12TH CENTURY

(Redirected from 12th-century)

As a means of recording the passage of time, the '12th century' was that century which lasted from 1101 to 1200. In the history of European culture, this period is considered part of the High Middle Ages and is sometimes called the 'Age of the Cistercians'. In Song Dynasty China an invasion by Jurchens causes a political schism of north and south. The Khmer Empire of Cambodia flourished during this century, while the Fatimids of Egypt were overtaken by the Ayyubid dynasty.
See also: Renaissance of the 12th century

Contents
Events
Significant people
Inventions, discoveries and introductions
Decades and Years

Events


The temple complex of Angkor Wat, built during the reign of Suryavarman II in Khmer era Cambodia.


1102, King Coloman unites Hungary and Croatia under the Hungarian Crown

★ c.1119, Foundation of the Knights Templar

1127, The Northern Song dynasty loses power over Northern China to the Jurchens of Manchuria.

1128, Portugal gains independence from the kingdom of León (recognised by León in 1143).

11301180, Fifty-year drought in the American Southwest.

1132, The Southern Song Dynasty establishes China's first permanent standing navy, although China had a long naval history prior. The main admiral's office was stationed at the port of Dinghai.

11321183, the Chinese navy increases from a mere 3000 marine soldiers to 52,000 marine soldiers stationed in 20 different squadrons. Between this time, hundreds of treadmill-operated paddle wheel craft are assembled for the navy, in order to combat the Jurchen's Jin Dynasty in the north.

11351154, The Anarchy is a period of civil war in England.

1136, Suger begins rebuilding abbey church at St Denis north of Paris, which is regarded as the first major Gothic building.

11401150, Collapse of the Ancestral Puebloan culture at Chaco Canyon

11451148, The Second Crusade is launched in response to the fall of the County of Edessa.

1154, the Moroccan-born Muslim geographer Muhammad al-Idrisi publishes his ''Geography''.

1161, the Song Dynasty Chinese navy, employing gunpowder bombs launched from trebuchets, defeat the enormous Jin Dynasty navy on the Yangtze River, in the Battle of Tangdao and the Battle of Caishi.
Richard I of England, or Richard the Lionheart.


1169, start of the conquest of Ireland. Richard fitzGilbert de Clare ('Strongbow') makes an alliance with the exiled Irish chief, Dermot MacMurrough, to help him recover his kingdom of Leinster.

1170, Thomas Becket is murdered.

1171, Saladin deposes the last Fatimid Caliph Al-'Ä€á¸id, initiating the Ayyubid dynasty.

1178, Chinese writer Zhou Qufei, a Guangzhou customs officer, wrote of an island far west in the Indian Ocean (possibly Madagascar), from where people with skin "as black as lacquer" and with frizzy hair were captured and purchased as slaves by Arab merchants.

1180-1185, the Genpei War in Japan

1185, Founding of the cathedral school (Katedralskolan) in Lund, Sweden. The school is the oldest in northern Europe, and one of the oldest in Europe as a whole.

1185, beginning in this year the Kamakura Shogunate deprives the Emperor of Japan of political power.

1187, Battle of Hattin: Saladin defeats the king of Jerusalem.

11891192, The Third crusade was an attempt by European leaders to reconquer the Holy Land from Saladin.

1193, Nalanda, the great Indian Buddhist educational centre, is destroyed.

1198, Frederick II is crowned King of Sicily at the age of 3 (also known as Frederick I of Sicily).

★ c. 1200, The Toltec Empire collapses.

Renaissance of the 12th century in Europe.

Gothic Architecture begins in France

★ Conflict between the Khmer Empire and Champa. Angkor Wat is built under the Hindu king Suryavarman II. At the end of the century the Buddhist Jayavarman VII becomes ruler.

Pope Adrian IV grants overlordship of Ireland to Henry II of England.

★ The medieval Serbian state formed by Stefan Nemanja and continued by the Nemanjić dynasty.

Pierre Abelard teaches.

Significant people


A 15th century depiction of Saladin


Francis of Assisi, Christian saint

Genghis Khan, ''Great Khan'' of the Mongol Empire

Bhaskara, towering figure in several disparate fields of mathematics

Pierre Abailard, one of the first scholastic philosophers; author of "Historia calamitatum mearum", a confessional account of his life (including a description of his love affair with Héloïse)

Bernard of Clairvaux, French abbot influential in church politics

William Marshal, knight and statesman

Manuel I Comnenus, Byzantine Emperor who allied with the Crusaders

Saladin, ruler of Egypt and Syria who resisted the Crusaders

Philip Augustus, French king

Friedrich Barbarossa, Holy Roman Emperor

Emperor Huizong of Song, China

Richard of St. Victor, theologian

Alfonso I Henriques, first king of Portugal

Maimonides, leading Jewish philosopher

Yue Fei, famous Chinese general

Thomas Becket, archbishop of Canterbury

Minamoto no Yoritomo, shogun of Japan, founder Kamakura Shogunate

Lin Tinggui, Chinese painter of Buddhist themes

Zhou Jichang, Chinese painter of Buddhist themes

Zhang Zeduan, Chinese painter of the panoramic painting ''Along the River During Qingming Festival''

Omar Khayyám, Persian poet and astronomer

Eleanor of Aquitaine, queen consort of France and later the Kingdom of England

Hildegard of Bingen, first Western musical composer known by name

Shao Yong, Chinese poet, historian, and philosopher

Suryavarman II, Khmer king

Jayavarman VII, Khmer king

Ibn Rushd, philosopher

Richard I of England, king of England who led the Third Crusade

Prithviraj Chauhan, king of Ajmer in India

William of Malmesbury, English historian

Zhu Xi, Neo-Confucian philosopher from China

Zhu Yu, Chinese maritime author

Inventions, discoveries and introductions


The Liuhe Pagoda of Hangzhou, China, 1165 AD.


★ Beginning of the Gothic architecture style in France.

★ Building of Angkor Wat in Khmer empire.

★ First European universities founded.

Christian humanism becomes a self-conscious philosophical tendency in Europe.

★ Earliest record of a miracle play, in Dunstable, England.

★ Beginning of trouvère music and poetry in France.

★ Beginning of the Ars antiqua period in the history of Western European music.

★ The ''Madrid Skylitzes'' manuscript illustrates the ''Synopsis of Histories'' by John Skylitzes.

★ Earliest Western account of a mariner's compass, by Alexander Neckam is "De utensilibus" (see Shen Kuo).

★ Although known in China since the 5th century BC, the blast furnace for smelting cast iron first appears in Europe, in and around Lapphyttan, Sweden, as early as 1150 AD.

★ First fire and plague insurance (in Iceland).

★ First authenticated influenza epidemics.

★ Invention of the Kente Cloth.

★ Start of Middle English.

Hoysala architecture reaches a peak.

Shahab al-Din Suhrawardi (1155–1191) founder of school of illumination (Ishraq).

1165 — The Liuhe Pagoda of Hangzhou, China, is built.

1111 — The Chinese Donglin Academy is founded

1107 — The Chinese engineer Wu Deren combines the mechanical compass vehicle of the South Pointing Chariot with the distance-measuring odometer device.

★ The Durham Cathedral of England is completed.

★ The kasbah of Marrakesh is built, city gate Bab Agnaou and the Koutoubia mosque.

1104 — The Venice Arsenal of Venice, Italy, is founded. It employed some 16000 people for the mass production of sailing ships in large assembly lines, hundreds of years before the Industrial Revolution.

Decades and Years



This article provided by Wikipedia. To edit the contents of this article, click here for original source.

psst.. try this: add to faves