1313

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
  • 1310
  • 1311
  • 1312
  • 1313
  • 1314
  • 1315
  • 1316
Holy Roman Empire under Henry VII

Year 1313 (MCCCXIII) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

1313 in various
Minguo calendar
599 before ROC
民前599年
Nanakshahi calendar−155
Thai solar calendar1855–1856
Tibetan calendar阳水鼠年
(male Water-Rat)
1439 or 1058 or 286
    — to —
阴水牛年
(female Water-Ox)
1440 or 1059 or 287

Events

January – March

April – June

  • April 20 – The Duchy of Masovia in Poland is divided among the three sons of Boleslaw II upon his death, with Siemowit II creating the Duchy of Rawa (with a capital at Rawa Mazowiecka), Trojden receiving Czersk and Wenceslaus receiving Płock.
  • 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.[2] As an act of penance, the Lord of Chale, Walder de Godeton, builds the St Catherine's Oratory.
  • May 5 – Seventeen years after his death in prison in Ferentino, the later Pope Celestine V is canonized as a Roman Catholic saint.[3]
  • Hoysala Empire, returns to the capital, Halebidu (now a ruins in the state of Karnataka), after two years as a hostage. Emperor Ballala III had agreed to leave his son behind at Delhi for two years as part of his surrender to the Delhi Sultan Alauddin Khalji.[4]
  • May 14 – In Poland, Bolko II of Opole and his brother Albert of Strzelce become the new rulers of Opole and Upper Silesia upon the death of their father, Bolko I.
  • May 17Robert 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.
  • Archdeacon of Lewes, is elected by his peers to be the Archbishop of Canterbury in England, but King Edward II intervenes and asks Pope Clement V to cancel the result. The Pope installs Walter Reynolds as the new archbishop on October 1.[5]
  • June 12Castle Rushen, on the Isle of Man, surrenders to Scotland's King Robert the Bruce after a siege of three weeks.[6]
  • King Robert the Wise of Naples, "Senator of Rome".[7]
  • 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".[8] 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."[9][10]

July – September

October – December

By place

Asia

  • Tran Anh Tong, emperor of Annam (Northern Vietnam), occupies Champa (Southern Vietnam) and establishes the Cham royal dynasty as puppet rulers.[19]

By topic

Literature

  • Wang Zhen, Chinese agronomist, government official and inventor of wooden-based movable type printing, publishes the Nong Shu ("Book of Agriculture").[20]

Religion

Births

Deaths

References

  1. ^ Hmannan Yazawin, Volume 1 (2003), p. 370
  2. ^ "Blessed Mary", Historic England Research Records, HeritageGateway.org
  3. ^ Ronald C. Finucane, Contested Canonizations: The Last Medieval Saints, 1482–1523 (Catholic University of America Press, 2011) p.19
  4. ^ Kishori Saran Lal, History of the Khaljis (1290-1320) (The Indian Press, 1950) p.214
  5. ^ E. B. Fryde, et al. Handbook of British Chronology (Cambridge University Press, 1996) p. 233
  6. ^ Michael Brown, Bannockburn: The Scottish Wars and the British Isles, 1307–1323 (Edinburgh University Press, 2008) p.46
  7. ^ Fleck, Cathleen A. (2016). The Clement Bible at the Medieval Courts of Naples and Avignon, p. 129. Routledge.
  8. ^ Stewart Dick, The Pageant of the Forth (A. C. McClurg & Company, 1911) p.107
  9. ^ Patrick Fraser Tytler, History of Scotland (William Tait, 1845) p. 270
  10. .
  11. ^ "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.
  12. ^ Jones, Michael (2000). The New Cambridge Medieval History, Volume VI: c. 1300–1415, p. 536. Cambridge University Press.
  13. ^ 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
  14. ^ John Barbour, The Bruce (Canongate Books, 2010) p.376
  15. .
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  17. ^ Michael Penman, Robert the Bruce: King of the Scots (Yale University Press, 2014) p.137
  18. .
  19. ^ Needham, Joseph (1986). Science and Civilization in China: Volume 6, Part 2, p. 59. Taipei: Caves Books, Ltd.
  20. ^ Tomašević, Nebojša (1983). Treasures of Yugoslavia: An Encyclopedic Touring Guide, p. 449. Yugoslaviapublic.
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