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1301 and Wenceslaus
Wenceslaus III Premyslid ( Czech and,,,,, ; 6 October 1289 – 4 August 1306 ) was by inheritance the King of Bohemia ( 1305 – 06 ), the King of Hungary ( 1301 – 05 ) and the King of Poland ( 1305 – 06 ).
His father accepted the crown of Hungary on behalf of Wenceslaus III after Andrew's death in 1301.
On 27 August 1301, Wenceslaus III was crowned in Székesfehérvár as the King of Hungary and as such assumed the name Ladislaus V ( Hungarian: László, Czech, Slovak and Croatian: Ladislav ).
* Wenceslaus III of Bohemia ( October 6, 1289 – August 4, 1306 ), King of Hungary ( 1301 – 05 ), King of Bohemia and of Poland ( 1305 – 06 )
The first mention of the German name Trautenau, from which the modern name Trutnov is derived, is from a document of King Wenceslaus II in 1301.

1301 and Andrew
* 1301Andrew III of Hungary dies, ending the Árpád dynasty in Hungary.
* 7 terms: Andrew Buckerel ( 1231 – 1237 ); John le Breton ( 1289, 1293 – 1298 ); John le Blund ( 1301 – 1307 )
When King Andrew III died on 14 January 1301, Charles ' partisans took him to Esztergom where the Archbishop Gregory Bicskei crowned him with an occasional crown because the Holy Crown of Hungary was guarded by his opponents.
Andrew III of Hungary ( 1290 – 1301 ) even ordered, in 1293, that all the Romanians who had been settled without royal permission on noble domains be returned to the royal estate of Armeni.
When Andrew III died in 1301, the entire kingdom was in the hands of a dozen powerful noblemen.
After the death of the Hungarian king Andrew III, Pressburg was annexed by Austria in 1301, because Andrew's widow gave the town to the Habsburgs.
The dynasty came to end in 1301 with the death of King Andrew III of Hungary, while the last member of the House of Árpad, Andrew's daughter, Blessed Elizabeth of Töss, died in 1336 or 1338.
Andrew III ( 1291 – 1301 ), the last king of the Árpád dynasty, declared, in the privilegium granted by him to the community of Posonium ( Bratislava ), that the Jews in that city should enjoy all the liberties of citizens.
The last Árpád king, Andrew III ( 1290 – 1301 ), used only the patriarchal cross.

1301 and III
From 1301 the upper Meuse roughly marked the western border of the Holy Roman Empire with the Kingdom of France, after Count Henry III of Bar had to receive the western part of the County of Bar ( Barrois mouvant ) as a French fief from the hands of King Philip IV.
* John II Comyn and John III Comyn — Guardians ( 1298 – 1301, 1304 )
Following the reversion of the Earldom of Chester to the crown, in 1254 Henry III passed the Lordship of Chester ( but not the title of Earl ) to his son Edward, who as Edward I bestowed the Earldom of Chester on his son Edward when he created him the first Prince of Wales in 1301.
In 1301 Count Henry III of Bar had to receive the western part of his lands ( Barrois mouvant ) as a fief by King Philip IV of France.
* Philip III of Navarre ( 1301 – 1343 )
Forest law was removed from the Bromsgrove area in 1301 in the reign of Henry III, when the boundaries were moved back.
* William III., † 1301,

1301 and Hungary
On 27 August 1301, his son was crowned in Székesfehérvár as King of Hungary under the name Ladislaus V ( Hungarian: László, Czech, Slovak and Croatian: Ladislav ).
After 1310, he acknowledged Charles I of Hungary ( 1301 – 1342 ) as his sovereign, but in fact continued to rule independently.
The dynasty descending from him ruled the Principality of Hungary and later the Kingdom of Hungary until 1301.
Árpád was the founder of the dynasty named after him, which would rule over the kingdom of Hungary till 1301.
The King Charles I of Hungary was crowned in May 1301 with a provisional crown in Esztergom by the Archbishop of this city, that lead to his second coronation in June 1309.
In 1301 the last member of the House of Árpád died, and Charles I of Hungary was crowned claiming the throne in the name of his paternal grandmother, the daughter of the King Stephen V of Hungary.
* From 14 January 1301 until 1308 in the Kingdom of Hungary between the extinction of the Árpád dynasty and when Charles I of Hungary secured the throne for himself against several pretenders.
* Personal union with the Kingdom of Hungary from 1301 to 1305, 1370 to 1382, and 1440 to 1444 ( see Hungary section above ).
The Árpáds or Arpads (,,,, ) was the ruling dynasty of the Principality of Hungary ( 9th – 10th centuries ) and of the Kingdom of Hungary ( 1000 – 1301 ).
* Engel, Pál: Magyarország világi archontológiája ( 1301 – 1457 ) ( The Temporal Archontology of Hungary ( 1301-1457 )); História-MTA Történettudományi Intézete, 1996, Budapest ; ISBN 963-8312-43-2.

1301 and died
Bartholomew de Badlesmere, 1st Baron Badlesmere ( 1275-14 April 1322 ), English nobleman, was the son and heir of Gunselm de Badlesmere ( died 1301 ) and Joan FitzBernard, and fought in the English army both in France and Scotland during the later years of the reign of Edward I of England.
After a bloody battle with Temur's armies near Zawkhan River in 1301, the old valiant Kaidu died, and was succeeded by Duwa.
In 1213 the county was acquired by the lords of Berg ; it was then known as Berg-Burgau, but the last ruler of this collateral line died in 1301, and Burgau ( now raised to the level of a margraviate ) became an exclave of Austria.
In 1301 Joan married Roger Mortimer and the castle passed to the Mortimer family who held it until 1425, when the line died out.
They were united under the Árpad dynasty until 1301, when the ( male ) line of the dynasty died out.
However, in the summer of 1300, Máté visited King Andrew's court, but the king died on 14 January 1301, and following his death a struggle commenced among the several claimants for the throne.
Amaury returned to the continent, worked as a cleric, and died sometime after 1301.
In 1301 he clashed with Kaidu, who died from a battle wound.
Kaidu had waged almost continuous warfare for more than 30 years against Kublai and his successor Temür, though he eventually fell in 1301, when he was defeated and wounded during a battle near Karakorum and died shortly afterwards.
A daughter, Fionnuala Ní Conchobair died in 1301 as abbess of Kilcreevanty, Clonfert.
1250 ) and Gilla Isa Mac Fir Bisigh, who died in 1301.
* Dietrich I ( born before 1215, died 1301 ), last Count of Isenberg and Altena, 1st Count of Limburg ( a. d. Lenne )
He was succeeded by his son, another Henry, who, when he died in 1301, divided the lands between three of his six sons.

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