1073
Millennium: | 2nd millennium |
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1073 by topic |
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Leaders |
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Birth and death categories |
Births – Deaths |
Establishments and disestablishments categories |
Establishments – Disestablishments |
Thai solar calendar | 1615–1616 |
Tibetan calendar | 阳水鼠年 (male Water-Rat) 1199 or 818 or 46 — to — 阴水牛年 (female Water-Ox) 1200 or 819 or 47 |
Year 1073 (MLXXIII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.
Events
By place
Byzantine Empire
- Spring – Emperor Michael VII (Doukas) sends a Byzantine army to deal with Seljuk raiding in Cappadocia, supported with a mixed force of Norman and French mercenary heavy cavalry under Roussel de Bailleul. Roussel re-conquers some territory in Galatia and declares it an independent Norman state. Michael, enraged, sends another army led by his uncle, Caesar John Doukas and the veteran General Nikephoros Botaneiates to deal with the rising of the Norman threat in Asia minor. But the Byzantines are defeated and John is captured. Roussel marches with a force (3,000 men) across Bithynia to the Bosporus and sacks Chrysopolis, near Constantinople.[1]
Europe
- May 25 – King Sancho IV of Navarre and Ahmad al-Muqtadir, Muslim ruler of the Taifa of Zaragoza, conclude an alliance by treaty.[2]
- Ebles II of Roucy leads a French army in Spain, to support King Sancho V of Aragon in his struggle against his Muslim neighbors.[3]
- Kiev.
- October 14 – The Judicate of Arborea (one of the four independent kingdoms in Sardinia) is recognised by Pope Gregory VII.
Britain
- Edgar Ætheling, last male member of the House of Wessex, joins forces with King Malcolm III of Scotland and King Philip I (the Amorous) of France in an attempt to take the English throne.
Asia
- Wang Anshi, Chinese chief chancellor of the Song Dynasty, creates a new bureau of the central government (called the Directorate of Weapons), which supervises the manufacture of military armaments and ensures quality control.
- June 15 – Emperor Go-Sanjō dies after a 5-year reign and is succeeded by his 19-year-old son Shirakawa as the 72nd emperor of Japan.
By topic
Religion
- Pope Alexander II dies after a 11½-year pontificate at Rome. He is succeeded by Gregory VII as the 157th pope of the Catholic Church.[4]
- Rabbi Yitchaki Alfassi finishes writing the Rif, an important work of Jewish law.
- Syriac Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch.
Births
- Agnes of Waiblingen, daughter of Henry IV (or 1072)
- Alfonso I (the Battler), king of Aragon (approximate date)
- Al-Tighnari, Moorish botanist and physician (d. 1118)
- Anastatius IV, pope of the Catholic Church (d. 1154)
- )
- Leopold III (the Good), margrave of Austria (d. 1136)
- Magnus III (Barefoot), king of Norway (d. 1103)
- Meng, empress of the Song Dynasty (d. 1131)
- Philippa, French noblewoman (approximate date)
- Shaykh Tabarsi, Persian Shia scholar (d. 1153)
- Thomas of Marle, lord of Coucy (d. 1130)
- Zbigniew, duke of Poland (approximate date)
- Lady Six Monkey, queen regnant of the Mixtec city State of Huachino (d. 1100)
Deaths
- April 21 – Alexander II, pope of the Catholic Church[5]
- June 15 – Go-Sanjō, emperor of Japan (b. 1032)
- July 12 – John Gualbert, Italian monk and abbot
- December 20 – Dominic of Silos, Spanish abbot (b. 1000)
- Al-Qushayri, Persian Sufi scholar and theologian (or 1072)
- Anthony of Kiev, Russian monk and saint (b. 983)
- Badis ibn Habus, Berber king of the Taifa of Granada
- Barisone I of Torres, Sardinian ruler (judge) of Arborea
- Peter Damian, cardinal-bishop of Ostia (or 1072)
- philosopher and cosmologist (b. 1017)
References
- ISBN 978-1-84884-215-1.
- JSTOR 3679149.
- from the original on July 15, 2014. Retrieved February 22, 2012.
- ISBN 0-14-007078-8.
- ^ "Alexander II | pope". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved November 30, 2020.