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1349

A Wisdom Archive on 1349

1349

A selection of articles related to 1349

1349, 1349, 1349 - Births, 1349 - Deaths, 1349 - Events, <b>1349</b> is a Norwegian black metal band; see 1349 (band)., Law of Attraction, Practising Law of Attraction, Law of Attraction for Prosperity, Law of Attraction for Love, Law of Attraction - Obstacles

ARTICLES RELATED TO 1349

1349: Encyclopedia II - Ethnic cleansing - Modern-age ethnic cleansing

The term "ethnic cleansing" has come to mean the displacement or expulsion from a territory of one ethnic group by another. The displacement is usually forcible, though there are examples of voluntary or compensated ethnic cleansing. The 20th century has seen numerous cases, particularly in Europe and the Middle East. During more recent times, ethnic cleansing has often been used during colonisation projects. In North America, British and American settlers ethnically cleansed millions [citation needed] of Native Amer ...

See also:

Ethnic cleansing, Ethnic cleansing - Origins of the term, Ethnic cleansing - Early examples of ethnic cleansing, Ethnic cleansing - Modern-age ethnic cleansing, Ethnic cleansing - 20th-century instances, Ethnic cleansing - Ethnic cleansing as a military and political tactic, Ethnic cleansing - Ethnic cleansing as international law crime, Ethnic cleansing - Comparison of events in the Bible with ethnic cleansing

Read more here: » Ethnic cleansing: Encyclopedia II - Ethnic cleansing - Modern-age ethnic cleansing

1349: Encyclopedia II - Algirdas - Background

Algirdas was one of the seven sons of the famous grand duke Gediminas among whom on his death in 1341 he divided his domains, leaving the youngest, Jaunutis, in possession of the capital, Vilnius, with a nominal priority. With the aid of his brother Kęstutis, Algirdas in 1345 drove out the incapable Jaunutis and declared himself grand duke. The two and thirty years of his reign (1345-1377) were devoted to the development and extension of Lithuania, and he lived to make i ...

See also:

Algirdas, Algirdas - Background, Algirdas - Expansion of Lithuania, Algirdas - Assessment, Algirdas - Mother, Algirdas - Father, Algirdas - Wives, Algirdas - Brothers, Algirdas - Sisters, Algirdas - Sons, Algirdas - Daughters

Read more here: » Algirdas: Encyclopedia II - Algirdas - Background

1349: Encyclopedia II - History of Bavaria - Partitions

The efforts of the dukes to increase their power and to give unity to the duchy had met with a fair measure of success; but they were soon vitiated by partitions among different members of the family, which for 250 years made the history of Bavaria little more than a jejune chronicle of territorial divisions bringing war and weakness in their train. The first of these divisions occurred in 1255. Louis II and Henry I, the sons of Duke Otto II, who for two years after their father's death had ruled Bavaria jointly, split their inheritance: Louis II obtained the western part of the duchy, afterwards called Upper Bav ...

See also:

History of Bavaria, History of Bavaria - Early settlements and Roman Raetia, History of Bavaria - Migrations and early Medieval Period, History of Bavaria - Bavaria and the Agilolfings under Frankish Overlordship, History of Bavaria - Christianity, History of Bavaria - The Duchy during the Carolingian Period, History of Bavaria - The Duchy during the Ottonian and Salian Periods, History of Bavaria - The Welfs, History of Bavaria - Geographic Fluctuations, History of Bavaria - The Wittelsbach Dynasty, History of Bavaria - Partitions, History of Bavaria - The Reunited Duchy, History of Bavaria - The Electorate, History of Bavaria - Revolutionary and Napoleonic, History of Bavaria - The Kingdom, History of Bavaria - German Empire, History of Bavaria - Modern Times, History of Bavaria - Bibliography, History of Bavaria - Notes

Read more here: » History of Bavaria: Encyclopedia II - History of Bavaria - Partitions

1349: Encyclopedia II - Santa Maria del Fiore - Interior

The cathedral is built as a basilica, with a nave and two aisles, forming a Roman cross. The nave and the aisles are divided by wide pointed arches with composite pilasters, dividing the nave into four square bays. Its dimensions are enormous: length 153 m (about 500 ft.), width 38 m (128 ft.), width at the crossing 90 m (almost 300 ft.). The height of the arches in the aisles is 23 m (75 ft.). The heigth from pavement to the opening of the lantern in the dome is also 90 m (300 ft). The Gothic interior is cavernous and gives an empty impression. The relative bareness of the church corresponds with the austerity of r ...

See also:

Santa Maria del Fiore, Santa Maria del Fiore - History, Santa Maria del Fiore - Dome, Santa Maria del Fiore - Façade, Santa Maria del Fiore - Interior, Santa Maria del Fiore - Crypt, Santa Maria del Fiore - Artists

Read more here: » Santa Maria del Fiore: Encyclopedia II - Santa Maria del Fiore - Interior

1349: Encyclopedia II - Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania - Choice of religion

He inherited a vast domain, comprising Lithuania proper, Samogitia, Red Russia, Polotsk and Minsk; but these possessions were environed by powerful and greedy foes, the most dangerous of them being the Teutonic Knights and the Livonian Brothers of the Sword. The systematic raiding of Lithuania by the knights under the pretext of converting it had long since united all the Lithuanian tribes against the common enemy; but Gediminas aimed at establishing a dynasty which should make Lithuania not merely secure but mighty, and for this purpose he ...

See also:

Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania, Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania - Origin, Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania - Choice of religion, Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania - Incorporation of Slavic lands, Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania - Domestic affairs, Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania - Father, Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania - Wives, Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania - Brothers, Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania - Sons, Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania - Daughters

Read more here: » Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania: Encyclopedia II - Gediminas Grand Duke of Lithuania - Choice of religion

1349: Encyclopedia II - Peasants' Revolt - Literary Mention

John Gower, friend of Geoffrey Chaucer, saw the peasants as unjustified in their cause. In his Vox Clamantis, he sees the peasant action as the work of the Anti-Christ and a sign of evil prevailing over virtue. Froissart's Chronicles devotes twenty pages to the revolt. William Morris described the revolt in A Dream of John Ball (1888). In the book Born in Blood: The Lost Secrets of Freemasonry (1990) author John J. Robinson (not a professional historian), combines scholarly research with enter ...

See also:

Peasants' Revolt, Peasants' Revolt - Literary Mention, Peasants' Revolt - Notes, Peasants' Revolt - Books

Read more here: » Peasants' Revolt: Encyclopedia II - Peasants' Revolt - Literary Mention

1349: Encyclopedia II - Early history of Laos - Mongol Influence

Recent historical research has shown that the Mongols, who destroyed Nanzhao in 1253 and made the area a province of their empire -- naming it Yunnan --exercised a decisive political influence in the middle Mekong Valley for the better part of a century. In 1271 Panya Lang, founder of a new dynasty headed by rulers bearing the title panya (lord), began his rule over a fully sovereign Muang Sua. In 1286 Panya Lang's son, Panya Khamphong, was involved in a coup d'etat that was probably instigated by the Mongols and that exiled his father. Upon his f ...

See also:

Early history of Laos, Early history of Laos - Mongol Influence, Early history of Laos - Reference

Read more here: » Early history of Laos: Encyclopedia II - Early history of Laos - Mongol Influence

1349: Encyclopedia II - Earnaness - The ancient stronghold

The ancient stronghold of Aranæs (58°40′N 13°35′E) was located near Skara on the shore of lake Vänern, in Västergötland. In the early 14th century, it was the property of the marshal and Swedish regent Torkel Knutsson. In this castle, King Birger Magnusson signed a reconciliation treaty with his brothers, the dukes Eric and Valdemar Magnusson. After the two dukes had poisoned the king's mind against his faithful marshal, Torkel was captured and taken to Stockholm, where he was beheaded. The once magnificent stronghold ...

See also:

Earnaness, Earnaness - Beowulf, Earnaness - The ancient stronghold, Earnaness - The lost town

Read more here: » Earnaness: Encyclopedia II - Earnaness - The ancient stronghold

1349: Encyclopedia II - Stefan Dušan - Biography

He was the oldest son of Stefan of Decani and Theodora, daughter of Bulgarian tsar Smilets. Early in his life he visited Constantinople, in which as a child he spent around seven years (1314–1320). There he learned Greek, gained an understanding of Greek life and culture, and got a clear sense of the Greek empire. He himself was more a soldier than a diplomat: as a youngster he excelled in two battles: in 1329 he beat Bosnian ban Stjepan Kotromanić, and in 1330 Bulga ...

See also:

Stefan Dušan, Stefan Dušan - Biography, Stefan Dušan - Reference, Stefan Dušan - Sources

Read more here: » Stefan Dušan: Encyclopedia II - Stefan Dušan - Biography

1349: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Alphabets

The following compares Српска Ћирилица (Serbian Cyrillic script) or Aзбука (Azbuka) with Srpska Latinica (Serbian Latin script) or Abeceda. Serbian language - Notes. The letters Lj, Nj and Dž are represented by two characters in the Latin alphabet. Also, the letter Đ is sometimes written as Dj. The sort order of the two alphabets is different. Azbuka: А Б В Г Д Ђ Е Ж З И Ј К Л Љ ...

See also:

Serbian language, Serbian language - Alphabets, Serbian language - Notes, Serbian language - Phonology, Serbian language - Vowels, Serbian language - Consonants, Serbian language - Serbian literature, Serbian language - Demographics, Serbian language - Trivia, Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Read more here: » Serbian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Alphabets

1349: Encyclopedia II - Norway - History

In the 9th century Norway consisted of a number of petty kingdoms. According to tradition, Harald Fairhair gathered the small kingdoms into one and in 872 with the battle of Hafrsfjord, he established a feudal state. The Viking age (8th to 11th centuries) was one of national unification and expansion. The Norwegians settled on Iceland, the Faroe Islands, Greenland and parts of the British Islands and attempted to settle at L'Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland, Canada (it is the Vinland of The Saga of Eric the Red). Norwegians founded th ...

See also:

Norway, Norway - History, Norway - Politics, Norway - Subdivisions, Norway - Geography, Norway - Economy, Norway - Demographics, Norway - Culture, Norway - Miscellaneous topics, Norway - International rankings

Read more here: » Norway: Encyclopedia II - Norway - History

1349: Encyclopedia II - Sarbadars - History

Sarbadars - Foundation. The Sarbadar state came into existence around early 1337. At that time, much of Khurasan was under the control of the Ilkhanid claimant Togha Temur and his amirs. One of his subjects, 'Ala' al-Din Muhammad, had jurisdiction over the city of Sabzavar. His oppressive taxation of the area caused an 'Abd al-Razzaq, a member of the feudal ruling class, to murder a government official in Bashtin, a district of the city. The official was a nephew of 'Ala' al-Din, and 'Abd al-Razzaq raised the sta ...

See also:

Sarbadars, Sarbadars - Religion, Sarbadars - Government, Sarbadars - History, Sarbadars - Foundation, Sarbadars - 1344-1361, Sarbadars - Decline and Submission to Timur, Sarbadars - Legacy, Sarbadars - Other Sarbadars

Read more here: » Sarbadars: Encyclopedia II - Sarbadars - History

1349: Encyclopedia II - Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor - Life

From 1333 Charles started to administer his father's Crown lands due to the King's often absence and in 1334 he became Margrave of Moravia. He was elected as a rival King of the Romans to Emperor Louis IV, succeeded his father John of Luxemburg as King of Bohemia and Count of Luxembourg in 1346 as his mother was Elizabeth (Eliška), heiress of Bohemia, daughter of King Wenceslaus II and sister of King Wenceslaus III of the Přemyslid dynasty. Charles was crowned as emperor of the Holy Roman Empire in 1355. After 1349, Charles IV was uncontested ...

See also:

Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor, Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor - Life, Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor - Family and children, Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor - In memoriam

Read more here: » Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor: Encyclopedia II - Charles IV Holy Roman Emperor - Life

1349: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Alphabets

The following compares Српска Ћирилица (Serbian Cyrillic script) or Aзбука (Azbuka) with Srpska Latinica (Serbian Latin script) or Abeceda. Serbian language - Notes. The letters Lj, Nj and Dž are represented by two characters in the Latin alphabet and are always written together even in top-down text). They are also sorted together (i.e. ljubav comes after lopta). Cyrillic is considered more precise because there is no ambiguity involved ...

See also:

Serbian language, Serbian language - Alphabets, Serbian language - Notes, Serbian language - Phonology, Serbian language - Vowels, Serbian language - Consonants, Serbian language - Morphology, Serbian language - Cases, Serbian language - Serbian literature, Serbian language - Demographics, Serbian language - Trivia, Serbian language - Differences to similar languages

Read more here: » Serbian language: Encyclopedia II - Serbian language - Alphabets

1349: Encyclopedia II - Bergen Norway - History

Bergen was founded as a city by Olaf Kyrre in AD 1070, and considered to be Norway's capital until 1299, Toward the end of the thirteenth century, Bergen became one of the Hanseatic League's four most important bureaus. The reason for its importance was the trade in dried cod from the northern Norwegian coast, starting up around 1100. The German hanseatic merchants lived in their own separate quarter of town, where low German was spoken, enjoying exclusive rights to trade with the northern fishermen that each summer sailed to Bergen. Today, one still gets a feel of this at the quayside of Bergen called Bryggen, today on ...

See also:

Bergen Norway, Bergen Norway - History, Bergen Norway - Cityscape, Bergen Norway - Administration, Bergen Norway - Weather, Bergen Norway - Universities and research, Bergen Norway - Industry, Bergen Norway - Communication, Bergen Norway - Culture and sports, Bergen Norway - Famous people from Bergen, Bergen Norway - Twin cities

Read more here: » Bergen Norway: Encyclopedia II - Bergen Norway - History

1349: Encyclopedia II - 1280s - War and politics

1280s - Europe. 1282 - March - Dafydd ap Gruffydd, brother to Prince of Wales Llywelyn the Last, attacks an English castle; his brother feels compelled to support him despite poor preparation for war, quickly leading to the final English conquest of Wales by King Edward I of England. 1286 - Prussians settled in exile in Serbia stage a famous uprising. 1288 - June 5 - John I of Brabant defeats the duchy of Guelders in the Battle of Worringen — one of the largest battles in ...

See also:

1280s, 1280s - War and politics, 1280s - Europe, 1280s - The Mongol Empire sphere of influence, 1280s - The Mamluk Sultanate sphere of influence: the Middle East, 1280s - Culture, 1280s - Natural events, 1280s - Science literature and industry, 1280s - Civic laws and institutions, 1280s - Art and architecture, 1280s - Cities and institutions, 1280s - Religion, 1280s - Births, 1280s - Deaths

Read more here: » 1280s: Encyclopedia II - 1280s - War and politics

1349: Encyclopedia II - Dauphiné - Origin of the name

Guy VIII, Count of Vienne, had a dolphin on his coat of arms and had been nicknamed le Dauphin (French for dolphin). This title descended in his family until 1349, when Humbert II sold his seigneurie, called the Dauphiné, to King Philippe VI on condition that the heir of France assume the title of le Dauphin. Le Dauphiné Libéré is a famous regional French newspaper, and organises the Cr ...

See also:

Dauphiné, Dauphiné - Origin of the name

Read more here: » Dauphiné: Encyclopedia II - Dauphiné - Origin of the name

1349: Encyclopedia II - Empire of Trebizond - Foundation

When Constantinople fell to the Fourth Crusade in 1204, the Empire of Trebizond was one of the three smaller Greek states that emerged from the wreckage, along with the Empire of Nicaea and the Despotate of Epirus. Alexius, a grandson of Byzantine emperor Andronicus I Comnenus and a descendant of King David the Builder of Georgia through his great grandmother Katay (daughter of David the Builder), made Trebizond his capital and asserted a claim to be ...

See also:

Empire of Trebizond, Empire of Trebizond - Foundation, Empire of Trebizond - Prosperity, Empire of Trebizond - Climax and civil war, Empire of Trebizond - Decline and fall, Empire of Trebizond - List of Trapezuntine emperors, Empire of Trebizond - List of Trapezuntine people

Read more here: » Empire of Trebizond: Encyclopedia II - Empire of Trebizond - Foundation

1349: Encyclopedia II - Philip VI of France - Ascension to the Throne

In 1328, King Charles IV died without a direct male descendant, however, at the time of his death his was wife pregnant. Philip was one of the two chief claimants to the throne along with King Edward III of England whose mother, Isabella, was the late King Charles' sister. Philip ascended to the throne by applying Salic law, which forbade females and those descended in the female line from succeeding to the throne. After the Charles' queen, Jeanne d'Evreux, gave birth to a girl ...

See also:

Philip VI of France, Philip VI of France - Ascension to the Throne, Philip VI of France - Life, Philip VI of France - Reign, Philip VI of France - Hundred Years' War, Philip VI of France - Final Years

Read more here: » Philip VI of France: Encyclopedia II - Philip VI of France - Ascension to the Throne

1349: Encyclopedia II - Geisslerlieder - Second outbreak 1349

The Black Death was one of the most traumatic events in European history, and the renewed desperation of the people, hopeful for divine intervention to end their sufferings, brought about a return of the flagellants and the Geisslerlieder. Unlike the situation with the first outbreak, much of the music was preserved. A single priest, Hugo Spechtshart of Reutlingen, who happened to be a capable musician, was impressed by the activity he witnessed, and transcribed exactly what he heard of the singing of the flagellants; indeed his work ...

See also:

Geisslerlieder, Geisslerlieder - First outbreak 13th century, Geisslerlieder - Second outbreak 1349, Geisslerlieder - References and further reading

Read more here: » Geisslerlieder: Encyclopedia II - Geisslerlieder - Second outbreak 1349

1349: Encyclopedia II - Ethnic cleansing - Modern-age ethnic cleansing

The term "ethnic cleansing" has come to mean the displacement or expulsion from a territory of one ethnic group by another. The displacement is usually forcible, though there are examples of voluntary or compensated ethnic cleansing. The 20th century has seen numerous cases, particularly in Europe and the Middle East. Ethnic cleansing - Older examples. In Canada the expulsion of the Acadians in 1755 from their ancestral lands in Nova Scotia or Acadia by the British military because of the Fren ...

See also:

Ethnic cleansing, Ethnic cleansing - Origins of the term, Ethnic cleansing - Early examples of ethnic cleansing, Ethnic cleansing - Colonization-related ethnic cleansing, Ethnic cleansing - Modern-age ethnic cleansing, Ethnic cleansing - Older examples, Ethnic cleansing - 20th-century instances, Ethnic cleansing - Ethnic cleansing as a military and political tactic, Ethnic cleansing - Ethnic cleansing as international law crime, Ethnic cleansing - Comparison of events in the Bible with ethnic cleansing

Read more here: » Ethnic cleansing: Encyclopedia II - Ethnic cleansing - Modern-age ethnic cleansing

1349: Encyclopedia II - Political history and modern state of the inhabitants of the Alps - The Eastern Alps

The political history of the Eastern Alps can be considered almost totally in terms of the advance or retreat of the house of Habsburg. The Habsburgers' original home was in the lower valley of the Aar, where the ruins of their ancestral castle still stand. They lost that district to the Swiss in 1415, as they had previously lost various other sections of what is now Switzerland. But they built an impressive empire in the Eastern Alps, where they defeated numerous minor dynasties. They won the duchy of Austria with Styria in 1282, Carinthia ...

See also:

Political history and modern state of the inhabitants of the Alps, Political history and modern state of the inhabitants of the Alps - The Western Alps, Political history and modern state of the inhabitants of the Alps - The Central Alps, Political history and modern state of the inhabitants of the Alps - The Eastern Alps

Read more here: » Political history and modern state of the inhabitants of the Alps: Encyclopedia II - Political history and modern state of the inhabitants of the Alps - The Eastern Alps




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