1347 Explained
Year 1347 (MCCCXLVII) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar, and a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Proleptic Gregorian calendar.
Events
January - December
- January 26 - Charles University in Prague is founded by a bull issued by Pope Clement VI, at the request of Charles I, King of Bohemia.
- February 2 - The Byzantine civil war of 1341–1347 between John VI Kantakouzenos and the regency for John V Palaiologos ends with Kantakouzenos entering Constantinople.
- February 26 - The Maona of Chios and Phocaea is formed to manage the overseas possessions of the Republic of Genoa.[1] [2]
- April - The Knights Hospitaller defeat a Turkish fleet, and sink 100 ships off Imbros.[3]
- May
- The agreement reorganizing the Byzantine Empire's affairs is finalized, as Anna of Savoy's son John V Palaiologos marries Kantakouzenos' 15-year-old daughter Helena.
- Genoese ships fleeing the 1331 Black Death plague in Theodosia stop in Constantinople, contaminating the city.
- May 20 - Cola di Rienzo, a Roman commoner, declares himself Emperor of Rome, in response to years of baronial power struggles.
- August 2 - The Islamic Bahmani Kingdom is established on the Indian subcontinent.
- September - Hundred Years' War: The English win the city of Calais.
- September 1 - The Black Death reaches the French port city of Marseilles.
- October - Ships arrive in the Sicilian city of Messina, carrying people afflicted by the Black Death onboard.
- November
- Pope Clement VI unites several of Rome's upper-class nobility, who drive Cola di Rienzo out of the city.
- King Phillip of France meets with the Estates General to ask for funds to further the war effort against the English.
- November 1 - The Black Death spreads to Aix-en-Provence in France.
- December - Plague hits the island of Majorca.
- December 24 - Pembroke College in the University of Cambridge, England, is founded by Marie de St Pol, Countess of Pembroke, as the Hall of Valence Marie.
- December 25 - The first cases of the plague are recorded in the city of Split, in Croatia.
- December 27 - To fund military operations in Corsica, the Republic of Genoa has to borrow at 20%, from an association of creditors known as the Compera nuova acquisitionis Corsicæ.[4]
Asia
Western Asia
The Mamluk Empire is hit by the plague in the autumn.[5] Baghdad is hit in the same year.[6]
South Asia
After years of resistance against the Delhi Sultan Muhammad bin Tughluq, the Bahmani Kingdom, a Muslim Sultanate in the Deccan, was established on August 3, when King Ala-ud-din Hasan Bahman Shah was crowned in a mosque in Daulatabad.[7] Later in the year, the Kingdom's capital was moved from Daulatabad to the more central Gulbarga.[8] [9] Southeast Asia suffered a drought which dried up an important river which ran through the capital city of the Kingdom of Ayodhya, forcing the King to move the capital to a new location on the Lop Buri River.[10]
Europe
Eastern and Scandinavian
On February 2 the Byzantine Empire's civil war between John VI Kantakouzenos and the regency ended with John VI entering Constantinople. On February 8, an agreement was concluded with the empress Anna of Savoy, whereby he and John V Palaiologos would rule jointly. The agreement was finalized in May when John V married Kantakouzenos' 15-year-old daughter. The war had come at a high cost economically and territorially, and much of the Empire was in need of rebuilding.[11] To make matters worse, in May Genoese ships fleeing the Black Death in Kaffa stopped in Constantinople. The plague soon spread from their ships to the city.[12] By autumn, the epidemic had spread throughout the Balkans, possibly through contact with Venetian ports along the Adriatic Sea.[13] Specific cases were recorded in the northern Balkans on December 25, in the city of Split.[14]
After being proclaimed Tsar of Serbia in the previous year by the newly promoted Serbian Patriarch Joanikije II, Stefan Dušan continued his southern expansion by conquering Epirus, Aetolia and Acarnania, appointing his half-brother, despot Simeon Uroš as governor of those provinces.
Central
On May 20 Cola di Rienzo, a Roman commoner, declared himself Emperor of Rome in front of a huge crowd in response to what had been several years of power struggles among the upper-class barony. Pope Clement VI, along with several of Rome's upper-class nobility, united to drive him out of the city in November.[15] In October, Genoese ships arrived in southern Italy with the Black Plague, beginning the spread of the disease in the region.[12] [16] Jews were first accused of ritual murders in Poland in 1347.[17] Casimir III of Poland issues Poland's first codified collection of laws after the diet of Wiślica. Separate laws are codified for greater and lesser Poland.[18] [19]
Western Europe
In the continuing Hundred Years' War, the English won the city of Calais in a treaty signed in September. In a meeting with the Estates General in November, the French King Phillip was told that in the recent war efforts they had "lost all and gained nothing."[20] Phillip, however, was granted a portion of the money he requested and was able to continue his war effort.[21] The English King Edward offered Calais a package of economic boosts which would make Calais the key city connecting England with France economically.[22] Edward returned to England at that height of his popularity and power and for six months celebrated his successes with others in the English nobility. Although the Kingdom's funds were largely pushed towards the war, building projects among the more wealthy continued, with, for example, the completion of Pembroke College in this year.[21]
The French city of Marseilles recognized the plague on September 1 and by November 1 it had spread to Aix-en-Provence. The earliest recorded invasion of the plague into Spanish territory was in Majorca in December 1347, probably through commercial ships. Three years of plague began in England.[23]
Births
Deaths
- February 2 - Thomas Bek, Bishop of Lincoln (b. 1282)
- April 9 - William of Ockham, English philosopher and Franciscan monk (b. c. 1285)
- May 30 - John Darcy, 1st Baron Darcy de Knayth, English peer (b. 1290)
- June - John de Warenne, 7th Earl of Surrey, English nobleman (b. 1286)
- June 11 - Bartholomew of San Concordio, Italian Dominican canonist and man of letters (b. 1260)
- October 11 - Louis IV, Holy Roman Emperor (b. 1282)
- November - Richard de Pilmuir, bishop of Dunkeld
- November 12 - John of Viktring, Austrian chronicler and political advisor in Carinthia (b. 1270–1280)
- November 15 - James I of Urgell, Prince of Aragon (b. 1321)
- date unknown
See also
Notes and References
- Encyclopedia: Vitale. Vito Antonio. Vignoso, Simone. Enciclopedia Italiana. 1937. Italian.
- Book: Setton, Kenneth M.. 1976. The Papacy and the Levant (1204–1571), Volume I: The Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries. Philadelphia. American Philosophical Society. 0-87169-114-0. 207.
- Book: Lock, Peter. The Routledge Companion to the Crusades. Routledge. 2013. 978-1135131371. 127.
- Book: Canale, Michele Giuseppe. Nuova Istoria della repubblica di Genova. Epoca quarta (1339–1528): I dogi popolari. 1864. Felice Le Monnier. Florence. 151.
- Watts, Sheldon. Epidemics and History. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1999. pp. 25–26
- [Edward Miller (historian)|Miller, Edward]
- Web site: Bahmani Sultanate. www.Britannica.com. Maren Goldberg and Thinley Kalsang Bhutia. 2016. 19 October 2022.
- pp. 335
- Britannica, Encyclopedia et al. Students' Britannica India. New Delhi: Encyclopædia Britannica (India), 2000. pp. 149
- [Steve van Beek|Van Beek, Steve]
- Mango, Cyril. The Oxford History of Byzantium. Oxford Oxfordshire: Oxford University Press, 2002. pp. 267
- Benedictow, Ole and Ole Benedictow. The Black Death, 1346–1353. Ipswich: Boydell Press, 2004. pp. 51–54
- Benedictow, Ole and Ole Benedictow. The Black Death, 1346–1353. Ipswich: Boydell Press, 2004. pp. 74
- Benedictow, Ole and Ole Benedictow. The Black Death, 1346–1353. Ipswich: Boydell Press, 2004. pp. 75
- Garwood, Duncan. Lonely Planet Rome: City Guides. Hawthorn: Lonely Planet Publications, 2006. pp. 70
- Corporation, Marshall. Exploring the Middle Ages. New York (Box 410: Marshall Cavendish Corporation, 2006. pp. 99
- Weinryb, Bernard. The Jews of Poland. Philadelphia: Jewish Publication Society of America, 1973. pp. 27
- Fisher, HH. America and the New Poland. City: Fisher Press, 2007. pp. xv
- Morfill, William. Poland. London: T. F. Unwin, 1893. pp. 42
- Fraioli, Deborah. Joan of Arc and the Hundred Years War. Westport: Greenwood Press, 2005. pp. 106
- Neillands, Robin. The Hundred Years War. New York: Routledge, 1990. pp. 109–110
- Corfis, Ivy and Michael Wolfe. The Medieval City under Siege. Ipswich: Boydell Press, 1999. pp. 55
- Book: Stratton, J.M.. Agricultural Records. John Baker. 1969. 0-212-97022-4.