1150

Year 1150 (MCL) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
1150 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1150
MCL
Ab urbe condita1903
Armenian calendar599
ԹՎ ՇՂԹ
Assyrian calendar5900
Balinese saka calendar1071–1072
Bengali calendar557
Berber calendar2100
English Regnal year15 Ste. 1  16 Ste. 1
Buddhist calendar1694
Burmese calendar512
Byzantine calendar6658–6659
Chinese calendar己巳年 (Earth Snake)
3846 or 3786
     to 
庚午年 (Metal Horse)
3847 or 3787
Coptic calendar866–867
Discordian calendar2316
Ethiopian calendar1142–1143
Hebrew calendar4910–4911
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1206–1207
 - Shaka Samvat1071–1072
 - Kali Yuga4250–4251
Holocene calendar11150
Igbo calendar150–151
Iranian calendar528–529
Islamic calendar544–545
Japanese calendarKyūan 6
(久安6年)
Javanese calendar1056–1057
Julian calendar1150
MCL
Korean calendar3483
Minguo calendar762 before ROC
民前762年
Nanakshahi calendar−318
Seleucid era1461/1462 AG
Thai solar calendar1692–1693
Tibetan calendar阴土蛇年
(female Earth-Snake)
1276 or 895 or 123
     to 
阳金马年
(male Iron-Horse)
1277 or 896 or 124
Nur al-Din, ruler of Aleppo (1118–1174)

Events

Byzantine Empire

  • Battle of Tara: The Byzantines defeat the Serbian-Hungarian army under Grdeša, count (župan) of Travunija, near the snow-covered Tara River. The Serbs are overpowered, and Grand Prince Uroš II is forced to accept the peace agreement made by Emperor Manuel I (Komnenos). Uroš is succeeded by his brother Desa, who becomes co-ruler of the Principality of Serbia (until 1153).[1]

Levant

  • Spring Joscelin II, count of Edessa, on his way to Antioch is separated from his escort and falls into the hands of some Turcoman free-booters. Nur al-Din, ruler (atabeg) of Aleppo, heard of Joscelin's capture and sends a squadron of cavalry to take him from his captors. Joscelin is led before a hostile crowd and publicly blinded. Nur al-Din puts him in prison in the Citadel of Aleppo.[2]
  • Battle of Aintab: A Crusader army led by King Baldwin III repels the attacks of Nur al-Din near Aintab. Baldwin safely evacuates the Christian residents of the County of Edessa, which is captured by the Zangids.[3]
  • The city of Ashkelon is fortified with 53 towers by order of the 17-year-old Caliph Al-Zafir, as it is the most strategic frontier fortress of the Fatimid Caliphate.[4]

Europe

England

  • November 10 Dryburgh Abbey located in the Scottish Borders is founded by Lord Hugh de Morville.
  • Cubbie Roo's Castle is built on Wyre (Orkney Islands) and is first mentioned in the Orkneyinga Saga.
  • Christchurch Priory located in Dorset is founded by Earl Baldwin de Redvers.
  • The Irish Chronology (Chronicon Scotorum) is written (approximate date).

Religion

  • The 15-year-old King Inge I (the Hunchback) of Norway calls for a meeting at Bergen of all religious leaders in anticipation that the English cardinal Nicholas Breakspear will found an archbishopric at Trondheim.
  • Peter Lombard, a French scholastic theologian, publishes the Four Books of Sentences, which becomes the standard textbook of theology at the medieval universities.[7]
  • The temple at Angkor Wat ("Capital of Temples") is completed in the Khmer Empire (modern Cambodia).

Births

  • January 26 – Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, Persian polymath (d. 1210)
  • October 8 – Narapatisithu, ruler of the Pagan Kingdom (d. 1211)
  • Agnes of Loon, German duchess and regent (d. 1191)
  • Albert de Rethel, Flemish clergyman and priest (d. 1195)
  • Alix of France, French countess and regent (d. 1197)
  • André de Chauvigny, French nobleman (d. 1202)
  • Azalaïs of Montferrat, Italian noblewoman (d. 1232)
  • Baldwin V, count of Hainaut and Flanders (d. 1195)
  • Geoffrey of Villehardouin, French knight (d. 1213)
  • Gerald FitzMaurice, Norman nobleman (d. 1204)
  • Gruffydd Fychan ap Iorwerth, Welsh knight (d. 1221)
  • Henry de Longchamp, English High Sheriff (d. 1212)
  • Henryk Kietlicz, archbishop of Gniezno (d. 1219)
  • Hermann Joseph, German priest and mystic (d. 1241)
  • Honorius III, pope of the Catholic Church (d. 1227)
  • Hugh II of Saint Omer, prince of Galilee (d. 1204)
  • John Comyn, archbishop of Dublin (approximate date)
  • John de Courcy (or Courci), Norman knight (d. 1219)
  • Judah ben Samuel, German Jewish rabbi (d. 1217)
  • Leo I (or Levon), king of Armenian Cilicia (d. 1219)
  • Minamoto no Noriyori, Japanese general (d. 1193)
  • Otto I, count of Guelders and Zutphen (d. 1207)
  • Qutb al-Din Aibak, ruler of the Delhi Sultanate (d. 1210)
  • Ramon I, Catalonian nobleman (approximate date)
  • Robert IV, French nobleman and Grand Master (d. 1193)
  • Rosamund Clifford, English noblewoman (d. 1176)
  • Stephen Langton, English archbishop (d. 1228)
  • Theodore Apsevdis, Byzantine painter (d. 1215)
  • Umadevi, Indian queen and general (d. 1218)
  • William de Braose, English nobleman (d. 1211)
  • Wincenty Kadłubek, bishop of Kraków (d. 1223)
  • Ye Shi, Chinese scholar and philosopher (d. 1223)

Deaths

  • January 9 Xi Zong, Chinese emperor of the Jin Dynasty (b. 1119)
  • March 20 Simon of Worcester, bishop of Worcester
  • April 8 Gertrude of Babenberg, German duchess (b. 1118)
  • August 27 Guarinus of Sitten, French bishop (b. 1065)
  • September 16 Sibylla of Burgundy, queen of Sicily (b. 1126)
  • November 12 Hartbert van Bierum, bishop of Utrecht
  • November 21 García IV (the Restorer), king of Navarre
  • December 16 Raynald of Bar, French abbot
  • Barisan of Ibelin (the Old), French nobleman
  • Henry VI (Berengar), co-ruler of Germany
  • Hervé de Bourg-Dieu, French biblical scholar
  • Ibn Masal, Fatimid general, official and vizier
  • Jabir ibn Aflah, Andalusian astronomer (b. 1100)
  • Kjeld (or Ketil), Danish clergyman and saint
  • Reinward, bishop of Meissen (approximate date)
  • Renier de Huy, Flemish goldsmith and sculptor
  • Robert de Sigello, English bishop and chancellor
  • Suryavarman II, ruler of the Khmer Empire
  • Teobaldo Roggeri, Italian shoemaker (b. 1100)
  • William the Simple, French nobleman (b. 1085)

References

  1. Joannes Cinnamus (1976). Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus, p. 87. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-52155-0.
  2. Steven Runciman (1952). A History of The Crusades. Vol II: The Kingdom of Jerusalem, p. 267. ISBN 978-0-241-29876-3.
  3. Smail, R. C. (1956). Crusading Warfare 1097–1193, p. 160. New York: Barnes & Noble Books. ISBN 1-56619-769-4.
  4. Gore, Rick (January 2001). "Ancient Ashkelon". National Geographic.
  5. Knödler, Julia (2010). Germany: Narrative (1125–1250), p. 178. Clifford J. (ed). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Medieval Warfare and Military Technology, pp. 176–185. New York: Oxford University Press.
  6. Nobel, Keith Allan (1994). Changing Doctoral Degrees: An International Perspective. Society for Research into Higher Education. ISBN 0335192130.
  7. Joseph Rickaby (1908). Scholasticism. A. Constable. p. 23.
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