1380s
Millennium: | 2nd millennium |
Centuries: | 13th century – 14th century – 15th century |
Decades: | 1350s 1360s 1370s – 1380s – 1390s 1400s 1410s |
Years: | 1380 1381 1382 1383 1384 1385 1386 1387 1388 1389 |
1380s-related categories: |
Births – Deaths – By country Establishments – Disestablishments |
Events
Contents: 1380 1381 1382 1383 1384 1385 1386 1387 1388 1389
1380
January–December
- February – Olaf II of Denmark becomes Olaf IV of Norway, with his mother Margaret as regent. Iceland and the Faroe Islands, as parts of Norway, pass under the Danish crown.
- May 31 – Grand Duke of Lithuania Jogaila signs the secret Treaty of Dovydiškės with the Teutonic Knights. This sparks a civil war with his uncle Kęstutis.
- June 21 – Battle of Chioggia: the Venetian fleet defeats Genoeses.
- July 27 – Henry Bolingbroke marries Mary de Bohun at Arundel Castle.
- September 8 – Battle of Kulikovo: Russian forces under Grand Prince Dmitry Donskoy of Moscow resist a large invasion by the Blue Horde, Lithuania and Ryazan, stopping their advance at the Battle of Kulikovo.
- September 16 – Charles V of France is succeeded by his twelve-year-old son, Charles VI.
- October 2 – Caterina Visconti marries her first cousin, Gian Galeazzo Visconti, later Duke of Milan, at the Church of San Giovanni in Conca.
- November 3 - Charles VI of France, who succeeded his father, Charles V of France, in September is crowned.
Date unknown
- Sir William Walworth, a member of the Fishmongers Guild, becomes Lord Mayor of London for the second time.
- Khan Tokhtamysh of the White Horde dethrones Khan Mamai of the Blue Horde. The two hordes unite to form the Golden Horde.
- Karim Al-Makhdum arrives in Jolo and builds a Mosque.
- The Hongwu Emperor purges the chancellor of China, Hu Weiyong, and abolishes that office as he imposes direct imperial rule over the six ministries of central government for the Ming Empire.
- The last islands of Polynesia are discovered and inhabited.
- The Companhia das Naus is founded by King Ferdinand I of Portugal.
- The imposter Paul Palaiologos Tagaris, having been appointed Latin Patriarch of Constantinople by Pope Urban VI, takes up residence in his see at Chalcis.
1381
January–December
- March 14 – Chioggia concludes an alliance with Zadar and Trogir against Venice, which becomes changed in 1412 in Šibenik.
- June 12 – Peasants' Revolt: In England, rebels from Kent and Essex, led by Wat Tyler and Jack Straw, meet at Blackheath. There the rebels are encouraged by a sermon, by renegade priest John Ball.
- June 14 – Peasants' Revolt: Rebels destroy John of Gaunt's Savoy Palace and storm the Tower of London, killing the Archbishop of Canterbury and the Lord Chancellor. King Richard II of England meets the leaders of the revolt and agrees to reforms such as fair rents and the abolition of serfdom.
- June 15 – Peasants' Revolt: During further negotiations, Wat Tyler is murdered by the King's entourage. Noble forces subsequently overpower the rebel army. The rebel leaders are eventually captured and executed and Richard II revokes his concessions. The revolt is discussed in John Gower's Vox Clamantis and Froissart's Chronicles.
- August – Kęstutis overthrows his nephew, Jogaila, as Grand Duke of Lithuania. Jogaila is allowed to remain as governor of eastern Lithuania. This marks the beginning of the Lithuanian Civil War (1381–84).
Date unknown
- Due to Joanna I of Naples' support for Antipope Clement VII, Pope Urban VI bestows Naples upon Charles of Durazzo. With the help of the Hungarians, Charles advances on Naples and captures Joan.
- The Ming dynasty of China annexes the areas of the old Kingdom of Dali, in what is now Yunnan and Guizhou provinces, inhabited by the Miao and Yao peoples. Hundreds of thousands of Chinese (including military colonists) will migrate there from the rest of China.
- James of Baux, the ruler of Taranto and the Latin Empire, claims the Principality of Achaea after the imprisonment of Joanna I of Naples.
- Sonam Drakpa deposes Drakpa Changchub as ruler of Tibet.
- Hajji I succeeds Alah-ad-Din Ali as Mamluk Sultan of Egypt. The Egyptian government continues to be controlled by rebel leader Barquq.
- After a naval battle, Venice wins the three year War of Chioggia against Genoa. The Genoans are permanently weakened by the conflict.
- Timur conquers east Persia, ending the rule of the Sarbadar dynasty.
- In Ming dynasty China, the lijia census registration system begun in 1371 is now universally imposed during the reign of the Hongwu Emperor. The census counts 59,873,305 people living in China in this year. This depicts a drastic drop in population since the Song dynasty, which counted 100 million people at its height in the early 12th century. The historian Timothy Brook, in his The Confusions of Pleasure: Commerce and Culture in Ming China, states that the Ming census was inaccurate, as China in the late 14th century had at least 65,000,000 inhabitants, if not 75,000,000.[1]
1382
January–December
- May 12 – Charles of Durazzo executes the imprisoned Joanna I of Naples and succeeds her as Charles III of Naples.
- May 21 – John Wycliffe's teachings are condemned by the Synod of London, which becomes known as the "Earthquake Synod" after its meetings are disrupted by a minor earthquake.[2]
- August – The iconic painting the Black Madonna of Częstochowa is brought from Jerusalem to the Jasna Góra Monastery in Poland.
- September – Following the death of Louis I of Hungary and Poland:
- Louis' daughter Mary becomes Queen of Hungary.
- The Poles, who do not wish to be ruled by Mary's fiancee, the future Holy Roman Emperor Sigismund, choose Mary's younger sister, Jadwiga, to become ruler of Poland. After two years of negotiations, Jadwiga is eventually crowned "King" in 1384.
- September 30 – The inhabitants of Trieste (now in northern Italy) donate their city to Duke Leopold III of Austria.
- October – James I succeeds his nephew, Peter II, as King of Cyprus.
- November 27 – At the Battle of Roosebeke, a French army under Louis II, Count of Flanders defeats the Flemings led by Philip van Artevelde.
Date unknown
- Khan Tokhtamysh of the Golden Horde overruns Muscovy, as punishment for Grand Prince Dmitry Donskoy's resistance to Khan Mamai of the Blue Horde in the 1370s. Dmitry Donskoy pledges his loyalty to Tokhtamysh and is allowed to remain as ruler of Moscow & Vladimir.
- The Ottomans take Sofia from the Bulgarians.
- After a five year revolt, Barquq deposes Hajji II as Mamluk Sultan of Egypt, marking the end of the Bahri dynasty and the start of the Burji dynasty.
- Ibrahim I is selected to succeed Husheng as Shah of Shirvan (now Azerbaijan).
- Kęstutis, the Grand Duke of Lithuania, is taken prisoner by former Grand Duke Jogaila whilst meeting him to hold negotiations. Kęstutis is subsequently murdered and Jogaila regains rule of Lithuania.
- Ahmed deposes his brother, Hussain, as ruler of the Jalayirid dynasty in western Persia.
- Rana Lakha succeeds Rana Kshetra Singh as ruler of Mewar (now part of western India).
- Conrad Zöllner von Rothenstein succeeds Winrich von Kniprode as Grand Master of the Teutonic Knights.
- Balša II of Zeta conquers Albania.
- Dawit I succeeds his brother Newaya Maryam as Emperor of Ethiopia.
- Winchester College is founded in England.
1383
January–December
- May 17 – King John I of Castile and Leon marries Beatrice of Portugal
- July 7 – The childless James of Baux, ruler of Taranto and Achaea and last titular Latin Emperor, dies.[3] As a result:
- Charles III of Naples becomes ruler of Achaea (now southern Greece).
- Otto, Duke of Brunswick-Grubenhagen, the widower of Joanna I of Naples, becomes ruler of Taranto (now eastern Italy).
- Louis I, Duke of Anjou inherits the claim to the Latin Empire (now western Turkey) but never uses the title of Emperor.
- October 22 – King Fernando I of Portugal dies and is succeeded by his daughter, Beatrice of Portugal. A period of civil war and anarchy, known as the 1383–85 Crisis, begins in Portugal due to Beatrice being married to the King John I of Castile and Leon.
Date unknown
- The Teutonic Knights recommence war against pagan Lithuania.
- Rao Chanda succeeds Rao Biram Dev as Rathore ruler of Marwar (now in western India).
- Löwenbräu beer is first brewed.
- Wat Phra That Doi Suthep Temple is built in present-day Thailand by King Kuena of Lanna.
- Construction of the Bastille is completed in Paris, France.
1384
January–December
- May–September 3 – Siege of Lisbon by the Castilian army, during the 1383–85 Crisis in Portugal.
- August 16 – The Hongwu Emperor of Ming China hears a case of a couple who tore paper money notes while fighting over them. Under the law, this is considered to be destroying stamped government documents, which is to be punished by a caning with a bamboo rod of 100 strokes. However, the Emperor decides to pardon them, on the grounds that it was unintentional.
- November 16 – 10-year-old Jadwiga is crowned "King" of Poland in Kraków following the death of her father, King Louis, in 1382.
- December 25 – Use of the Spanish era dating system in the Crown of Castile is suppressed.
Unknown Date
- The Hongwu Emperor of China reinstates the Imperial examination system for drafting scholar-officials to the civil service after suspending the system since 1373 in favor of a recommendation system to office.
- The Nasrid princes of Al-Andalus replace Abu al-Abbas with Abu Faris Musa ibn Faris as ruler of the Marinid dynasty in modern-day Morocco.
- Zain Al-Abidin succeeds his father, Shah Shuja, as ruler of the Muzaffarids in central Persia.
- Shortly before his death, John Wycliffe sends out tracts against Pope Urban VI, who has not turned out to be the reformist Wycliffe had hoped.
- Qara Muhammad succeeds Bairam Khawaja as ruler of the Kara Koyunlu ("Black Sheep Turkomans") in modern-day Armenia and northern Iraq.
- Timur conquers northern territories of the Jalayirid Empire in western Persia.
- Katharine Lady Berkeley's School is founded in Gloucestershire, England.
1385
January–December
- July 17 – Charles VI of France marries Isabeau of Bavaria. The wedding is celebrated with France's first court ball.
- August 6 – Edmund of Langley was elevated to the first Duke of York.
- August 14
- Battle of Aljubarrota: John of Aviz defeats John I of Castile in the decisive battle of the 1383–85 Crisis in Portugal. John of Aviz is crowned King John I of Portugal, ending Queen Beatrice's rule, and Portugal's independence from the Kingdom of Castile is secured.
- The Union of Krewo establishes the Jagiellonian dynasty in Poland and Lithuania through the proposed marriage of Queen regnant Jadwiga of Poland and Grand Duke Jogaila of Lithuania, and sees the acceptance of Roman Catholicism by the Lithuanian elite and an end to the Greater Poland Civil War.
- August 31 – King Richard II of England begins an invasion of Scotland.[4] The English burn Holyrood and Edinburgh, but return home without a decisive battle.[5]
- September 18 – Battle of Savra: Serbian forces under Balša II and Ivaniš Mrnjavčević are defeated by Ottoman commander Hayreddin Pasha near Berat.
- October 15 – The Battle of Valverde is fought between the armies of Portugal and Castile.
- December – A group of Hungarian nobles helps Charles III of Naples to overthrow Queen Mary as ruler of Hungary and Croatia.
Date unknown
- Tokhtamysh of the Golden Horde conquers parts of the Jalayirid Empire in western Persia, causing a rift between himself and Timur of the Timurid Empire, who had also wanted to conquer Persia.
- Olav IV of Norway is elected as titular King of Sweden, in opposition to the unpopular King Albert.
- The Hongwu Emperor of China's Ming dynasty relents after eighteen tribute missions over the previous eight years and agrees to invest King U of Goryeo.
- Construction of:
- Castello Estense in Ferrara (modern-day Italy)
- Bodiam Castle (East Sussex, England)
1386
January–December
- February 24 – Elizabeth of Bosnia, the mother of the overthrown Queen Mary of Hungary and Croatia, arranges the assassination of Charles III of Naples, the ruler of Hungary, Naples, Achaea and Croatia, with the result that:
- Mary is reinstated as Queen of Hungary and Croatia.
- Charles' son, Ladislaus, becomes King of Naples.
- A period of interregnum begins in Achaea, lasting until 1396. The rule of Achaea is sought by numerous pretenders, none of whom can be considered to have reigned.
- March 4 – Grand Duke of Lithuania Jogaila (having been baptised on February 15 in Wawel Cathedral, Kraków, and on February 18 married Jadwiga, 12-year-old queen regnant of Poland) is crowned Władysław II Jagiełło, King of Poland, beginning the Jagiellonian dynasty.
- May 9 – King John I of Portugal and King Richard II of England ratify the Treaty of Windsor.
- May 20 – Earliest recorded mention of the city of Pitești, in modern-day Romania.
- July 9 – Battle of Sempach: The Swiss safeguard independence from Habsburg rule.
- July – John of Gaunt leaves England to make good his claim to the throne of Castile by right of his second marriage to Constanza of Castile in 1371.
- September 23 – Dan I of Wallachia (modern-day southern Romania) is killed in battle against the Bulgarians and is succeeded by Mircea.
- October 18 – Ruprecht Karl University of Heidelberg, the oldest university in Germany, is founded.
- November 21 – Timur's invasions of Georgia: Timurid dynasty Turco-Mongol leader Timur captures and sacks the Georgian capital of Tbilisi, taking King Bagrat V prisoner.
Date unknown
- The mother and sister of Queen Jadwiga of Poland are kidnapped by Jadwiga's brother-in-law.
- Abu al-Abbas is reinstated as ruler of the Marinid dynasty in present day Morocco.
- The Republic of Venice takes control of the island of Corfu.
- Construction begins on the Brancacci Chapel in Florence.
- Rozhdestvensky monastery is built in Muscovy.
1387
January–December
- January – Sigismund, the future Holy Roman Emperor and husband of Mary, Queen of Hungary, orders the murder of his mother-in-law, Elizabeta Kotromanic, and declares himself joint ruler of Hungary.
- January 1 – Charles III ascends to the throne of Navarre after the death of his father, Charles II.
- January 5 – John I succeeds his father, Peter IV, as King of Aragon and Valencia, and forms an alliance with France and Castile.
- March 11 – The Battle of Castagnaro is fought between Verona and Padua: Padua, led by John Hawkwood, is victorious over Giovanni Ordelaffi of Verona.
- June 2 – John Holland, a maternal half-brother of Richard II of England, is created Earl of Huntingdon.
- August 22 – Olaf, King of Norway and Denmark and claimant to the throne of Sweden, dies. The vacant thrones come under the regency of his mother Margaret I of Denmark, who will soon become Queen in her own right.
- December 19 – Battle of Radcot Bridge: Forces loyal to Richard II of England are defeated by a group of rebellious barons known as the Lords Appellant. Richard II is imprisoned until he agrees to replace all the councillors in his court.
Date unknown
- Timur conquers the Muzaffarid Empire in central Persia and appoints three puppet rulers.
- Khan Tokhtamysh of the Golden Horde invades the Timurid Empire but has to soon after withdraw due to heavy snow.
- Magha II succeeds his brother, Musa II, as Mansa of the Mali Empire.
1388
January–December
- February – The entire court of Richard II of England are convicted of treason by the Merciless Parliament, under the influence of the Lords Appellant, and are all either executed or exiled. Richard II effectively becomes a puppet of the Lords Appellant.
- April 9 – Battle of Näfels: Glarus in alliance with the Old Swiss Confederacy decisively defeat the Habsburgs, despite being outnumbered sixteen to one.
- May 18 – Battle of Buyur Lake: A Chinese Ming invasion force under General Lan Yu defeats a large Mongolian army under Uskhal Khan Tögüs Temür and captures 100 members of the Northern Yuan dynasty. Uskhal Khan is killed whilst trying to escape and is succeeded as Khan of Mongolia by his rival, Jorightu. The invading Chinese army destroys Karakorum, the capital of the Mongolian Empire.
- August 5 – Battle of Otterburn: A Scottish army, led by James Douglas, defeats an English army, capturing their leader, Harry Hotspur. Douglas is killed during the battle.
- August 27 – Battle of Bileća: Bosnians check Ottoman advance.
- December 12 – Maria of Enghien sells the Lordship of Argos and Nauplia to the Republic of Venice.
Date unknown
- The revision of Wycliffe's Bible is completed by John Purvey, and Wyclif's followers, known as the Lollards, begin to be persecuted in England.
- John of Gaunt, the uncle of Richard II of England, makes peace with Castile and gives up his claim to the Castilian throne by allowing his daughter Catherine of Lancaster to marry Prince Henry, the eldest son of John I of Castile.
- Ramesuan is reinstated as King of Ayutthaya (modern-day southern Thailand) after dethroning and executing 17-year-old King Thong Chan.
- Goryeo Revolution: General Yi Seong-gye begins a four year revolution in Goryeo (modern-day Korea) after being ordered by King U of Goryeo to attack the superior Chinese army. King U is forced from power and replaced by his son Chang.
- Tran Ngung overthrows Tran Hien as King of Vietnam.
- Omar I is succeeded by Sa'id as King of the Kanem-Bornu Empire (modern-day east Chad and Nigeria). Sa'id is succeeded in the same year by Kade Alunu. Omar and Sa'id are both killed by Bilala invaders from the west.
- Ghiyas-ud-Din Tughluq II succeeds Firuz Shah Tughlaq as Sultan of Delhi.
- Charles VI of France takes full control of government, ending the regency of his uncle, Philip the Bold.
- The University of Cologne is established; by the 21st century it will be the largest university in Germany.
- Cozia Monastery is built in Wallachia.
- Ljubostinja Monastery is built in Serbia.
1389
January–December
- February 24 – Queen Margaret of Norway and Denmark defeats Albert, King of Sweden in battle and becomes ruler of all three kingdoms. Albert is deposed from the Swedish throne and taken prisoner.
- May 19 – Vasili I becomes Grand Prince of Moscow after the death of his father, Dmitry Donskoy.
- June 28 – Battle of Kosovo: The Ottoman Empire scores a decisive victory over the Serbs and their Christian allies.[6] Both Sultan Murad I and the Serbian Prince Lazar are killed in battle.
- Bayezid I (1389–1402) succeeds his father Murad I (1359–1389) as Ottoman Emperor.
- Stefan III succeeds his father as ruler of Serbia.
- July 18 – Hundred Years' War: The kingdoms of England and France sign the Truce of Leulinghem, ending the second phase of the war and bringing a 13-year peace.
- November 2 – Pope Boniface IX succeeds Pope Urban VI as the 203rd pope.
Date unknown
- Goryeo Revolution in Korea (1388–1392): King Chang of Goryeo is forced from power and replaced by King Gongyang. The ten-year-old Chang and his predecessor, U, are both assassinated later in the year.
- Hadji II is restored as Mamluk Sultan of Egypt after overthrowing Sultan Barquq.
- With the backing of Antipope John XXIII, supporters of Louis II overthrow the underage King Ladislaus as King of Naples. The new Pope Boniface IX recognises Ladislaus's claim to the throne.
- Wikramawardhana succeeds Hayam Wuruk as ruler of the Majapahit Empire (now Indonesia).
- The unpopular Sultan Tughluq Khan of Delhi is murdered and succeeded by his brother, Abu Bakr Shah.
- Biri II succeeds Kade Alunu as King of the Kanem-Bornu Empire (now eastern Chad and Nigeria) and the Empire loses its land in present-day Chad to the Bilala.
- Sandaki overthrows Magha II as Mansa of the Mali Empire.
- Abd ar-Rahmân II succeeds Musa II as ruler of the Ziyanid Dynasty in present-day western Algeria.
- Abu Tashufin II succeeds his nephew, Abu Hammu II, as ruler of the Abdalwadid Dynasty in present-day eastern Algeria.
- Carmo Convent is built in Lisbon, Portugal.
Births
- 1380
- February 11 – Gian Francesco Poggio Bracciolini, Italian humanist (d. 1459)
- September 8 – Saint Bernardino of Siena, Italian Franciscan missionary (d. 1444)
- Ghiyath al-Kashi, Persian astronomer and mathematician (d. 1429)
- Thomas à Kempis, German monk and writer (d. 1471)
- 1381
- May 9 – Johann Schiltberger, German traveller and writer (d. 1440)
- October 13 – Thomas FitzAlan, 12th Earl of Arundel, English politician (d. 1415)
- John I, Duke of Bourbon (d. 1434)
- Saint Rita of Cascia (d. 1457)
- 1382
- Frederick IV, Duke of Austria, Regent of Tyrol and Further Austria (d. 1439)
- Dawit I of Ethiopia (d. 1413)
- Eric of Pomerania, King of Norway, Sweden and Denmark (d. 1459)
- Richard de Beauchamp, 13th Earl of Warwick (d. 1439)
- 1383
- Amadeus VIII of Savoy (d. 1451)
- Pope Eugene IV (d. 1447)
- Anne of Gloucester, English noblewoman (d. 1438)
- 1384
- Antoine, Duke of Brabant (d. 1415)
- Saint Frances of Rome (d. 1440)
- Khalil Sultan, Timurid ruler in Transoxiana (d. 1411)
- 1385
- John FitzAlan, 13th Earl of Arundel (d. 1421)
- Jan van Eyck, Flemish painter (approximate date; died 1441)
- Margaret Holland, Duchess of Clarence, English noblewoman (d. 1429)
- 1386
- Ashikaga Yoshimochi, Japanese shogun (d. 1428)
- Giovanni da Capistrano, Italian saint (d. 1456)
- Donatello, Italian artist (d. 1466)
- Mircea I of Wallachia (d. 1418)
- Niccolò Piccinino, Italian mercenary (d. 1444)
- 1387
- King Henry V of England (d. 1422)
- King Charles III of Navarre (d. 1425)
- Isabella of Valois, Princess of France (d. 1410)
- 1388
- Claudius Clavus, Danish geographer
- Thomas of Lancaster, 1st Duke of Clarence, second son of Henry IV of England (d. 1421)
- Juliana Berners, English writer
- Thomas Montacute, 4th Earl of Salisbury (d. 1428)
- 1389
- John of Lancaster, 1st Duke of Bedford, son of Henry IV of England, regent of England (d. 1435)
- Cosimo de' Medici, ruler of Florence (d. 1464)
- John VI, Duke of Brittany (d. 1442)
- Zbigniew Oleśnicki, Polish cardinal and statesman (d. 1455)
- Antoninus of Florence, Italian archbishop
Deaths
- 1380
- Philippa, 5th Countess of Ulster (b. 1355)
- Saint Catherine of Siena (b. 1347)
- Emperor Kōmyō of Japan (b. 1322)
- King Charles V of France (b. 1338)
- Bertrand du Guesclin, Constable of France
- Dafydd ap Gwilym, Welsh poet
- Haakon VI of Norway (b. 1340)
- Nissim of Gerona, rabbi (b. 1320)
- 1381
- St Catherine of Sweden
- Simon Sudbury, Archbishop of Canterbury
- John Cavendish, English jurist
- John of Ruysbroeck, Flemish mystic (b. 1293)
- Edmund Mortimer, 3rd Earl of March (b. 1351)
- Wat Tyler, English rebel
- 1382
- Janusz Suchywilk, Polish nobleman
- Joanna I of Naples (b. 1327)
- Kęstutis, Grand Prince of Lithuania (b. 1297)
- Eleanor of Aragon, queen of John I of Castile (b. 1358)
- Peter II of Cyprus, called The Fat
- Philip van Artevelde, Flemish patriot (b. 1340)
- Louis I of Hungary (b. 1326)
- Nicole Oresme, French philosopher (b. 1325)
- 1383
- Amadeus VI, Count of Savoy (b. 1334)
- Thomas de Ros, 4th Baron de Ros (b. 1338)
- John VI Kantakouzenos, Byzantine emperor (b. c. 1292)
- King Fernando I of Portugal (b. 1345)
- 1384
- Geert Groote, Dutch preacher and founder of the Brethren of the Common Life (b. 1340)
- John Wycliffe, English theologian and Bible translator (b. 1328)
- Ruaidri mac Tairdelbach Ó Conchobair, King of Connacht
- Joanna of Dreux, countess of Penthièvre and nominal Duchess of Brittany (b. 1319)
- John of Fordun, Scottish chronicler
- Kan'ami, Japanese Noh actor and playwright (b. 1333)
- Liubartas, King of Galicia
- Peter of Enghien, Count of Lecce
- 1385 – Joan of Kent, wife of Edward, the Black Prince (b. 1328)
- 1386
- Leopold III, Duke of Austria (b. 1351)
- James Audley, English knight
- 1387
- Frans Ackerman, Flemish statesman (b. 1330)
- Olaf IV of Norway/Olaf II of Denmark (b. 1370)
- Peter IV of Aragon (b. 1319)
- Richard Óg Burke, second Clanricarde
- Peter de la Mare, English politician
- King Charles II of Navarre (b. 1332)
- 1388
- Simon de Burley, Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports
- James Douglas, 2nd Earl of Douglas
- Thomas Usk, English author
- 1389
- Murad I, emperor of the Ottoman Empire (b. 1319)
- Prince Lazar of Serbia
- Pope Urban VI (b. c. 1318)
- Dmitry Donskoy, Russian tsar
- Isabel Macduff, 9th Countess of Fife
- Hayam Wuruk, Ruler of the Majapahit Empire on Java (b. 1334)
References
- ↑ Brook, Timothy (1998). The Confusions of Pleasure: Commerce and Culture in Ming China. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-22154-3
- ↑
- "Earthquake Synod." In Cross, F. L. and E. A. Livingstone, eds. The Oxford Dictionary of the Christian Church. London: Oxford UP, 1974. p. 437.
- ↑ Lock, Peter (2013). The Routledge Companion to the Crusades. Routledge. p. 130. ISBN 9781135131371.
- ↑ Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
- ↑ Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 109–113. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2.
- ↑ Lock, Peter (2013). The Routledge Companion to the Crusades. Routledge. p. 130. ISBN 9781135131371.
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