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Prehistoric3500-1BCE1-1099 CE1100-13991400-15991600s1700s

1800s'10-'19'20-'29'30-'39'40-'49'50-'59'60-'69'70-'79'80-'89'90-'99

1900s'10-'19'20-'29'30-'39'40-'49'50-'59'60-'69'70-'79'80-'89'90-'99

2000s

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Chronological Timeline HomeMedia History Project HomeMHP Connections Pages

12th - 14th Centuries

Gallery
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7 Word Poem
Chinese Calligraphy,
A Seven Word Poem
ca. 1190-1244,
Yeh-lu Ch'u-ts'ai

Mayan Codex
Mayan Codex
ca. 1250

Medieval Glosses
Late 13th Century
medical text,
translation of
Hippocrates,
with glosses



Chinese calligrapher
Zhao Mengfu

landscape, 1294

Chinese calligrapher
Ni Zan

landscape, c.1350


1100-1399

1100: The Bayeux Tapestry depicts the Norman conquest.
1100: Art and poetry flourish under China's Sung dynasty.
1100: Romanesque architecture dominates Europe's churches, abbeys.
1100: Anselm's writings; they will influence Scholastic thought for centuries.
1100: Gothic Textus script introduced when quill pen is cut at an angle.
1104: Gospel of St. John, written in 687 in uncial, found in St. Cuthbert’s casket.
1115: Byzantine art, notably mosaics, reaches a peak.
1116: Chinese sew pages to make stitched books.
1126: In Korea, palace fire destroys library with tens of thousands of books.
1131: Persian mathematician Omar Khayyam dies after writing the Rubáiyát.
1140: In Egypt, cloth is stripped from mummies to make paper.
1140: Winchester Bible written, with Romanesque illumination.
1140: The University of Bologna, is founded as a center for the study of law.
1142: French logician Peter Abelard dies; best known for doomed love of Héloïse.
1147: Crusader taken prisoner escapes with papermaking art, according to a legend.
1147: Benedictine nun, Hildegard of Bingen, publishes visionary Scivias.
1148: Anna Comnena, daughter of Byzantine emperor, writes history of her time.
 
 
1150: England's Adelard of Bath dies after translating Arabic algebra book into Latin.
1150: Cambodia's Hindu temple at Angkor Wat is completed.
1150: Start of 350 years of Middle English.
1150: Caliph of Baghdad orders burning of books by philosopher Avicenna.
1150: Koreans start printing books from movable type.
1151: French abbot Suger dies after developing Gothic architecture.
1151: Papermill built at Jativa, Spain, under the Moors may be first in Europe.
1154: Monks discontinue Anglo-Saxon Chronicle after 183 years.
1158: Hildegard completes "symphony" of 77 songs.
1158: Peter Lombard's Four Books of Sentences are grounding for Scholasticism.
1161: Ibn Daud's works establish him as the first Jewish Aristotelian.
1168: Oxford University is founded.
1168: Maimonides' Commentary on the Mishnah shows Aristotelian influence.
1180: German minnesingers entertain with love songs.
1190: Aristotelian views of Islamic philospher Ibn Rushd; they will influence Aquinas.
1190: Maimonides' Guide to the Perplexed reconciles Judaism, Aristotelianism.
1194: Emir of Seville, Spain, begins burning of books of philosophy and logic.
1195: Pictorial encyclopedia composed and illustrated by Herrad of Landsberg.
 
1198: Averro‘s, Spanish-Arab philosopher, dies; work on Aristotle preceded Renaissance.
 
 
1200: The University of Paris is granted its charter, starts mail, messenger service.
1200: Books are copied and sold for profit by stationers, usually at universities.
1200: Tales of love and chivalry, based on an Arab practice, are sung by troubadors.
1200: European monasteries communicate by letter system.
1200: French Dominicans begin the Inquisition to snuff out heresy.
1200: Some religious texts are written in the English vernacular.
1202: Leonardo Fibonacci's Liber Abaci establishes Arabic numerals in Europe.
1204: Maimonides dies, revising his 14-volume Mishneh Torah to the last.
1204: Crusaders pillage Eastern Orthodox Constantinople, burning art.
1215: The Magna Carta sets limits on a king's power.
1222: The University of Padua is founded.
1224: The University of Naples is founded.
1225: "The Fibonacci series" introduced in his Book of Square Numbers.
1228: Zen Buddhist-based calligraphy spreads from China to Japan.
1229: The University of Toulouse is founded.
1229: In Toulouse, the Inquisition forbids laymen to read the Bible.
1231: Cambridge University is founded.
1229: The Bezels of Wisdom explain Sufi faith, an Islamic offshoot.
1234: Koreans use movable metal type.
1244: The University of Rome is founded.
 
 
1253: In Paris, the Sorbonne University is founded.
1262: Birth of Guan Daoshang, most famous of Chinese women artists.
1267: Roger Bacon builds a camera obscura to show optical illusions.
1268: Roger Bacon's On Experimental Science supports inductive reasoning.
1270: Bishop of Paris formally condemns doctrines of radical Aristotelians.
1270: Syrian scholar compiles an encyclopedia.
1273: Thomas Aquinas' Summa Theologica melds Christian, Aristotelian thought.
1273: Persian poet Mawlana, creator of "whirling dervishes" hypnotic dancing, dies.
1276: At Fabriano, Italy, the first paper mill is built in Christian Europe.
1280: Mechanical clocks using weights and gears gradually replace water clocks.
1280: In China, Kublai Khan establishes a pony express.
1282: In the Fabriano mill, watermarks are added to paper.
1283: Thailand gets its own alphabet.
1285: Eyeglasses are invented in Italy, but correcting only for far-sightedness.
1290: Beatrice, the inspiration of Dante, dies.
1290: French astronomer Guillaume de Saint Cloud describes concept of a camera.
1298: Marco Polo tells of paper money in China. Few Europeans believe such nonsense.
 
 
1300: Wooden type is used in central Asia.
1300: British monk John Duns Scotus writes Treatise on God as First Principle.
1305: Taxis family begins private postal service in Europe.
1309: Paper is made in England.
1313: In Florence, Giotto prefigures modern painting.
1321: Dante Alighieri dies after completing his epic poem, The Divine Comedy.
1325: Legends of King Arthur are written.
1328: In England, William of Occam postulates "Razor" law of parsimony, simplicity.
1333: Petrarch's discovery of classical manuscripts helps bring on the Renaissance.
1337: Giotto dies. His paintings will influence the great Renaissance artists.
1338: A paper mill operates in France.
1340: The madrigal, a form of vocal chamber music, originates in northern Italy.
1342: In France, mathematician Levi ben Gershon writes theory of photography.
 
 
1350: In Milan, a public striking clock.
1353: Giovanni Boccaccio's Decameron tells tales of earthy love and intrigue.
1373: The Bibliotheque Nationale housed in the Louvre, catalogues 1,000 volumes.
1378: In England, the Great Schism; Lollards say lay people can interpret the Bible.
1382: French scholar Nicolas Oresme dies. His Book of Divinations attacks astrology.
1384: John Wyclif dies after overseeing completion of Bible translated into English.
1387: Geoffrey Chaucer writes The Canterbury Tales.
1390: The first paper mill in Germany.
1392: Koreans have a type foundry to produce bronze characters.
1395: Improved version of the Wyclif Bible is completed.
1399: Johannes Gutenberg born; his invention will usher in the "modern age ".
 


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Copyright © Irving Fang and Kristina Ross, 1995-1996. All rights reserved.