1126

Year 1126 (MCXXVI) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
1126 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1126
MCXXVI
Ab urbe condita1879
Armenian calendar575
ԹՎ ՇՀԵ
Assyrian calendar5876
Balinese saka calendar1047–1048
Bengali calendar533
Berber calendar2076
English Regnal year26 Hen. 1  27 Hen. 1
Buddhist calendar1670
Burmese calendar488
Byzantine calendar6634–6635
Chinese calendar乙巳年 (Wood Snake)
3822 or 3762
     to 
丙午年 (Fire Horse)
3823 or 3763
Coptic calendar842–843
Discordian calendar2292
Ethiopian calendar1118–1119
Hebrew calendar4886–4887
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1182–1183
 - Shaka Samvat1047–1048
 - Kali Yuga4226–4227
Holocene calendar11126
Igbo calendar126–127
Iranian calendar504–505
Islamic calendar519–520
Japanese calendarTenji 3 / Daiji 1
(大治元年)
Javanese calendar1031–1032
Julian calendar1126
MCXXVI
Korean calendar3459
Minguo calendar786 before ROC
民前786年
Nanakshahi calendar−342
Seleucid era1437/1438 AG
Thai solar calendar1668–1669
Tibetan calendar阴木蛇年
(female Wood-Snake)
1252 or 871 or 99
     to 
阳火马年
(male Fire-Horse)
1253 or 872 or 100
Battle of Chlumec, by Adolf Liebscher

Events

Byzantine Empire

  • Summer Emperor John II Komnenos re-confirms the treaty of 1082. This ends the hostilities with Hungary and Venice. John secures Braničevo, and recovers the region of Sirmium on the Danube, but is forced by Venice to renew the exclusive commercial privileges.

Levant

  • Spring The Crusaders under Pons, count of Tripoli, attack the fortress of Rafaniya (once held by Pons' grandfather Raymond IV), which dominates the entry of the Buqaia from the Orontes Valley. They besiege the fortress for 18 days and capture it on March 31.[1]
  • Autumn Bohemond II takes over his inheritance of the Principality of Antioch. He sails from Otranto with a Norman fleet of 24 ships, carrying a number of troops and horses. Bohemond lands at the port of St. Symeon early in October and is welcomed at Antioch.[1]

Europe

  • February 18 Battle of Chlumec: Duke Soběslav I defeats a German army under King Lothair III and his Moravian ally, Duke Otto II the Black. Soběslav becomes the head of the Bohemian Principality.[2]
  • March 8 Queen Urraca of León ("the Reckless") dies after a 17-year reign. She is succeeded by her 21-year-old son Alfonso VII el Emperador who becomes king of León (until 1157).
  • Ragnvald Knaphövde, pretender to the Swedish throne, is killed by upset peasants at a local thing. Sweden is without a ruler, but Magnus I ("the Strong") claims sovereignty over Gothenland.
  • Summer King Alfonso the Battler of Aragon and Navarre launches a campaign raid into Granada in Andalusia (modern Spain) against the Almoravids.
  • Winter King Lothair III makes Henry X ("the Proud"), duke of Bavaria to succeed his late father, Henry IX ("the Black"), who has died on December 13.

Britain

  • Shrewsbury Castle is granted by King Henry I to his second wife, Queen Adeliza of Louvain (or Adelicia). The command of the castle is given to William FitzAlan.
  • Rutherglen (located in South Lanarkshire) becomes one of the first of the Royal Burghs in Scotland.

Asia

  • Spring In China, scholars and farmers demonstrate around the capital city of Kaifeng, for the restoration of a trusted military official, Li Gang (李綱). Small conflicts erupt between the protestors and the government.
  • January 18 Emperor Hui Zong of the Song Dynasty abdicates in favour of his eldest son, Qin Zong after a 24-year reign. Hui Zong assumes the honorary title of Taishang Huang (or "Retired Emperor").
  • Jin–Song War: Jurchen forces reach the Yellow River Valley, two days after New Year. Remnants of the court flee south, including much of the populace, and communities such as the Kaifeng Jews.[3]
  • January 31 Jurchen forces lay siege to Kaifeng. Qin Zong negotiates the terms of surrender, agreeing an annual indemnity. He orders Song forces to defend the prefectures of the Northern Song.

Literature

Religion

  • Olegarius, archbishop of Tarragona, creates a community of knights (known as the "Confraternity of Tarragona"), to combat the Almoravids in Catalonia.[4]

Births

  • Abu Madyan, Andalusian mystic and Sufi master (d. 1198)
  • Averroes ibn Rushd, Andalusian judge and physician (d. 1198)
  • Eynion de Tilston, Norman knight and lord of Tilston (approximate date)
  • Fan Chengda, Chinese politician, poet and geographer (d. 1193)
  • Michael the Syrian ("the Great"), Syriac patriarch (d. 1199)
  • Mieszko III the Old, duke of Greater Poland (d. 1202)
  • Muneko, Japanese princess and empress (d. 1189)
  • Peter I of Courtenay, French nobleman (d. 1183)
  • Sibylla of Burgundy, queen of Sicily (d. 1150)
  • Sviatoslav III, Grand Prince of Kiev (d. 1194)
  • Taira no Tokiko, Japanese Buddhist nun (d. 1185)

Deaths

  • February 18 Otto II the Black, Moravian prince (b. 1085)
  • March 8 Urraca, queen regnant of León and Galicia (b. 1079)
  • July 30 Cecilia of Normandy (or Cecily), English princess
  • September 1 Świętosława of Poland, queen of Bohemia
  • October 1 Morphia of Melitene, queen of Jerusalem (or 1127)
  • December 4 Omar Khayyam, Persian mathematician (b. 1048)
  • December 13 Henry IX the Black, duke of Bavaria (b. 1075)
  • December 29 Wulfhilde of Saxony, duchess of Bavaria (b. 1072)
  • Abu Bakr al-Turtushi, Andalusian political philosopher (b. 1059)
  • Abu Nasr Ahmad ibn Fadl, Seljuk ruler (vizier) of Damascus
  • Ahmad Ghazali, Persian mystic and writer (approximate date)
  • Al-Tutili ("Blind Poet of Tudela"), Andalusian Muwallad poet
  • Bertrand of Comminges, French bishop and saint (b. 1050)
  • Cai Jing, Chinese politician and calligrapher (b. 1047)
  • Edgar the Ætheling, uncrowned king of England (b. 1051)
  • Ekkehard of Aura, German abbot, chronicler and writer
  • Ragnvald Knaphövde, Swedish pretender (approximate date)
  • Tong Guan, Chinese general and political adviser (b. 1054)
  • Vikramaditya VI, king of the Western Chalukya Empire
  • Waleran of Le Puiset, French nobleman (approximate date)
  • Wynebald de Ballon, Norman nobleman (b. 1058)

References

  1. Runciman, Steven (1952). A History of The Crusades. Vol II: The Kingdom of Jerusalem. pp. 140–141. ISBN 978-0-241-29876-3.
  2. Bellum.cz – Battle of Chlumec 18th February 1126
  3. Mote, Frederick W. (1999). Imperial China: 900–1800, p. 196. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01212-7.
  4. Fletcher, R. A. (1987). "Reconquest and Crusade in Spain c. 1050-1150". Transactions of the Royal Historical Society. 5. 37: 31–47 [46]. JSTOR 3679149.
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