1300

King Wenceslaus II, crowned King of Poland in 1300, from the Codex Manesse (14th century)
Territory under control of Wenceslaus II of the Přemyslid dynasty (c. 1301)
1300 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1300
MCCC
Ab urbe condita2053
Armenian calendar749
ԹՎ ՉԽԹ
Assyrian calendar6050
Balinese saka calendar1221–1222
Bengali calendar706–707
Berber calendar2250
English Regnal year28 Edw. 1 – 29 Edw. 1
Buddhist calendar1844
Burmese calendar662
Byzantine calendar6808–6809
Chinese calendar己亥年 (Earth Pig)
3997 or 3790
    — to —
庚子年 (Metal Rat)
3998 or 3791
Coptic calendar1016–1017
Discordian calendar2466
Ethiopian calendar1292–1293
Hebrew calendar5060–5061
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1356–1357
 - Shaka Samvat1221–1222
 - Kali Yuga4400–4401
Holocene calendar11300
Igbo calendar300–301
Iranian calendar678–679
Islamic calendar699–700
Japanese calendarShōan 2
(正安2年)
Javanese calendar1211–1212
Julian calendar1300
MCCC
Korean calendar3633
Minguo calendar612 before ROC
民前612年
Nanakshahi calendar−168
Thai solar calendar1842–1843
Tibetan calendarས་མོ་ཕག་ལོ་
(female Earth-Boar)
1426 or 1045 or 273
    — to —
ལྕགས་ཕོ་བྱི་བ་ལོ་
(male Iron-Rat)
1427 or 1046 or 274

The year 1300 (MCCC) was a leap year starting on Friday in the Julian calendar. It was the last year of the 13th century, and the first year of the 14th century. The year 1300 was not a leap year in the Proleptic Gregorian calendar.

January – March

April – June

July – September

  • July 10 – English invasion of Scotland (1300): King Edward I of England begins a five-day siege of Caerlaverock Castle in Scotland. Enraged by the defending garrison's request for honorable surrender terms, Edward orders the destruction of the castle with battering rams and stone-lobbing trebuchet catapults, then pulls down the walls of the garrison.[9]
  • July 17 – English invasion of Scotland (1300): King Edward I and the English Army arrive in Galloway and set up camp on July 19 at Kirkcudbright where they remain for 10 days while laying waste to the surrounding country side.[10] They confront a Scottish army under John Comyn III ("the Red") on the River Cree. During the battle, the Scottish cavalry is again defeated. Edward is unable to pursue the fugitives into the wild country, where they flee and take refuge. John escapes with his life and begins to raid the English countryside in smaller groups.[11]
  • July 18 – Gerard Segarelli, Italian founder of the Apostolic Brethren, is burned at the stake in Parma during a brutal repression of the Apostolics.
  • July 20 – A fleet of 16 ships led by Jacques de Molay (Grand Master of the Knights Templar), Henry II of Cyprus (the last European King of Jerusalem), Amalric of Tyre, and an emissary of the Mongol leader Ghazan departs from the Cyprus port of Famagusta and begins a raid of Muslim-occupied cities in Egypt and Palestine before returning to Cyprus.[12]
  • July 25Wenceslaus II, King of Bohemia, of the Czech Přemyslid dynasty, is crowned King of Poland in a ceremony at Gniezno, near Poznań, after his Bohemian forces have seized Pomerania and Greater Poland (Wielkopolska). The 28-year-old Wenceslaus has ruled Lesser Poland (Małopolska) since 1291, and forced a number of Silesian princes to swear allegiance to him. Crowned as king, he reunites the Polish territories and during his reign introduces a number of laws and reforms, the most important being the creation of a new type of official known as a starosta (or "Elder"), who rules a small territory as the king's direct representative.[13][14]
  • August 9 – After crossing the River Dee in Scotland and reaching Twynholm, King Edward I and his English troops receive new provisions from the English Navy and fights a brief skirmish with the Scots.[10]
  • August 27Robert Winchelsey, the Archbishop of Canterbury, arrives at Sweetheart Abbey in Scotland with the papal envoy Lumbardus, to deliver a letter from Boniface VIII to England's King Edward I demanding that Edward withdraw from the Kingdom of Scotland. Edward ignores the letter, but because the campaign is not a success, the English forces begin on their home journey and Edward arranges a truce.[15]
  • September 20 – Italian diplomat Isol the Pisan (Ciolo Bofeti di Anastasio) is appointed by Pope Boniface VIII to be the Church's liaison between the European settlements in the Middle East (the Crusader states) and the Mongol Empire, and given the title "Vicar of Syria and the Holy Land for Ghazan the Emperor of the Tartars".
  • September 26 – King Edward I summons the English Parliament to Lincoln. The parliamentary session will last until January 30, 1301.

October – December

  • October 28 (13 Safar 700 AH) – After learning that the Mongol Empire plans to stage a new attack on the Middle East, including what is now the area occupied by Syria, Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon and Palestine, the Mamluk Sultan, Nasir ad-Din Muhammad, leads an army from Cairo to confront the invasion.[16]
  • October 30 – At Dumfries, a truce is concluded between England and Scotland after being mediated by France and both sides agree to a cease hostilities until Whitsunday (May 21) of 1301. King Edward then returns to England.[17]
  • November 11 – King Edward I holds a session of the English parliament at York, then remains there until shortly after Christmas.[18]
  • December 30 (17 Rabi II 700 AH) – Mahmud Ghazan, ruler of the Mongol Empire's Ikhanate area in the Middle East, crosses the Euphrates River at Qala'at Jabar (modern-day Raqqa in Syria) to invade Syria. Residents of Damascus, Aleppo and other areas of Syria, fearing a repeat of the massacre a few months earlier, flee toward Gaza. Ghazan turns back less than five weeks later because of unusually cold weather (including heavy snow and rain) that kills almost all of his cavalry's 12,000 horses.[19]

Undated

Births

  • January 21 – Roger Clifford, English nobleman and knight (d. 1322)
  • January 28 – Chūgan Engetsu, Japanese poet and writer (d. 1375)
  • February 1 – Bolko II of Ziębice, Polish nobleman and knight (d. 1341)
  • April 4 – Constance of Aragon, Aragonese princess (infanta) (d. 1327)
  • June 1Thomas of Brotherton, English nobleman and prince (d. 1338)[21]
  • September 27 – Adolf of the Rhine, German nobleman (d. 1327)[22]
  • October 9 – John de Grey, English nobleman and knight (d. 1359)
  • December 22Khutughtu Khan Kusala, Mongol emperor (d. 1329)
  • Charles d'Artois, Neapolitan nobleman, knight and chancellor (d. 1346)
  • Dionigi di Borgo San Sepolcro, Italian bishop and theologian (d. 1342)
  • Gerard III, Dutch nobleman, knight, bailiff and rebel leader (d. 1358)[23]
  • Guillaume de Harsigny, French doctor and court physician (d. 1393)
  • Guillaume de Machaut, French priest, poet and composer (d. 1377)
  • Immanuel Bonfils, French mathematician and astronomer (d. 1377)
  • Jakov of Serres, Serbian scholar, hierarch and translator (d. 1365)
  • Jeanne de Clisson, French noblewoman and privateer (d. 1359)[24]
  • Joanna of Pfirt, German noblewoman (House of Habsburg) (d. 1351)
  • Johannes Tauler, German preacher, mystic and theologian (d. 1361)
  • John III, Brabantian nobleman and knight (House of Reginar) (d. 1355)[25]
  • John Sheppey, English administrator, treasurer and bishop (d. 1360)
  • Jordan of Quedlinburg, German preacher, hermit and writer (d. 1380)
  • Richard FitzRalph, Norman-Irish archbishop and theologian (d. 1360)
  • Simon Locard (or Lockhart), Scottish landowner and knight (d. 1371)
  • Thomas Bradwardine, English archbishop and theologian (d. 1349)

Deaths

References

  1. ^ Steven Runciman, A History of the Crusades, Vol. 3 (Penguin Books, 1952)
  2. ^ Luciano Petech, Medieval History of Nepal (Fondata Da Giuseppe Tucci, 1984) p.109
  3. ^ William Stubbs, The Constitutional History of England in Its Origin and Development, Vol. 2 (Clarendon Press, 1887) p. 155
  4. ^ a b c Strayer, Joseph (1980). The Reign of Philip the Fair, pp. 10–11. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-10089-0.
  5. ^ "Gesta Dei per Mongolos 1300. The Genesis of a Non-Event", by Sylvia Schein, The English Historical Review (October 1979) pp. 805–819
  6. ^ Pfatteicher, Philip (1980). Festivals and Commemorations. Augsburg Fortress. ISBN 978-0-8066-1757-2.
  7. ^ T. F. Tout, Edward the First (Macmillan and Company, 1893) p.204
  8. ^ Phillips, Seymour (2011). Edward II, pp. 82–84. New Haven, CT & London, UK: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-17802-9.
  9. ^ G. W. S. Barrow, Robert Bruce and the Community of the Realm of Scotland (Edinburgh University Press, 2013)
  10. ^ a b George Chalmers, Caledonia, or, A Historical and Topographical Account of North Britain from the Most Ancient to the Present Times (Alexander Gardner, 1890) p. 264
  11. ^ Pete Armstrong, Stirling Bridge & Falkirk 1297–98 (Osprey, 2003) p. 84 ISBN 1-84176-510-4.
  12. ^ Peter Jackson, The Mongols and the West: 1221–1410 (Pearson Longman, 2005) pp. 165–195
  13. ^ Richard Brzezinski (1998). History of Poland: Old Poland – The Piast Dynasty, p. 24. ISBN 83-7212-019-6.
  14. ^ Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History, p. 152. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. ISBN 0-304-35730-8.
  15. ^ "Edward I at Sweetheart Abbey", by E. J. Chinnock, in The Transactions and Journal of Proceedings of the Dumfrieshire and Galloway Natural History and Antiquarian Society, February 21, 1902, p. 173
  16. ^ Amir Mazor, The Rise and Fall of a Muslim Regiment: The Manṣūriyya in the First Mamluk Sultanate, 678/1279 - 741/1341 (Bonn University Press, 2015) p.121
  17. ^ Sir David Dalrymple, Annals of Scotland: From the Accession of Malcolm III in the Year MLVII to the Accession of the House of Stewart in the Year MCCCLXXI (Archibald Constable & Co., 1819) p.421
  18. ^ John Wade, British History Chronologically Arranged (Bohn Publishing, 1843) p.53
  19. ^ Angus Donal Stewart, The Armenian Kingdom and the Mamluks: War and Diplomacy During the Reigns of Hetʻum II (Brill, 2001) pp.146-147
  20. ^ Helmuth, Laura. "In the Cliffs of mesa Verde". Smithsonian Magazine. Retrieved July 12, 2022.
  21. ^ Sharpe, Thomasin Elizabeth (1875). A royal descent [of the family of Sharpe]; with other pedigrees and memorials [With] Additions and corrections. pp. 2–.
  22. ^ Steven Mueller (2007). The Wittelsbach Dynasty. Waldmann Press. ISBN 978-0-9702576-3-5.
  23. ^ Koenen, H.J. (1903). "Het ridderlijk geslacht van Heemskerk in de middeleeuwen", pp. 228–244. De Wapenheraut, Archief van Epen, 's Gravenhage - Brussel, vol VII.
  24. ^ Axelrod, Alan (2013). Mercenaries: A Guide to Private Armies and Private Military Companies. CQ Press. p. 174. ISBN 9781483364674.
  25. ^ Anne Rudloff Stanton (2001). The Queen Mary Psalter: A Study of Affect and Audience. American Philosophical Society. pp. 217–. ISBN 978-0-87169-916-9.

Further reading

  • Alexandra Gajewski & Zoë Opacic (ed.), The Year 1300 and the Creation of a New European Architecture (Architectura Medii Aevi, 1), Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols, 2007. ISBN 978-2-503-52286-9.