1240s

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
  • 12th century
  • 13th century
  • 14th century
Decades:
Years:
  • 1240
  • 1241
  • 1242
  • 1243
  • 1244
  • 1245
  • 1246
  • 1247
  • 1248
  • 1249
Categories:
  • Births
  • Deaths
  • By country
  • By topic
  • Establishments
  • Disestablishments

The 1240s was a decade of the Julian Calendar which began on January 1, 1240, and ended on December 31, 1249.

Events

1240

By area[]

Africa[]
Asia[]
  • December 6Batu Khan and the Golden Horde sack the Ruthenian city of Kiev.
  • Tuan Mash'ika, an Arab, travels and introduces Islam to Sulu.
Europe[]
  • July 15Battle of the Neva: Russian prince Alexander Nevsky defeats the Swedes, saving the Novgorod Republic from a full-scale enemy invasion from the North.
  • The civil war era in Norway ends.
  • The Flemish village Kaprijke is recognized as a city.
  • Sancho II of Portugal conquers the cities of Ayamonte and Cacella from the Muslims, as part of the Reconquista.[1]
  • The University of Siena is founded.

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • June 12 – The Disputation of Paris begins at the court of Louis IX of France, where four rabbis defend the Talmud against Nicholas Donin's accusations of blasphemy.
  • Saint Maurice starts to be portrayed as a Moor.

1241

  • March 18Battle of Chmielnik (Mongol invasion of Poland): The Mongols overwhelm the feudal Polish armies of Sandomierz and Kraków provinces, and plunder the abandoned city of Kraków.[2][3]
  • April 9Battle of Legnica: The Mongols, under the command of Baidar, Kadan and Orda Khan, defeat the feudal Polish nobility, including the Knights Templar.[4][5]
  • April 11Battle of Mohi: Batu Khan and Subutai defeat Béla IV of Hungary. The battle is the last major event in the Mongol Invasion of Europe.[6][7]
  • MayBattle of Giglio: an Imperial fleet defeats a Genoan fleet in the Tyrrhenian Sea.[8][9]
  • May 10 – Battle of Cameirge in Ulster: The Milesian Irish septs of the Ó Dónaills from Donegal, the Ó Néills from Armagh and the Ó Dochartaighs of Connacht defeat the last Tuatha Dé Danann sept, the Meic Lochlainn of Tír Eoghain and Inishowen under Domhnall mac Muirchertaigh Mac Lochlainn. From now on the Kings of Tír Eoghain will all be of the Ó Néill dynasty, Brian Ua Néill becoming sole ruler.[10]
  • Early northern summer – A succession crisis or other priorities results in the Mongols withdrawing behind their river barrier into the Ukraine and the Russias, leaving Central Asian and far Eastern Europe peoples tributary to the Khanates, but leaving Poland and Hungary to begin recovery and reorganization.[11][12]
  • August 29 – After Henry III of England's invasion of Wales, the Treaty of Gwerneigron is signed by him and Dafydd ap Llywelyn, curbing the latter's authority and denying him royal title.[13][14]
  • September 23Snorri Sturluson, Icelandic saga writer, is murdered by Gissur Þorvaldsson, an emissary of King Haakon IV of Norway.[15][16]
  • October 25Pope Celestine IV succeeds Pope Gregory IX, as the 179th pope.[17][18]
  • Emperor Lizong of Song China accepts the Neo-Confucian teachings of the late Zhu Xi, including his commentary on the Four Books. This will have an impact upon the philosophical schools of surrounding countries as well, including Korea, Japan, and Vietnam.[19][20]
  • Livonian Crusade: The Estonian rebellion of 1237 is suppressed on Saaremaa Island, by the Livonian Order.[21][22]
  • The University of Valladolid is founded in Spain.[23]

1242

By area[]

Africa[]
  • In Maghrib, after a string of successes against the fast declining Almohads, Abu Zakariya, the first Hafsid ruler of Ifriqiya, conquers the Kingdom of Tlemcen.[24]
Asia[]
  • Emperor Go-Saga ascends to the throne of Japan.
  • Batu Khan establishes the Golden Horde at Sarai.
  • The Mongols invade the Seljuk Sultanate.
Europe[]
  • April 5 – During a battle on the ice of Lake Peipus, Russian forces, led by Alexander Nevsky, rebuff an invasion attempt by the Teutonic Knights.
  • Cleves, Germany is chartered as a city.
  • Kiel, Germany is chartered as a town.
  • The Archbishop of Mainz conquers the city of Wiesbaden, from the House of Nassau.
  • King Sancho II of Portugal conquers the cities of Tavira, Alvor and Paderne, in his continuing effort against the Muslims, known as Reconquista.[1]
  • Mongol invasions
    • German colonists arrive in Bratislava, after the Mongols fail to conquer the city.
    • The Mongols of the Golden Horde devastate Volga Bulgaria, and force the nation to pay tribute.
    • A French goldsmith working in Budapest, named Guillaume Boucher, is captured by the Mongols and taken to Karakorum.
    • The Golden Bull is issued by King Béla IV to inhabitants of Gradec (today's Zagreb) and Samobor in Croatia, during the Mongol invasion of Europe. By this golden bull King Bela IV proclaims a free royal city.
    • Battle of Grobnicko Polje: Croats stop the Mongolian invasion.

By topic[]

Science[]
Religion[]
  • The diocese of Warmia, Poland is created.

1243

  • March – Treaty of Alcaraz: Ferdinand III of Castile turns the independent Muslim Taifa of Murcia into a protectorate, and initiates the process of the colonization and Christianization of the region.
  • May 1 – The Castillan troops are garrisoned in Murcia, to support the Huddite Dynasty.[25]
  • June 25Pope Innocent IV succeeds Pope Celestine IV, as the 180th pope.
  • June 26Battle of Köse Dağ: The Mongols defeat the Seljuk Turks of the Sultanate of Rum.
  • The city of Brno is founded, in what will become the Czech Republic.

1244

  • March 16 – Following their successful nine-month siege of Montségur, French royal forces burn about 210 Cathar Perfecti and credentes.
  • The Christian Reconquista in Iberia enjoys a string of successes:
    • March 26 – By the Treaty of Almizra, the king of Aragon and prince of Castile come to an agreement, on the distribution of Muslim lands yet to be conquered.[26]
    • May 22James I of Aragon takes the Muslim-held city of Janita, after several months of siege.[27] This success is followed by the capture of Biar later that year.[28]
    • James I of Aragon reconquers Altea, Spain.
    • The heir prince of Castile conducts a series of military operations, to support the Muslim Huddite rulers of Murcia against rebel strongholds.[29]
  • The Siege and Fall of Jerusalem leads to the Seventh Crusade.
  • Dogen Zenji establishes the Eiheiji temple in Japan, thus founding the Sōtō sect of Zen Buddhism.

1245

  • February 21Thomas (bishop of Finland) is granted resignation by Pope Innocent IV, after having confessed to torture and forgery.
  • April 16Pope Innocent IV sends Giovanni da Pian del Carpine to the Mongol court, suggesting (amongst other things) that the Mongols convert to Christianity, and join the Crusades.
  • June 28 – The First Council of Lyon opens, in the course of which Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor, is excommunicated and deposed, and the Seventh Crusade is proclaimed.
  • August 1 – The second of two papal bulls refers to the marriage of King Sancho II of Portugal to Mécia Lopes de Haro, and decrees the deposition of the king.
  • date unknown
    • Witness of the toll taken by war and fiscal pressure in the kingdom of Castile, the region of Segovia is described this year as depopulated and sterile.[30]
    • The rebuilding of Westminster Abbey is started in England.

1246

By area[]

Americas[]
  • The Mexicans settle Chapultepec, a former Toltec stronghold.
Asia[]
  • Emperor Go-Fukakusa succeeds Emperor Go-Saga, on the throne of Japan.
  • Güyük Khan is enthroned as the 3rd Great Khan of the Mongol Empire (an event also witnessed by a papal mission under Giovanni da Pian del Carpine), at Karakorum.
Europe[]
  • With the death of Duke Frederick the Quarrelsome, the Babenberg Dynasty ends in Austria.
  • Spain: After two unsuccessful sieges in 1225 and 1230, the Castillans manage to take the city of Jaén from the Andalucians, at the Siege of Jaen.[32]

By topic[]

Arts[]
  • The Gothic chapel of Sainte-Chapelle is built.
  • Robert Grosseteste translates Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics from Greek into Latin, which marks the true start of the rediscovery of the philosopher by medieval Europe.[33]
Nature[]
Religion[]
  • Beaulieu Abbey is dedicated.

1247

  • July 2 – A document issued by King Béla IV of Hungary, granting territories to the Knights Hospitaller in the Banate of Severin and Cumania, makes an early mention of Litovoi and other Vlach/Romanian local rulers, in Wallachia and Transylvania.
  • December 1 – A rebellion arises among the Muslim subjects of the Crown of Aragon, in the region of Valencia. As a punishment, the king issues an order of expulsion of the Muslims from his realm, leading numerous people into exile in Andalusia and North Africa, in the subsequent year.[34]

Date unknown[]

  • Kabaka Tembo reigned over the Buganda Kingdom between 1247 and 1277 in present day Uganda.
  • Shams Tabrizi disappears, resulting in Jalal Uddin Rumi writing 30,000 verses of poetry about his disappearance.
  • Romford, London, England is chartered as a market town.
  • The future Bethlem Royal Hospital, Bedlam, is founded in London.
  • The Thuringian War of Succession begins.
  • Qin Jiushao publishes the original form of the Chinese remainder theorem.
  • Egypt takes control of Jerusalem from the Kharezmians.
  • Nijmegen becomes part of Gelderland.
  • Afonso III succeeds Sancho II, as King of Portugal.
  • Song Ci publishes the Collected Cases of Injustice Rectified, a book considered to be the first monographic work on forensic medicine.

1248

  • April 26 – The Gothic chapel Sainte-Chapelle is consecrated in Paris, France.
  • August 15 – The foundation stone of Cologne Cathedral is laid, after an older cathedral on the site burns down on April 30 (construction is completed 632 years later, in 1880).
  • August 25 – The Dutch city of Ommen receives city rights and fortification rights from Otto III, Archbishop of Utrecht, after it has been pillaged at least twice by a local robber baron.
  • November 23Reconquista: King Ferdinand III of Castile recaptures the city of Seville from the Moors, ending the Siege of Seville; this year also Prince Alfonso X of Castile takes the city of Alicante.
  • November 24 – In the middle of the night a mass on the north side of Mont Granier suddenly collapses, in one of the largest historical rock slope failures known in Europe.[35]

Date unknown[]

  • King Louis IX of France launches the Seventh Crusade, setting sail with an army of 20,000 toward Egypt.
  • Pope Innocent IV grants the Croats permission to use their own language and script in liturgy (see Glagolitic alphabet).
  • Tallinn (Reval) converts from Riga law to Lübeck law.
  • Roger Bacon publishes the formula for black powder in Europe.
  • Approximate date – History of the Aztecs: The Mexica tribe, predecessors of the Aztec people, arrive at Chapultepec (in modern-day Mexico City).
  • becomes Ruler of the City-state Azcapotzalco at the Valley of Mexico

1249

By place[]

Africa[]
  • King Louis IX of France captures Damietta in Egypt, in the first major military engagement of the Seventh Crusade.
Asia[]
  • Pho Khun Si Indrathit becomes the first king of the Sukhothai Kingdom, marking the founding of the modern Thai nation.
  • The Hikitsuke, a judicial organ of the Kamakura and Muromachi shogunates of Japan, is established.
  • The Japanese Hōji era ends, and the Kenchō era begins.
Europe[]
  • February 16Andrew of Longjumeau is dispatched by King Louis IX of France as an ambassador, to meet with the Khan of the Mongols.
  • May 26 – The Battle of Fossalta is fought between the Holy Roman Empire and the Lombard League. The Italians capture the German commander.
  • July 13Alexander III is crowned as King of the Scots.
  • August 15 – The First Battle of Athenry is fought in Galway, Ireland.
  • The city of Stralsund (in present-day Germany) is burned to the ground, by forces from the rival city of Lübeck.
  • Swedish statesman Birger Jarl subjugates the province of Tavastia in Finland, securing Swedish power in Finland.
  • Alphonse, Count of Poitiers orders the expulsion of Jews from Poitou, France.
  • The Hungarian capital is moved from Esztergom to Buda.
=Mediterranean=
  • The Moors lose possession of Alicante in Al-Andalus (Islamic Spain).
  • King Afonso III of Portugal recaptures Faro and Silves in the Algarve from the Moors, thus ending the Portuguese Reconquista.[1]
  • The city of Mystras, Greece is fortified, and a palace is constructed there by William II Villehardouin.

By topic[]

Education[]
  • Spring – University College, the first College at Oxford, is founded with money from the estate of William of Durham.
Microhistory[]
  • Jean Mouflet makes an agreement with the abbot of Saint-Pierre-le-Vif in the Senonais region in France: in return for an annual payment, the monastery will recognize Jean as a "citizen of Sens". He is a leather merchant, with a leather shop that he leases for the rent of 50 shillings a year. The agreement is witnessed by Jean's wife, Douce, daughter of a wealthy and prominent citizen of Sens, Felis Charpentier.
Science[]
  • Roger Bacon publishes a major scientific work, including writings of convex lens spectacles for treating long-sightedness, and the first publication of the formula for gunpowder in the western world.

Significant people[]

Fibonacci. Fibonacci sequence and Liber Abbaci

Births[]

1240

  • September 29Margaret of England, queen consort of the Scots (d. 1275)
  • Abulafia, Maltese Jewish philosopher (d. 1292)
  • Pope Benedict XI (d. 1304)
  • Pope Clement V (d. 1314)
  • Sigerus of Brabant, French theologian (d. 1284)
  • Albert the Degenerate, landgrave of Thuringia (approximate date; d. 1314)
  • Peter III of Aragon, King of Aragon, Count of Barcelona and King of Valencia, monarch (d. 1285)

1241

1242

1243

Emperor Go-Fukakusa

1244

  • June 24Henry I, Landgrave of Hesse (d. 1308)
  • Archbishop Henry II of Virneburg (d. 1332)
  • Approximate date – Agnes Blannbekin, Austrian Beguine mystic (d. 1315)

1245

  • January 16Edmund Crouchback, 1st Earl of Lancaster, son of Henry III of England (d. 1296)
  • April 3 – King Philip III of France (d. 1285)
  • November 14Sang Sapurba, first Malay King and progenitor of Malay kings in Malacca and Majapahit kingdoms (d. 1316)
  • date unknownBoniface of Savoy
    • Giovanna da Signa, Italian saint (d. 1307)

1246

1247

  • Angelo da Clareno, Italian founder of Fraticelli (d. 1337)
  • John II, Count of Holland and Hainaut (d. 1304)
  • Rashid-al-Din Hamadani, Persian writer and historian (approximate date) (d. 1318)
  • Giles of Rome, Roman archbishop and philosopher
  • Zhang San Feng, Chinese Taoist

1248

  • Blanche of Artois, queen consort and regent of Navarre (approximate date) (d. 1302)
  • Robert II, Duke of Burgundy (d. 1306)
  • Peter Olivi, Franciscan theologian (d. 1298)
  • Isabella of Aragon, queen of Philip III of France (d. 1271)

1249

Emperor Kameyama
  • July 9Emperor Kameyama of Japan (d. 1305)
  • Eric V of Denmark (d. 1286)
  • Robert III of Flanders, ruler
  • Frederick I, Margrave of Baden (d. 1268)
  • Constance of Sicily, Queen of Aragon (d. 1302)
  • Humphrey de Bohun, 3rd Earl of Hereford (d. 1297)
  • Pope John XXII (d. 1334)[40]
  • Menachem Meiri, Catalan rabbi
  • Amadeus V of Savoy (d. 1323)

Deaths[]

1240

1241

1242

Emperor Juntoku

1243

1244

  • March 1Gruffyd ap Llywelyn, eldest, illegitimate son of Llywelyn the Great (b. 1200)
  • April 2Henrik Harpestræng, Danish botanical and medical author
  • December 5Joan, Countess of Flanders and Hainault (b. 1199 or 1200)
  • date unknown
    • Eleanor of Castile, queen consort of Aragon, daughter of king Alfonso VIII and Eleonore Plantagenet
    • Witco de Perchyc, Bohemian noble (b. 1177)

1245

  • August 19Ramon Berenguer IV, Count of Provence (b. 1195)
  • August 21Alexander of Hales, English theologian
  • Rusudan of Georgia, queen regnant of Georgia (b. 1194)

1246

  • February 25Dafydd ap Llywelyn, prince of Wales
  • June – Richard Fitz Roy, illegitimate son of John of England
  • June 4Isabella of Angoulême, queen of John of England
  • June 15 – Duke Frederick II, Duke of Austria (b. 1219)
  • September 20Mikhail of Chernigov, Prince of Kiev
  • September 30Yaroslav II of Russia (b. 1190)
  • November 8Berengaria of Castile, queen of Castile and León (b. 1196)
  • date unknown
    • Ednyfed Fychan, seneschal of Gwynedd
    • Sayyid Muhammad Al-Makki, ancestor of the Bukkuri Sayyids (b. 1145)
    • Fatima, Mongolian senior office holder

1247

1248

  • Haraldr Óláfsson, King of Mann and the Isles and his wife, Cecilía, daughter of Hákon Hákonarson, King of Norway (the two were newlyweds who drowned near Shetland, on their return to the Kingdom of Mann and the Isles from Norway)
  • Subutai, Mongol general

1249

  • July 6 – King Alexander II of Scotland (b. 1198)
  • July 19Jacopo Tiepolo, Doge of Venice
  • September 27Raymond VII, Count of Toulouse (b. 1197)
  • November 22As-Salih Ayyub, ruler of Egypt
  • date unknown
    • Abu Zakariya, ruler of the Maghreb (b. 1203)
    • Stephanie of Lampron, queen consort of Cyprus
    • Wuzhun Shifan, Chinese Zen Buddhist monk (b. 1178)
    • Song Ci, Chinese physician and judge (b. 1186)

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