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1306 and
** Robert II ( 1272 1306 )
** Hugh V ( 1306 1315 )
* 1306 In front of the high altar of Greyfriars Church in Dumfries, Robert the Bruce murders John Comyn sparking revolution in the Scottish Wars of Independence
* Kings of Bohemia ( 1306 1307, 1437 1439, 1453 1457, 1526 1918 ),
* 1306 Robert the Bruce becomes King of Scotland.
* Barrow, G. W. S., Kingship and Unity: Scotland, 1000 1306.
* 1289 King Wenceslaus III of Bohemia ( d. 1306 )
Robert I ( 11 July 1274 7 June 1329 ), popularly known as Robert the Bruce ( Medieval Gaelic: Roibert a Briuis ; modern Scottish Gaelic: Raibeart Bruis ; Norman French: Robert de Brus or Robert de Bruys ), was King of Scots from 25 March 1306, until his death in 1329.
According to a legend, at some point while he was on the run during the winter of 1306 07, Bruce hid in a cave on Rathlin Island off the north coast of Ireland, where he observed a spider spinning a web, trying to make a connection from one area of the cave's roof to another.
* January 20 John de Bohun, 5th Earl of Hereford ( b. 1306 )
# 205r: Herr Konrad, der Schenk von Landeck ( of Thurgau, 1271 1306 )
* September 16 Philip III of Navarre ( b. 1306 )
* September 7 Andrea Dandolo, doge of Venice ( b. 1306 )
* December 10 December 11 King Birger of Sweden has his brothers, Dukes Eric and Valdemar, captured and thrown into a dungeon during the Nyköping Banquet, as a revenge for their imprisonment of him in the Håtuna games in 1306.
* October 6 King Wenceslaus III of Bohemia ( d. 1306 )
* Kagen ( 1303 1306
* Tokuji ( 1306 1308 )
* Imperial Prince Takayoshi ( also Takanaga ) ( 尊良親王 ) ( 1306 / 8 1337 )
* Imperial Prince Tokiyoshi ( also Yoyoshi ) ( 世良親王 ) ( 1306 / 8 1330 )
* Barrow, G. W. S., Kingship and Unity: Scotland 1000 1306.

1306 and Earl
His wife and daughters and other women of the party were sent to Kildrummy in August 1306 under the protection of Bruce's brother Neil Bruce and the Earl of Atholl and most of his remaining men.
The Earldom of Carrick merged into the crown of Scotland with the accession in 1306 of the Earl of Carrick, Robert the Bruce, who transferred the title to his son David in 1328 ( the title became automatically subsidiary to the Dukedom of Rothesay in 1469 ); the High Stewardship merged into the crown with the accession of Robert, 7th High Steward of Scotland as Robert III in 1371 ; the Dukedom of Rothesay was created by Robert III of Scotland for his son David in 1398.
The situation changed again on 10 February 1306, when Robert the Bruce murdered his rival John Comyn and a few weeks later, on 25 March, had himself crowned king of Scotland by Isobel, sister of the Earl of Buchan.
The most irreconcilable of Bruce's Scottish enemies also came: Ingram de Umfraville, a former Guardian of Scotland, and his kinsman the Earl of Angus, as well as others of the MacDougalls, MacCanns and Sir John Comyn of Badenoch, the only son of the Red Comyn, who was born and raised in England and was now returning to Scotland to avenge his father's killing by Bruce at Greyfriars Kirk in Dumfries in 1306.
In 1306 it passed through marriage to the ambitious Earl of March, Roger Mortimer, 1st Earl of March.
* Roger Bigod, 5th Earl of Norfolk 1269 1306
In 1306 her grandfather King Edward I arranged for her to wed Duncan Macduff, 8th Earl of Fife.
In 1306, Robert the Bruce, Earl of Carrick, became King Robert I of Scotland, with the earldom merging in the Crown.
* Roger Bigod, 5th Earl of Norfolk ( d. 1306 )
6 December 1306 ) was 5th Earl of Norfolk.
This had the effect of disinheriting his brother John, thus when Roger died without issue in December 1306, his title became extinct and his estates escheated to the crown and were eventually bestowed on Thomas of Brotherton, 1st Earl of Norfolk.
* John Randolph, 3rd Earl of Moray ( 1306 1346 ), 3rd Earl of Moray, regent of Scotland
In 1306 he was styled Earl of Arundel, and served under Edward I in the Scottish Wars, for which he was richly rewarded.
Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel and 8th Earl of Surrey ( 9th Earl of Arundel per Ancestral Roots ) ( c. 1306 24 January 1376 ) was an English nobleman and medieval military leader.
On 25 May 1306, at ten or eleven years old, Joan was married to one of the leading nobles of England, John de Warenne, 7th Earl of Surrey, a " nasty, brutal man with scarcely one redeeming quality.
In May 1306 at Westminster, Eleanor married Hugh le Despenser the Younger, the son of Hugh le Despenser, Earl of Winchester and Isabella de Beauchamp, daughter of William de Beauchamp, 9th Earl of Warwick.
One document records that, in 1306 letters were delivered from Edward to his supporters, William I, Earl of Ross, Lachlan MacRuairi, his brother Ruairi, and John " mak Nakyl ".
Bruce was defeated at the Battle of Methven in June 1306, so he sent Isabella and his female relatives north, but they were betrayed to the English by Uilleam II, Earl of Ross.

1306 and army
Temür backed Duwa and sent a large army under Khayisan in the fall of 1306, and Chapar finally surrendered.

1306 and Scottish
The First War of Scottish Independence can be loosely divided into four phases: the initial English invasion and success in 1296 ; the campaigns led by William Wallace, Andrew de Moray and various Scottish Guardians from 1297 until John Comyn negotiated for the general Scottish submission in February 1304 ; the renewed campaigns led by Robert the Bruce following his killing of The Red Comyn in Dumfries in 1306 to his and the Scottish victory at Bannockburn in 1314 ; and a final phase of Scottish diplomatic initiatives and military campaigns in Scotland, Ireland and Northern England from 1314 until the Treaty of Edinburgh-Northampton in 1328.
On 10 February 1306, during a meeting between Bruce and Comyn, the two surviving claimants for the Scottish throne, Bruce quarrelled with and killed John Comyn at Greyfriars Kirk in Dumfries.
In 1306 Edward became concerned about a possible Scottish invasion of North Wales, but the unfinished castle had already fallen into a poor state of repair.
Ever since the death of John Comyn at the hands of Robert Bruce and his supporters in 1306 the Wars of Scottish Independence had also been a civil war.
* Sir Simon Fraser ( d. 1306 ) ( died 1306 ), fought in the Wars of Scottish Independence
It is divided into four books, treating successively of the Roman, the Pictish, the Scottish and the Scoto-Saxon periods, from 80 to 1306 AD.
The clan's first recognised chief, Donnchadh Reamhar, ' Stout Duncan ', son of Andrew de Atholia ( Latin ' Andrew of Atholl '), was a minor land-owner and leader of a kin-group around Dunkeld, Highland Perthshire, and as legend has it, an enthusiastic and faithful supporter of Robert I ( king 1306 29 ) during the Wars of Scottish Independence ; he is believed to have looked after King Robert after the Battle of Methven in 1306.
The Battle of Methven took place at Methven in Scotland in 1306, during the Wars of Scottish Independence.
The castle was attacked by Scottish forces in 1306 under Bishop Wishart of Glasgow ( using timber given to Glasgow diocese by the English for cathedral repairs ), but the siege was unsuccessful.
* John Fraser ( d. 1306 ), Scottish independence fighter, brother of Simon Fraser
Robert the Bruce was crowned at Scone in 1306 and the last coronation was of Charles II, when he accepted the Scottish crown in 1651.
His son Sir James Douglas, his estates forfeit to the English crown, swore allegiance to Robert the Bruce in 1306 prior to the latter's coronation, and was to share the deprivations and small victories of Bruce during the years, leading up to Bannockburn, and after was to be lieutenant to the King, and the pre-eminent warlord of the Scottish Border.
It is believed that Robert the Bruce landed at Lochranza in 1306 on his return from Ireland to claim the Scottish throne.

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