1365

1365 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1365
MCCCLXV
Ab urbe condita2118
Armenian calendar814
ԹՎ ՊԺԴ
Assyrian calendar6115
Balinese saka calendar1286–1287
Bengali calendar771–772
Berber calendar2315
English Regnal year38 Edw. 3 – 39 Edw. 3
Buddhist calendar1909
Burmese calendar727
Byzantine calendar6873–6874
Chinese calendar甲辰年 (Wood Dragon)
4062 or 3855
    — to —
乙巳年 (Wood Snake)
4063 or 3856
Coptic calendar1081–1082
Discordian calendar2531
Ethiopian calendar1357–1358
Hebrew calendar5125–5126
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1421–1422
 - Shaka Samvat1286–1287
 - Kali Yuga4465–4466
Holocene calendar11365
Igbo calendar365–366
Iranian calendar743–744
Islamic calendar766–767
Japanese calendarJōji 4
(貞治4年)
Javanese calendar1278–1279
Julian calendar1365
MCCCLXV
Korean calendar3698
Minguo calendar547 before ROC
民前547年
Nanakshahi calendar−103
Thai solar calendar1907–1908
Tibetan calendarཤིང་ཕོ་འབྲུག་ལོ་
(male Wood-Dragon)
1491 or 1110 or 338
    — to —
ཤིང་མོ་སྦྲུལ་ལོ་
(female Wood-Snake)
1492 or 1111 or 339

Year 1365 (MCCCLXV) was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Julian calendar.

Events

January–December

Date unknown

  • Adrianopole (modern-day Edirne) becomes the capital city of the Ottoman Sultanate.
  • In modern-day southern India, Bahmani Sultan Mohammed Shah I invades the Vijayanagara Empire.
  • The Sukhothai Kingdom in northern Thailand becomes a tributary state of the Ayutthaya Kingdom.
  • Muhammed V begins building the Maristan of Granada (a hospital) in Granada (in modern-day Spain).
  • The Chagatai Khanate defeats Timur in the Battle of Tashkent.

Births

  • January 27 – Edward of Angoulême, French-born royal prince of England (d. 1370)
  • July 25 – U of Goryeo, Korean king (d. 1389)
  • date unknown – Abd al-Karīm al-Jīlī, Baghdadi Sufi author (d. 1424)
  • approximate date – Violant of Bar, queen regent of Aragon (d. 1431)[1]

Deaths

References

  1. ^ Self-Fashioning and Assumptions of Identity in Medieval and Early Modern Iberia. BRILL. 2015. p. 54. ISBN 9789004291003.