1341
Appearance
Millennium: | 2nd millennium |
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Centuries: | |
Decades: | |
Years: |
1341 by topic |
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Leaders |
Birth and death categories |
Births – Deaths |
Establishments and disestablishments categories |
Establishments – Disestablishments |
Art and literature |
1341 in poetry |
Gregorian calendar | 1341 MCCCXLI |
Ab urbe condita | 2094 |
Armenian calendar | 790 ԹՎ ՉՂ |
Assyrian calendar | 6091 |
Balinese saka calendar | 1262–1263 |
Bengali calendar | 748 |
Berber calendar | 2291 |
English Regnal year | 14 Edw. 3 – 15 Edw. 3 |
Buddhist calendar | 1885 |
Burmese calendar | 703 |
Byzantine calendar | 6849–6850 |
Chinese calendar | 4038 or 3831 — to — 4039 or 3832 |
Coptic calendar | 1057–1058 |
Discordian calendar | 2507 |
Ethiopian calendar | 1333–1334 |
Hebrew calendar | 5101–5102 |
Hindu calendars | |
- Vikram Samvat | 1397–1398 |
- Shaka Samvat | 1262–1263 |
- Kali Yuga | 4441–4442 |
Holocene calendar | 11341 |
Igbo calendar | 341–342 |
Iranian calendar | 719–720 |
Islamic calendar | 741–742 |
Japanese calendar | Ryakuō 4 ( |
Javanese calendar | 1253–1254 |
Julian calendar | 1341 MCCCXLI |
Korean calendar | 3674 |
Minguo calendar | 571 before ROC |
Nanakshahi calendar | −127 |
Thai solar calendar | 1883–1884 |
Tibetan calendar | 阳金龙年 (male Iron-Dragon) 1467 or 1086 or 314 — to — 阴金 (female Iron-Snake) 1468 or 1087 or 315 |
Year 1341 (MCCCXLI) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.
Events
Date unknown
- The Queen's College, a constituent college of the University of Oxford, is founded.
- Petrarch is crowned poet laureate in Rome, the first man since antiquity to be given this honor.
- September–October: The Byzantine civil war of 1341–1347 between John VI Kantakouzenos and the regency for the infant John V Palaiologos breaks out.
- The Breton War of Succession begins over the control of the Duchy of Brittany.
- Margarete Maultasch, Countess of Tyrol, expels her husband John Henry of Bohemia, to whom she had been married as a child. She subsequently marries Louis of Bavaria without having been divorced, which results in the excommunication of the couple.
- Tbilisi becomes a capital of European Christian Cathedra after city Smirna. George V (the brilliant) returns Jerusalem and Grave of Christ from Muslims.
- Saluzzo is sacked by Manfred V of Saluzzo.
- Casimir III of Poland build a masonry castle in Lublin and encircles the city with defensive walls.
- The Chinese poet Zhang Xian writes the Iron Cannon Affair about the destructive use of gunpowder and the cannon.
- The sultan of Delhi chooses Ibn Battuta to lead a diplomatic mission to Yuan Dynasty China.
- The great earthquake on the Malabar Coast of India known as the Malabar Coast Earthquake, and consequent flood in the river Periyar in what is now southern India, which lead to the river changing its course, closing of Muziris, opening up of Cochin (Kochi) harbour, submersion of some islands and birth of some new islands.[1]
Births
- June 5 – Edmund of Langley, son of King Edward III of England (d. 1402)
- September 1 – Frederick III the Simple, King of Sicily (d. 1377)
- November 10 – Henry Percy, 1st Earl of Northumberland, English statesman (d. 1408)
- date unknown
- Bonne of Bourbon, Countess of Savoy (d. 1402)
- Hermann II, Landgrave of Hesse (d. 1413)
- Louis, Duke of Durazzo (d. 1376)
- Qu You, Chinese novelist (d. 1427)
Deaths
- March 2 – Martha of Denmark, queen consort of Sweden (b. 1277)
- April 30 – John III, Duke of Brittany (b. 1286)
- June – Al-Nasir Muhammad, Sultan of Egypt (b. 1295)
- June 12 – Juliana Falconieri, Italian saint (b. 1270)
- June 15 – Andronikos III Palaiologos, Byzantine Emperor (b. 1297)
- August 9 – Eleanor of Anjou, queen consort of Sicily (b. 1289)
- August 28 – King Levon IV of Armenia (murdered) (b. 1309)
- December – Gediminas, Duke of Lithuania
- December 4 – Janisław I, Archbishop of Gniezno
- date unknown
- Petrus Filipsson, Archbishop of Uppsala
- Uzbeg Khan, Khan of the Golden Horde (b. 1282)
- Nicholas I Sanudo, Duke of the Archipelago
- Bartholomew II Ghisi, Lord of Tenos and Mykonos, Triarch of Negroponte
- probable – Richard Folville, English outlaw and parson (resisting arrest)