1378

1378 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1378
MCCCLXXVIII
Ab urbe condita2131
Armenian calendar827
ԹՎ ՊԻԷ
Assyrian calendar6128
Balinese saka calendar1299–1300
Bengali calendar784–785
Berber calendar2328
English Regnal yearRic. 2 – 2 Ric. 2
Buddhist calendar1922
Burmese calendar740
Byzantine calendar6886–6887
Chinese calendar丁巳年 (Fire Snake)
4075 or 3868
    — to —
戊午年 (Earth Horse)
4076 or 3869
Coptic calendar1094–1095
Discordian calendar2544
Ethiopian calendar1370–1371
Hebrew calendar5138–5139
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1434–1435
 - Shaka Samvat1299–1300
 - Kali Yuga4478–4479
Holocene calendar11378
Igbo calendar378–379
Iranian calendar756–757
Islamic calendar779–780
Japanese calendarEiwa 4
(永和4年)
Javanese calendar1291–1292
Julian calendar1378
MCCCLXXVIII
Korean calendar3711
Minguo calendar534 before ROC
民前534年
Nanakshahi calendar−90
Thai solar calendar1920–1921
Tibetan calendarམེ་མོ་སྦྲུལ་ལོ་
(female Fire-Snake)
1504 or 1123 or 351
    — to —
ས་ཕོ་རྟ་ལོ་
(male Earth-Horse)
1505 or 1124 or 352

Year 1378 (MCCCLXXVIII) was a common year starting on Friday of the Julian calendar.

Events

January–December

  • January – Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor, visits his nephew Charles V of France in Paris, to celebrate publicly the friendship between their two nations.
  • January 13 – Balša II succeeds his brother, Durađ I, as ruler of Lower Zeta (modern-day Montenegro).
  • March – In England, John Wycliffe tries to promote his ideas for Catholic reform by laying his theses before Parliament, and making them public in a tract. He is subsequently summoned before the Archbishop of Canterbury, Simon of Sudbury, at the episcopal palace at Lambeth, to defend his actions.
  • April 9 – Following the death of Pope Gregory XI, and riots in Rome calling for a Roman pope, the cardinals, who are mostly French, elect Pope Urban VI (Bartolomeo Prignano, Archbishop of Bari) as the 202nd Pope.
  • April 16 – Da'ud Shah succeeds his assassinated nephew, Aladdin Mujahid Shah, as ruler of the Bahmani Sultanate in modern-day southern India. Da'ud Shah is assassinated in the following month, and is succeeded by Mohammad Shah II.
  • May – Uskhal Khan Tögüs Temür succeeds his father, Biligtü Khan Ayushiridara, as ruler of the Northern Yuan dynasty in Mongolia.
  • July 21 – Ciompi Revolt: Discontented wool carders briefly take over the government of Florence.
  • August 4 – Gian Galeazzo Visconti succeeds his father, Galeazzo II Visconti, as ruler of Milan.
  • August 11 – Battle of the Vozha River: Prince Dmitri Ivanovich of Moscow resists a small invasion by the Mongol Blue Horde under Mamai.
  • September – A contract is set up between Richard le Scrope, 1st Baron Scrope of Bolton and the mason Johan Lewyn, for the construction of Bolton Castle in the north of England.
  • September 20 – Unhappy with Pope Urban's critical attitude towards them, the majority of the cardinals meet at Fondi, elect Clement VII as antipope, and establish a rival papal court at Avignon. This split within the Catholic Church becomes known as the Western Schism, also known as the Great Schism.[1] France, Aragon, Castile and León, Cyprus, Burgundy, Savoy, Naples and Scotland choose to recognise Antipope Clement VII. Denmark, England, Flanders, the Holy Roman Empire, Hungary, northern Italy, Ireland, Norway, Poland and Sweden continue to recognise Pope Urban VI.
  • November 10 – Estimated appearance date of Halley's Comet.[2]
  • November 29 – Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor, dies in Prague. He is succeeded by his son, Wenceslaus, as King of Bohemia, but the office of Holy Roman Emperor falls into abeyance, until Charles's son Sigismund is crowned in 1433.

Date unknown

  • The Raseborg Castle is mentioned for the first time in documents,[3] but its actual date of foundation is unknown.
  • Tokhtamysh dethrones Temur-Malik to become Khan of the White Horde.
  • Uthman Beg establishes the Aq Qoyunlu (Turkomans of the White Sheep) dynasty at Diyarbakır, in modern-day southeast Turkey.
  • Ottoman Turks capture the town of Ihtiman in west Bulgaria.
  • Tai Bian succeeds Zhao Bing Fa as King of Mong Mao (modern-day northern Myanmar).
  • Sa'im al-Dahr is hanged for blowing the nose off the Great Sphinx of Giza.[4]

Births

  • January 23 – Louis III, Elector Palatine (d. 1436)
  • May 27 – Zhu Quan, Chinese military commander, historian and playwright (d. 1448)
  • August 16 – Hongxi Emperor of China (d. 1425)
  • October 24 – David Stewart, Duke of Rothesay, heir to throne of Scotland (d. 1402)[5]
  • December 31 – Pope Callixtus III (d. 1458)
  • date unknown

Deaths

Charles IV, Holy Roman Emperor

References

  1. ^ "Western Schism | History, Background, Popes, & Resolution | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved July 23, 2024.
  2. ^ Annales Mediolanenses.
  3. ^ Raseborg Castle - Sygic Travel
  4. ^ According to Al-Maqrizi.
  5. ^ "David Stewart, 1st Duke of Rothesay: Biography on Undiscovered Scotland". www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk. Retrieved October 24, 2020.