sunday after
Easter, the French ship Ste Marie is shipwrecked on England's
Isle of Wight at
Chale Bay. Residents nearby loot the ship of its cargo, casks of wine belonging to Regimus de Depe of Aquitaine.[33] As an act of
penance, the Lord of Chale, Walder de Godeton, builds the
St Catherine's Oratory.
May 17 –
Robert the Bruce, King of Scotland, leads an invasion of the
Isle of Man, landing at
Ramsey with a multitude of ships and captures it within five days. The only resistance is presented by the lord of
Castle Rushen, and King Robert concentrates his efforts on a siege of the castle starting on May 22.
June 21 – In Germany, peace is made between
Rudolf I, Duke of Bavaria, and his younger brother,
Louis the Bavarian, with Rudolf having control of the Electoral Palatinate, in return for supporting the election of Louis as the next Holy Roman Emperor.
June 24 – From the English garrison at
Stirling Castle in Scottish territory, Sir
Philip Mowbray proposes a truce with
Edward Bruce, brother of King Robert the Bruce of Scotland, after a siege of "many months".[39] Edward Bruce agrees to what Scottish historian
Patrick Fraser Tytler will describe five centuries later as "a truce involving conditions which ought on no account to have been accepted." As Tytler notes, the effect "was to check the ardour of the Scots in that career of success, which was now rapidly leading to the complete deliverance of their country; it gave the King of England a whole year to assemble the strength of his dominions... We need not wonder, then, that Bruce was highly incensed, on hearing that, without consulting him, his brother had agreed to Mowbray's proposals."[40][41]
August 8 – Emperor
Henry VII begins a campaign against
King Robert of Naples ("Robert the Wise"). Henry's allies are loath to join him and his 15,000-man army, supported by 4,000 knights, while the imperial fleet is prepared to attack King Robert's realm directly.
August 24 – A week after contracting
malaria during the siege of the Neapolitan city of
Siena, the Holy Roman Emperor Henry VII dies of
malaria at
Buonconvento. His 17-year-old son,
John of Bohemia, will succeed him and will become one of the seven
prince-electors of the
Holy Roman Empire.[43] Upon learning of the Henry's death,
Louis, Duke of Bavaria goes to war against his cousin,
Frederick the Fair, Duke of Austria and Styria, as both compete to be elected the new Emperor, a competition which will eventually be resolved in favour of Louis.
September 23 – The
English Parliament is called into session for the fourth time in less than 12 months, after three unsuccessful attempts to assemble members. King Edward II persuades the session to pass a tax bill for revenues to be collected by the following June in order to finance a new campaign against Scotland.
October – December
October 21 –
Robert the Bruce,
King of Scotland delivers an ultimatum at a meeting of the Scottish nobles at an assembly in
Dundee, giving Scots who have not yet come into his peace agreement a year to swear fealty to him or lose all their estates.[44][45] The Scottish nobles of
Lothian appeal to Edward II for protection, who promises to bring an English expeditionary force by midsummer in 1314.[46]
December 26 – Three days after receiving authorization from the English Parliament for a feudal levy, King Edward II issues a summons for eight earls and 87 barons to muster their troops at
Berwick-upon-Tweed by June 10 for an invasion of Scotland.[49]
By place
Asia
Tran Anh Tong, emperor of
Annam (Northern
Vietnam), occupies
Champa (Southern Vietnam) and establishes the Cham royal dynasty as puppet rulers.[50]
By topic
Literature
Wang Zhen, Chinese agronomist, government official and inventor of wooden-based
movable type printing, publishes the Nong Shu ("Book of Agriculture").[51]
January 17 – Queen Oljath, who had been the Queen consort of the
Kingdom of Georgia as wife of
King Vakhtang II (d. 1292), and then his cousin,
King David VIII (d. 1302), marries a third time, taking as her husband Qara Sonqur, Governor of
Maragheh (now in the East Azerbaijan province of Iran), in exchange for a
dowry of 30,000 dinars.[53]
January 21 – (3 Shawwal 713 AH)
Muhammad III of Granada, who had been the Sultan from 1302 to 1309, is murdered by being drowned in the pool of the Dar al-Kubra, on orders of his brother, the Sultan Nasr.[54] Nasr himself is forced to abdicate 18 days later.
February 27 – Walter de Godeton, Lord of Chale, is convicted of theft arising from the April 20, 1313 incident of the plundering of wine from a ship wrecked on the
Isle of Wight, and fined 287 marks.
March –
Tour de Nesle Affair: After confirmation that two of his sons' wives are engaged in
adultery, King Philip IV the Fair of France orders the arrest of his daughters-in-law,
Margaret of Burgundy (the wife of
Prince Louis X);
Blanche of Burgundy (wife of
Prince Charles of Valois), and
Joan II, Countess of Burgundy (wife of
Prince Philip V). The arrests come after the accusations of King Philip's daughter,
Isabella, Queen consort of England, and surveillance of the Tower of Nesle.[56] The two knights arrested for adultery,
Philip of Aunay and Walter of Aunay, are imprisoned as well. Joan II is charged with being an accessory for being aware of the crime and not reporting it, and put under house arrest until after King Philip's death later in the year. Blanche is imprisoned at the
Château Gaillard until 1322. Margaret will die of illness in prison a year later, and five months after technically becoming Queen consort of France.[57] Philip of Aunay and Walter of Aunay will be tortured and executed.[58]
April 19 –
Philip of Aunay and his older brother Walter de Aunay, convicted of adultery with Margaret of Burgundy and Blanch of Burgundy, respectively, both of whom are two daughters-in-law of King Philip IV of France, are executed. The manner of their execution is particularly brutal, following torture at the Place du Grand Martroy in
Pontoise.[59]
May 1 – The
papal conclave to elect a successor to Pope Clement V begins at the
Carpentras Cathedral with 23 Roman Catholic cardinals in attendance, of whom the votes of 16 are necessary to elect a new Pontiff. The cardinals are divided into three factions, none of which have more than eight people, with a group from
Italy (led by Guillaume de Mandagot), who want to move the papacy back to
Rome; nine from
Gascony, most of whom are relatives of Pope Clement (led by
Arnaud de Pellegrue); and five from
Provence (led by
Berengar Fredol). The Italian cardinals walk out three months later after being harassed and threaten to elect their own Pope. The conclave will not meet again for two years, during which time there is no Pope.
May 14 – In Italy, more than 50 of the
Fraticelli spiritualists of the Franciscan order of Tuscany are
excommunicated from the Roman Catholic Church by the Archbishop of Genoa after refusing to return to obedience to the Pope.[61]
June 19 – English forces march to the environs of
Edinburgh, here Edward II waits for the wagon train of over 200 baggage and supply wagons – which straggle behind the long columns, to catch up. At the nearby port of
Leith, English supply ships land stores for the army – who will be well rested before the 35-mile march that will bring them to Stirling Castle, before the deadline of
June 24.[63]
June 23 – English forces approach the Scottish positions at
Torwood, mounted troops under
Gilbert de Clare are confronted by Scottish forces and repulsed. During the fierce fighting,
Henry de Bohun is killed in a duel by King
Robert the Bruce. Edward II and forward elements, mainly cavalry, encamp at
Bannockburn. The baggage train and the majority of the forces arrive in the evening.[64]
June 24 –
Battle of Bannockburn: Scottish forces (some 8,000 men) led by
Robert the Bruce defeat the English army at Bannockburn. During the battle, the Scottish pikemen formed in
schiltrons (or
phalanx) repulses the English cavalry (some 2,000 men). Edward II flees with his bodyguard (some 500 men), while panic spreads among the remaining forces, turning their defeat into a rout.[65][66]
July 14 – The Italian cardinals participating in the
papal conclave in France walk out after weeks of harassment by supporters of a French candidate for pope. The rest of the College of Cardinals disperse to
Avignon, seat of the Papacy;
Orange, now in the
département of
Vaucluse, and
Valence in the now in the département of
Drôme.
Amda Seyon I, known as "the Pillar of Zion" begins his reign as
Emperor of Ethiopia, during which he expands into Muslim territory to the southeast. He enlarges his kingdom by incorporating a number of smaller states.[73]
January 20 – The English Parliament is convened at Lincoln to hear the reading of the Articuli Cleri, the list of grievances against the church in England. The parliament ends on March 9.
February 12 – Italian sculptor
Tino di Camaino is commissioned by the
Republic of Pisa to create the statue of the late
Enrico VII di Lussemburgo (Henry VII, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Italy), to be finished in less than six months for the August 24 dedication of Henry's tomb. Camaino delivers the work by July 26. [75]
February 15 –
John of Argyll reports to King Edward II of England that he and his army have recovered the
Isle of Man and expelled the Scottish occupiers. Archibald A. M. Duncan, ed., Acts of Robert I (1306-1329) (Edinburgh University Press, 1988) p.378
March 4 – (4 Dhu al-Hijjah 714 AH) The
Emir of Mecca,
Abu al-Ghayth, is defeated in a battle near Mecca by his brother
Humaydah ibn Abi Numayy. [76] Wounded in battle, then captured by the enemy, Abu al-Ghayth is executed by order of his brother at Khayf Bani Shadid.
Margaret of Burgundy, technically the
Queen consort of France as the wife of
King Louis X, dies in the
Château Gaillard prison after a year of incarceration, due to her 1314 conviction for adultery. Unable to have the marriage nullified because a new Pope had not been installed, King Louis left Margaret imprisoned. [80]
July 24 –
Otto II, Prince of Anhalt-Aschersleben, dies without leaving any heirs, bringing an end to the Principality. His assets are seized by his cousin and creditor, Bishop Albert of Halberstadt.[84]
July 28 – King Louis X of France issues a charter in allowing expelled Jews to come back to France, but under strict conditions. The French Jews will be allowed to stay in the country for 12 years, after which their right to remain will be reviewed. For identification, Jewish people are required to wear armbands in public, can only live in designated communities and are forbidden from
usury. Through this, the Jewish community will depend upon the king for their right to protection.[85] In December, Sultan
Ismail I of Granada implements similar rules for the Jews in the Spanish kingdom, directing Jews to wear a
yellow badge in public.[86]
July 31 – King Louis X mobilizes an army along the Flemish border. He prohibits the export of grain and other goods to
Flanders – which proves challenging to enforce. [87] Louis pressures officers of the Church at the borderlands, as well as King
Edward II, to support his effort to prevent Spanish merchant vessels from trading with the embargoed Flemish cities.[88]
August 10 – As the
Great Famine of 1315–1317 spreads through England and much of western Europe, King Edward II witnesses the full extent when he and his entourage stop at
St Albans and find bread and other food unavailable. A combination of heavy rains and unseasonably cold weather had led to crop failure when grain could not ripen for harvest, followed by the death of livestock from starvation, and the sharp increase of food prices. [90]
August 24 – The coronation of Louis the Quarrelsome as
King Louis X of France takes place at
Reims, nine months after Louis ascended the throne upon the death of his father, Philip IV.
September 3 – (3 Jumada II 715 AH)
Rumaythah ibn Abi Numayy, the former emir of Mecca, arrives at the court of the Mamluk Sultan of Egypt,
al-Nasir Muhammad in
Cairo. He receives pardon from the Sultan and seeks support against the new Emir,
Humaydah ibn Abi Numayy, who had killed his brother and predecessor,
Abu al-Ghayth. Al-Nasir sends Rumaythah back to
Mecca with an Egyptian army. However, six days before the relief army's arrival, Humaydah pillages and burns the castle at Wadi Marr, and destroys 2,000 date palm trees.
November 17 – The marriage of King
James II of Aragon to Marie of Lusignan is performed in person after Marie has traveled to Spain, with the ceremony taking place at
Girona.
(3 Jumada II 715 AH)
Rumaythah ibn Abi Numayy arrives at Mecca with an Egyptian Army, led by the emirs Najm al-Din Damurkhan ibn Qaraman and Sayf al-Din Taydamur al-Jamadar, then spends two weeks in making plans to drive out the Emir
Humaydah ibn Abi Numayy. They loot Humaydah's castle at al-Khalf wal-Khulayf, plunder the wealth inside and capture his 12-year-old son, but Humaydah himself escapes to Iraq.
January 28 –
Llywelyn Bren leads a revolt against
English rule in Wales. After disregarding an order to appear before King
Edward II, Llywelyn Bren raises a rebel army and lays siege to
Caerphilly Castle. [96] The revolt spreads throughout the south
Wear Cove (the Wales valley), and other castles are attacked. Edward sends an expeditionary force led by
Humphrey de Bohun to suppress the rebellion. In March, after a battle at
Morgraig Castle Llywelyn Bren is forced to break off the Caerphilly siege after six weeks and surrenders on March 18. [97]
February 22 –
Battle of Picotin: Catalan forces led by Prince
Ferdinand of Majorca, claimant to the
Principality of Achaea, defeat the army of Princess
Matilda of Hainaut, on the
Peloponnese. During the battle, the Catalans kill 500 Burgundians and 700 native troops. The remnants of the Princess's army withdraw in haste, pursued by the Catalan cavalry; before they turn back to loot the abandoned Achaean camp.[101]
August 5 –
Battle of Gransee: A North German-Danish alliance, led by
Henry II, Lord of Mecklenburg ("Henry the Lion"), decisively defeats the forces under
Waldemar the Great at
Schulzendorf. [107] During the battle, Waldemar escapes the battlefield, but his army – which consists largely of knights in armor — is massacred. Later, the victorious alliance negotiates a peace treaty at
Zehdenick.
October 30 – A papal court in
Avignon, with Cardinal
Berengar Fredol the Elder presiding, rules that
Juan Fernández was properly elected Bishop of
León (now in Spain), dismissing a challenge by Juan García. Fernández had been elected a year before, but his confirmation by the Pope was delayed because of the challenge. Before Fernández can travel to Avignon, however, he passes away on December 17.
November 16 –
John of the House of Capet is born four months after the death of his father, King
Louis X of France and, as the eldest (and only) son of King Louis, becomes King John I of France from the moment of his birth, with his uncle,
Prince Philip the Tall, serving as regent. John dies, four days after his birth, on November 20. [109]
November 20 – Upon the death of the infant John I, Philip the Tall, eldest surviving brother of King Louis X of France, becomes
King Philip V
January 9 – The 23-year-old
Philip the Tall, younger brother of the late King
Louis X of France, is hastily crowned
King of France, as King Philip V, at
Rheims. The only son of King Louis X had been born posthumously, but died after four days. Supporters of King Louis felt that his eldest daughter,
Joan II of Navarre, should have been crowned as the monarch. Mass protests follow in
Artois,
Champagne and
Burgundy. The coronation of a brother, instead of the eldest daughter, as the successor to the throne sets the precedent for the
Salic law, providing that the eldest male heir inherits the throne.[111][112] Philip V reorganizes the French army by extending the military obligations of the realm. Each town and castellany is responsible for providing a specified number of fully equipped troops – such as sergeants and infantry militias, while towns in economically advanced areas like
Flanders become a major source of men and money. At the same time, the arriére ban (military recruitment) is generally commuted in favour for taxation.[113]
February 1 –
Manuel Pessanha of
Genoa is appointed as the first Chief
Admiral of Portugal (Almirante-mor) by
King Denis, and charged with organizing a permanent navy for the kingdom, with 20 warships and hiring Genoese captains to recruit sailors. The organization of the
Portuguese Royal Navy is completed by December 12.
February 16 – (10th day of 1st month of 6
Shōwa) An earthquake of estimated 7.0 magnitude strikes
Kyoto. On February 22, an aftershock of 6.0 magnitude follows the first quake.
March 23 – In France,
Hugues Géraud, the Roman Catholic Bishop of
Cahors, is arrested along with plotting to assassinate Pope John XXII (with poisoned bread) and to use evil magic against him and two of his advisors,
Bertrand du Pouget and
Gaucelme de Jean. Following a trial, Géraud is convicted of witchcraft and sacrilege, and executed on August 30.
May 22 – Pursuant to the papal order of April 27, the first of the Spiritual Franciscans (Fraticelli) appear before Pope John XXII to be confronted over their disobedience.[119]
June 13 – Cardinal
Jacques de Via, Bishop of Avignon and nephew of Pope John XXII, is found dead. A court will conclude on August 30 that de Via was murdered by
witchcraft.
August 21 –
Hugues Géraud, the Catholic Bishop of Cahors who is implicated in a plot to assassinate
Pope John XXII, is personally questioned by the Pope. Géraud is convicted on August 30 of witchcraft, sacrilege and the June 13 murder of Cardinal
Jacques de Via, and is burned at the stake as punishment.
October 7 – Pope John XXII issues the bull Quorundam exigit, imposing a more lenient treatment of supporters of the Franciscan cause of "unconditional poverty".[116]
A Hungarian document mentions for the first time
Basarab I as leader of
Wallachia (historians estimate he was on the throne since about
1310). Basarab will become the first
voivode of Wallachia as an independent state, and founder of the
House of Basarab (until
1352).[124]
The
Great Famine of 1315–1317 comes to an end. Crop harvests return to normal – but it will be another five years before food supplies are completely replenished in
Northern Europe. Simultaneously, the people are so weakened by diseases such as
pneumonia,
bronchitis, and
tuberculosis. Historians debate the toll, but it is estimated that 10–25% of the population of many cities and towns dies.[125]
January 23 –
Pope John XXII issues the papal bull Gloriosam ecclesiam, excommunicating the
Fraticelli, or Spiritual Franciscans from the Roman Catholic Church. The group is known for pursuing strictly the Franciscan ideal of Apostolic poverty and attempting to force others to do so. The Pope cites as reasons for the excommunication that the adherents are guilty of making accusations of corruption, against the Church, denial of the authority of priests, refusal to take oaths to the church, teaching that priests could not confer sacraments, and claiming to be the only group to be true observers of the Gospel. [126]
March 29 – (Bunpō 2, 26th day of 2nd month) Japan's
Emperor Hanazono abdicates the throne after a 9-year reign. He is succeeded by his cousin,
Go-Daigo, who will rule until
1339).[129]
Pope John XXII creates the
Archdiocese of
Soltaniyeh (now located in northwestern Iran), bringing the Roman Catholic hierarchy to the Ilkhanate in Persia, with the Dominican missionary Francesco da Perugia (Francon de Perouse) as the first Archbishop. [130][131] Francesco and six bishops arrive on August 1.
After the appointment of Guglielmo di Balaeto as rector by Pope John XXII with broad powers before the city of Benevento, the inhabitants rise against the Pope and demand some political autonomy. Finally, the rebellion is crushed by papal forces. [132][133]
May 7 – At the marketplace in the French city of
Marseilles, four of the most defiant members of the
Fraticelli (or Spiritual Franciscans) are found guilty of heresy and burned at the stake. [135][136]
June 18 – The arranged marriage of 6-year-old
Joan of Burgundy and 12-year-old
Philip of Navarre is held as part of a contract for Joan and Philip to eventually become the co-monarchs of Navarre. The two will succeed to the monarchy in
1328.
June 27 – The reign of King Birger of Sweden ends as supporters of his late brothers, Valdemar and Eric, storm the
Nyköping Castle. Birger and his wife flee to
Stegeborg Castle, then flee again when the rebels capture the stronghold in August.
July – September
July 13 –
Rashid al-Din Hamadani, the Grand Vizier of the Ilkhanate in Iran during the reign of the Mongol Ilkhan
Öljaitü, is convicted of the 1316 murder of the Ilkhan, and is executed (along with his son Ibrahim Izzaddin). [140]
July 25 – In Italy,
Jacopo I da Carrara becomes the first
Lord of Padua, founding the
Carraresi dynasty that will rule the independent city state for almost 90 years before its conquest and annexation by the Republic of Venice following a war in
1405.
September 13 –
Pope John XXII appoints a commission of three members (Uberto d'Ormont, Bishop of Naples; Angelo Tignosi, Bishop of Viterbo; and notary Pandulpho de Sabbello) to take evidence on the matter of the
canonization of Thomas Aquinas. Testimony is taken of 42 witnesses between July 21 and September 18, 1319. [142]
January 20 – A convocation at York is held by order of the
Archbishop,
William Melton, after orders sent by him to the Bishops of Durham and of Carlisle on November 28, 1318 to bring all abbots, priors, archdeacons and convents in their jurisdiction to appear before him "in octabis Sancti Hilarii proxime futuris" (on the next octave of Saint Hillary).[144]
February 6 – (14 Dhu al-Hijjah 718 AH)
Rumaythah ibn Abi Numayy and Sayf al-Din Bahadur al-Ibrahimi, both former
Emirs of Mecca, are arrested by the incumbent Emir, Shams al-Din Aq Sunqur al-Nasiri and taken from Mecca to Cairo for imprisonment. Rumaythah is charged with having provided support to his brother, Humaydah ibn Abi Numayy and al-Ibrahimi is accused of allowing Humaydah to escape. Rumaythah is pardoned a month later after arriving in Cairo.
March 14 – The
Military Order of Christ (Ordem Militar de Cristo) is established in Portugal by
King Denis of Portugal after Pope John XXII issues the papal bull Ad ea ex quibus. The new Order is the revival of former
Knights Templar who had aided the Kingdom of Portugal in its post-war reconstruction.[145]
April – June
April 19 –
Philip I, Prince of Taranto, in his capacity as King of Albania, gives the title of
Philip, Despot of Romania to his second eldest son Prince Philip II. Despite the mention of Romania, the despotate is a part of Albania, and the title gives rights of Philip II to
Epirus in Greece.
May 8 –
King Haakon V Magnusson of
Norway dies at the age of 49 with no sons, leaving the throne empty until the nobles can agree on his successor. Havtore Jonsson manages a guardianship government until the nobles choose
Magnus VII Eriksson, son of Haakon's daughter Ingeborg.[146]
June 20 – Within the Mongol Empire,
Özbeg Khan of the
Golden Horde (the Mongol-controlled area of what is now Uzbekistan and Russia) fights a battle against the
Ilkhanate (the Mongol-controlled Middle East) in an attempt to expand the Golden Horde's territory, with a confrontation in Ilkhanate territory at
Mianeh (now in Iran).[147] The troops of
Özbeg Khan are supplemented with rebels led by an Ilkhanate prince,
Yasa'ur. The Ilkhan Sultan,
Abu Sa'id Bahadur Khan and his general,
Amir Chupan, lead the defenders to victory and take many of the rebel officers prisoner. Afterward, 36 emirs and seven viceroys are executed for treason, including
Qurumushi of Georgia and
Irinjin of Anatolia.
June 25 –
Battle of the Vega of Granada: Castilian forces of 12,000 troops, led by the regents
Don Pedro of Castile and
Don Juan of Castile are defeated by a Moorish relief army at
Granada during their attempt . Both regents are killed in the fighting. Pedro and Juan had summoned their Catilian vassals to assemble an expeditionary army in
Córdoba, as part of an attempt to restore the deposed Sultan Nasr to the Granadan throne.[148]
July 21 –
Canonization of Thomas Aquinas: The taking of testimony from more than 40 witnesses is started by Bishop Uberto d'Ormont of Naples, Bishop Angelo Tignosi of Viterbo, and notary Pandulpho de Sabbello, and will continue until September 18. [142]
September 6 – As a reward for his victory at the Battle of Mianeh, General Chupan of the Ilkhanate is allowed to marry
Sati Beg, the sister of the Ilkhanate Sultan Abu Sa'id.[149]
September 13 –
Pope John XXII issues the
papal bull "Imminente Nobis", declaring that the Pope has the right of appointment to all clerical offices (archbishops, bishops, abbots, priors and collegiate and monasterial leaders) in the Roman Catholic Church, ending the right of the individual chapters to elect their own leaders.[150]
September 20 –
Battle of Myton: Scottish forces (some 15,000 men) led by
James the Black, Lord Douglas, defeat an English army in an encounter known as the "Chapter of Myton" because of the large number of clergymen involved.
David Dalrymple, Lord Hailes, writes 460 years later, "The English were instantly routed. Three thousand were left dead on the field, and great part of fugitives drowned in
the Swale. In this action there fell three thousand ecclesiastics, [20th September.] According to the savage peasantry of those times, this rout was termed by the Scots, the Chapter of Mitton."[151] After the battle, King
Edward II is forced to raise the siege at
Berwick Castle and retreats south of the
River Trent, allowing the Scots to ravage
Cumberland and
Westmorland unmolested. Queen
Isabella, who is in
York at this time, manages to escape to safety at
Nottingham.[152]
October – December
October 17 – Prince
Jaime of Aragon marries the 12-year-old Princess
Leonor of Castile at Gandesa, but announces at the conclusion of the mass that "his decision was to never rule" the
Kingdom of Aragon as a sovereign or even to remain in secular life, but to instead enter a monastery to pursue a life "under a religious rule."[153]King Jaime II informs Leonor's grandmother (Queen Maria de Molina) of the situation on October 22, and Queen Maria demands the return of Leonor immediately. Having renounced his royal rights, Prince Jaime finds afterward that he will not be allowed to enter a monastery either.
October 29 – (Gen'ō 1, 15th day of 9th month) Nichiin of Japan's
Daimoku sect refutes all other sects of Buddhism during an interrogation by the
Kamakura shogunate, permitting the sect to continue.
November 13 – King
Eric VI of Denmark dies after a 33-year reign at
Roskilde, leaving a vacancy that will not be filled until the January election of his brother
Christopher II. During his rule, he attempts to control the routes of the
Hanseatic League. The Hanse, an association of Baltic merchants, expels the English and Scots, and gains a monopoly of trade with Norway.[154]
December 21 – Representatives of England's King Edward II and Scotland's King
Robert the Bruce sign a two-year truce.[151] Hostilities are to cease until Christmas Day, 1321, with the Scots to build no new castles in the sheriffdoms of Berwick , Roxburgh, and Dumfries, and the English were to either transfer the Harbottle garrison in Northumberland to Scotland, or to destroy it.[155] A long-term peace is still far off because of Edward's arrogant refusal to relinquish his claims of sovereignty over the Scots.[152]
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^"The Khaljis: Alauddin Khalji", by Banarsi Prasad Saksena, in A Comprehensive History of India (volume 5): The Delhi Sultanat (A.D. 1206-1526); (People's Publishing House, 1992) p.410
^
abPál Engel, The Realm of St Stephen: A History of Medieval Hungary, 895–1526 (I.B. Tauris Publishers, 2001) p. 130
^Martin, Sean (2005). The Knights Templar: The History & Myths of the Legendary Military Order, p. 122. New York: Thunder's Mouth Press.
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^Joseph F. Callaghan (2011). The Gibraltar Crusade: Castile and the Battle for the Strait, p. 133. University of Pennsylvania Press.
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^Kishori Saran Lal, History of the Khaljis (1290-1320) (The Indian Press, 1950) p.200
^René Grousset, The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia (Rutgers University Press, 1310) p. 157
^Paolo Preto, I servizi segreti di Venezia: Spionaggio e controspionaggio ai tempi della Serenissima ("The secret services of Venice: Espionage and counter-espionage in the time of the Serenissima") (il Saggiatore Tascabili, 2010) p. 51
^Evan Macleod Barron, The Scottish War of Independence: A Critical Study (James Nisbet & Co., 1914) p. 380
^Cynthia Talbot (2001). Precolonial India in Practice: Society, Region, and Identity in Medieval Andhra, p. 135. Oxford University Press.
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^
abJones, Michael, The New Cambridge Medieval History, Vol. VI: c. 1300-c. 1415, Cambridge University Press, 2000. Page 533ff
^The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 6, c.1300-c.1415, ed. by Michael Jones (Cambridge University Press, 2000) p. 443
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abAlvise Zorzi (1983). Venice, 697-1797: City, Republic, Empire. Sidgwick & Jackson. p. 258.
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^Joseph F. O'Callaghan, The Gibraltar Crusade: Castile and the Battle for the Strait (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011) p.133
^John Julius Norwich, A History of Venice (Knopf Doubleday, 1989) p.200
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abPalmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 95–98.
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^Barber, Malcolm (2012a). The Trial of the Templars. Cambridge University Press. p. 259.
^Michael Penman, Robert the Bruce: King of the Scots (Yale University Press, 2014) pp.130-131
^Martin, Sean (2005). The Knights Templar: The History & Myths of the Legendary Military Order, p. 142. New York: Thunder's Mouth Press.
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^Sophia Menache, Clement V (Cambridge University Press, 1998) p.115
^"Lyons", by Pierre-Louis-Théophile-Georges Goyau, in The Catholic Encyclopedia, ed. by Charles Herbermann (Robert Appleton Company, 1910)
^Karl Friedrich von Klöden, Diplomatische Geschichte des Markgrafen Waldemar von Brandenburg vom Jahre 1295 bis 1323 ("Diplomatic History of Margrave Waldemar of Brandenburg from 1295 to 1323") (M. Simion, 1844) p. 109
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abMalcolm Barber, The Trial of the Templars (Cambridge University Press, 2012a) pp. 259-271
^Maddicot, J. R. (1970). Thomas of Lancaster, 1307–1322, pp. 123–124. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
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^Joseph F. O'Callaghan, The Gibraltar Crusade: Castile and the Battle for the Strait (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2011)
^Rady, Martyn C. (2000). Nobility, land and service in medieval Hungary, p. 51. University of London.
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^Hamilton , J. S. (1988). Piers Gaveston, Earl of Cornwall, 1307–1312: Politics and Patronage in the Reign of Edward II, pp. 92-93. Detroit; London: Wayne State University Press.
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abBarsoum, Ephrem (2003). The Scattered Pearls: A History of Syriac Literature and Sciences. Translated by Matti Moosa (2nd ed.). Gorgias Press. p. 488.
^"Blessed Mary", Historic England Research Records, HeritageGateway.org
^Ronald C. Finucane, Contested Canonizations: The Last Medieval Saints, 1482–1523 (Catholic University of America Press, 2011) p.19
^Kishori Saran Lal, History of the Khaljis (1290–1320) (The Indian Press, 1950) p.214
^E. B. Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology (Cambridge University Press, 1996) p. 233
^Michael Brown, Bannockburn: The Scottish Wars and the British Isles, 1307–1323 (Edinburgh University Press, 2008) p.46
^Fleck, Cathleen A. (2016). The Clement Bible at the Medieval Courts of Naples and Avignon, p. 129. Routledge.
^Stewart Dick, The Pageant of the Forth (A. C. McClurg & Company, 1911) p.107
^Patrick Fraser Tytler, History of Scotland (William Tait, 1845) p. 270
^Fawcett, Richard (1995). Stirling Castle, p. 23. B. T. Batsford/Historic Scotland.
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^"The Morea, 1311–1364", by Peter Topping, in A History of the Crusades, Volume III: The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries, ed. by Kenneth M. Setton and Harry W. Hazard (University of Wisconsin Press, 1975) pp.104–140.
^Jones, Michael (2000). The New Cambridge Medieval History, Volume VI: c. 1300–1415, p. 536. Cambridge University Press.
^Regesta Regum Scottorum: The Acts of Robert I, King of Scots, 1306-1329, ed. by Archibald A. M. Duncan (Edinburgh University Press, 1988) p.113
^John Barbour, The Bruce (Canongate Books, 2010) p.376
^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's great victory, p. 35.
ISBN1-85532-609-4
^Rogers, Clifford J. (2010). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology, Volume 1, p. 190. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
ISBN9780195334036.
^Joseph F. Callaghan (2011). The Gibraltar Crusade: Castile and the Battle for the Strait, p. 137. University of Pennsylvania Press.
ISBN978-0-8122-2302-6.
^Michael Penman, Robert the Bruce: King of the Scots (Yale University Press, 2014) p.137
^Hywel Williams (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History, p. 156.
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^Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 6, Part 2, p. 59. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
^Tomašević, Nebojša (1983). Treasures of Yugoslavia: An Encyclopedic Touring Guide, p. 449. Yugoslaviapublic.
^W.B. Fisher, The Cambridge History of Iran (Cambridge University Press, 1968) p.403
^"Muhammad III", by Francisco Vidal Castro, in Diccionario Biográfico electrónico (Real Academia de la Historia (ed.)
^Elizabeth A. R. Brown (2015). "Philip the Fair, Clement V, and the end of the Knights Templar: The execution of Jacques de Molay and Geoffroi de Charny in March". Viator. 47 (1): 229–292.
doi:
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^Alison Weir, Isabella: She-Wolf of France, Queen of England (Pimlico, 2006) p.92,99
^Jacqueline Broad and Karen Green, Virtue, Liberty, and Toleration: Political Ideas of European Women, 1400–1800 (Springer, 2007) p.8
^Gillmeister, Heiner (1998). Tennis: A Cultural History, pp. 17–21. London: Leicester University Press.
ISBN978-0-7185-0147-1.
^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's great victory, p. 79.
ISBN1-85532-609-4.
^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's great victory, p. 83.
ISBN1-85532-609-4.
^Helle, Knut (1964). Norge blir en stat, 1130–1319 (Universitetsforlaget).
ISBN82-00-01323-5.
^Barrow, Geoffrey W. S. (1988). Robert Bruce and the Community of the Realm of Scotland, p. 231. Edinburgh University Press.
^Gerhard Heitz and Henning Rischer, Geschichte in Daten: Mecklenburg-Vorpommern ("History in Data: Mecklenburg-West Pomerania") (Koehler & Amelang, 1995) p.177
^Gábor Ágoston (2021). The Last Muslim Conquest: The Ottoman Empire and Its Wars in Europe. Princeton University Press. p. 543.
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^Brian L. Fargher (1996). The Origins of the New Churches Movement in Southern Ethiopia, 1927-1944. University of Aberdeen. p. 11.
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^"Sienese and Pisan Trecento Sculpture", by W. R. Valentiner, in The Art Bulletin (March 1927) p.192
^al-Najm Ibn Fahd, Itḥāf al-wará bi-akhbār Umm al-Qurá, p. 152–153
^Martin Abraham Meyer, History of the City of Gaza: from the earliest times to the present day (Columbia University Press, 1907) p.150
^Sarah Crome, Scotland's First War of Independence (Auch Books, 1999) p.127
^"Malatya", in İslâm Ansiklopedisi, Volume 27 (Türk Diyanet Vakfı', 2003) pp. 468–473
^Jim Bradbury, The Capetians: Kings of France, 987-1328 (Continuum Books, 2007)
^"Lettres portant que les serfs du Domaine du Roy seront affranchis, moyennant finance, Imprimerie nationale, 3 juillet 1315", in Recueil général des anciennes lois françaises, vol. 3, p. 583
^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's Great Victory, p. 86.
ISBN1-85532-609-4.
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abMcNamee, Colin (2010). Rogers, Clifford J. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Ttechnology, Volume 1, pp. 127–128. Oxford University Press.
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^ Jan Gyllenbok, Encyclopaedia of Historical Metrology, Weights, and Measures Volume 2 (Springer, 2018) p.1146
^ Robert Chazan, Church, State, and Jews in the Middle Ages (Behrman House, 1979) pp.79–80
^Ulysse R. (1891). Les Signes d'Infamie. Translated by Adler C. and Jacobs J. in the Jewish Encyclopedia: The unedited full-text of the 1906 Jewish Encyclopedia.
^Carl Jacob Kulsrud, Maritime Neutrality to 1780: A History of the Main Principles Governing Neutrality and Belligerency to 1780 (Little, Brown and Company, 1936) p.213
^Jordan, William Chester (2005). Unceasing Strife, Unending Fear: Jacques de Therines and the Freedom of the Church in the Age of the Last Capetians, pp. 151–152. Princeton University Press.
^Armstrong, Pete (2002). Osprey: Bannockburn 1314 – Robert Bruce's great victory, p. 83.
ISBN1-85532-609-4.
^"Edward II: The Great Famine, 1315 to 1317", by Kathryn Warner (2009)
^Routledge Revivals: Medieval France (1995): An Encyclopedia. Taylor & Francis. 2017. p. 568.
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^Kelly, Samantha (2003). The New Solomon: Robert of Naples (1309–1343) and Fourteenth Century Kingship, p. 228. Brill.
^Art Cosgrove, ed., Art, ed., A New History of Ireland (Oxford University Press, 2008) pp.286–288
^Kishori Saran Lal (1950). History of the Khalijis (1290–1320), pp. 56–57. Allahabad: The Indian Press.
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^"Llywelyn ab Rhys", in Dictionary of National Biography, Vol. 34, ed. by Sidney Lee. (Smith, Elder & Co, 1893) pp.21–22
^
abDavies, R. R. (2000). The Age of Conquest: Wales, 1063–1415, p. 436. St. Martin's Press.
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^"The Khaljis: Alauddin Khalji", by Banarsi Prasad Saksena, in A Comprehensive History of India: The Delhi Sultanate (A.D. 1206-1526), Vol. ed. by Mohammad Habib and Khaliq Ahmad Nizami (People's Publishing House, 1970)
^. W. S. Barrow, Robert Bruce and the Community of the Realm of Scotland (Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1964, reissued by Edinburgh University Press, 2013)
^David Hume (1996). The History of the House of Douglas, p. 488.
^Topping, Peter (1975). "The Morea, 1311–1364". In Setton, Kenneth M.; Hazard, Harry W. (eds.). A History of the Crusades, Volume III: The Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries, p. 112. Madison and London: University of Wisconsin Press.
ISBN0-299-06670-3.
^Peter Jackson (2003). The Delhi Sultanate: A Political and Military History Cambridge University Press. .
^Hywel Williams (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History, p. 156.
ISBN0-304-35730-8.
^Rose, Hugh James (1857). A New General Biographical Dictionary, p. 89. Volume 11. London: Fellows.
^Gillmeister, Heiner (1998). Tennis: A Cultural History, pp. 17–21. London: Leicester University Press.
ISBN978-0-7185-0147-1.
^
ab Housley, Norman (1992). The Later Crusades, 1274–1580: From Lyons to Alcazar, p. 165. Oxford University Press.
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