Events
Europe
★
May 7 - The
Second Council of Lyons, held by the leadership of the
Roman Catholic Church convenes to consider the conquest of the
Holy Land via
Crusades and address the
East-West Schism with the
Byzantine church. The Council eventually approves a
tithe to support efforts to conquer the Holy Land from
Muslims, and reaches apparent resolution of the schism which ultimately proves unsuccessful.
★ November - The diet at
Nuremberg orders that all crown estates seized since the death of
Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor be restored to
Rudolph I of Germany; almost all European rulers agree, with the notable exception of King
Otakar II of Bohemia, who had benefited greatly by conquering or otherwise coming into possession of many of those lands.
★
Pope Gregory X decrees that
conclaves (meetings during which the electors have no contact with the outside) should be used for
papal elections, reforming the electoral process which had taken over three years to elect him.
England
★
August 2 - King
Edward I of England finally returns from the
Ninth Crusade to
England to be
crowned king, two years after his father King
Henry III's death.
★
★ His interim chancellor and effective regent,
Walter de Merton retires from royal service to make the final revisions to his statutes for the foundation of
Merton College, Oxford and take up the post of
Bishop of Rochester.
★
★ One of Edward's first acts is to enforce a decree requiring all
English Jews to wear
yellow badges.
★ The first main survey of the
Hundred Rolls, an
English census seen as a follow up to the
Domesday Book completed in
1086, is begun; it lasts until
1275.
Italy
★
Bonvesin de la Riva wrote the didactic-allegoric poemet
Libro de le tre scritture (Negra, Rubra, Aurea), first text in ancient
Western Lombard language (still similar to other
gallo-italic languages), and one of the first great literary work in
Italy. It tells about
Hell,
Christ's Passion and
Paradise; this plot suggested
Dante in his
Comedia.
Asia
★
November 20 - The
Mongol Empire attempts the first of several invasions of
Japan; after the Mongols capture outlying islands, they are repulsed on the main island at the
Battle of Bun'ei by amassed Japanese warriors and a strong storm which batters their forces and fleet. Credit for the storm — called a ''
kamikaze'', or divine wind — is given by the Japanese to the god
Raiden.
★
Nichiren, founder of
Nichiren Buddhism, enters a voluntary exile on
Mount Minobu.
Births
★
July 11 -
Robert the Bruce, King of
Scotland (died
1329)
★
Eric VI of Denmark (died
1319)
★
Saint Louis of Toulouse (died
1297)
★
Adam Murimuth, English ecclesiastic and chronicler (approximate date; died
1347)
★
Marchetto da Padova, Italian music theorist (approximate date)
Deaths
★
March 7 - Saint
Thomas Aquinas, Italian Catholic theologian (born
1225)
★
June 25 -
Nasir al-Din Tusi, Persian scientist and writer (born
1201)
★
July 15 -
Bonaventure, Italian theologian and saint (born
1221)
★
August 15 -
Robert de Sorbon, French theologian and founder of the Sorbonne (born
1201)
★
September 2 -
Prince Munetaka, Japanese shogun (born
1242)
★
Henry III of Champagne
★
Aedh mac Felim Ua Conchobair, King of Connacht