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In 1347 he took the important step of ensuring the legitimation of his four sons, John, Earl of Carrick ( the future King Robert III ), Walter, Lord of Fife ( d. 1362 ), Robert ( the future Duke of Albany ) and Alexander, Lord of Badenoch ( and future Earl of Buchan ), and six daughters by petitioning Pope Clement VI to allow a canon law marriage to Elizabeth Mure.
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1347 and took
Walter of Chatton was a contemporary of William of Ockham ( 1287 – 1347 ) who took exception to Occam's razor and Ockham's use of it.
In July 1347 he took part in fruitless negotiations with the English outside Calais in the days just before that city's capitulation.
In 1347 Louis I took their estates around Bribir in the Hrvatsko Primorje hinterlands ( they used to be known as " princes of Bribir " Bribirski in Croatian ) and gave them the Zrin estate with Zrin Castle in the Croatian region of Banovina, south of the modern city of Petrinja and west of Hrvatska Kostajnica.
Louis I, also Duke of Bavaria from 1347 as LouisV, took it upon himself to declare Margaret's marriage to John Henry null and void.
In 1347 the northern part was conquered by the Bahmani Sultanate, which in 1473 took the town of Belgaum and conquered the southern part also.
1347 and important
The Church considers the first seven Ecumenical Councils ( held between the 4th and the 8th century ) to be the most important ; however, there have been more, specifically the Synods of Constantinople, 879 – 880, 1341, 1347, 1351, 1583, 1819, and 1872, the Synod of Iaşi ( Jassy ), 1642, and the Pan-Orthodox Synod of Jerusalem, 1672, all of which helped to define the Orthodox position.
In 1347 King Louis I of Hungary conferred on this branch of the Brebers, in the persons of Count Gregory and Count George ( Grgur and Juraj in Croatian ), respectively son and nephew of Ban Paul, the castle of Zrin ( in exchange for the strategically important castle of Ostrovica, their last holding outside of ancestral Breber ( Croat.
It serves as a monument to an occurrence in 1347 during the Hundred Years ' War, when Calais, an important French port on the English Channel, was under siege by the English for over a year.
1347 and four
The Late Middle Ages were marked by difficulties and calamities, such as famine, plague, and war, which much diminished the population of western Europe ; in the four years from 1347 through 1350, the Black Death killed approximately a third of the European population.
Between 1327 and 1347 a chapel with four traceried windows was provided by Lord Harrington in the south choir aisle, and in fact his tomb is still in the building.
1347 and sons
Janusz I ( c. 1347 – 1352 – 1429 ) was Duke of Warsaw ( from 1373 ), one of the dukes of Masovia after its division amongst the sons of Duke Siemowit III.
1347 and John
* 1347 – The Byzantine civil war of 1341 – 1347 ends with a power-sharing agreement between John VI Kantakouzenos and John V Palaiologos.
* 1341 – The Byzantine civil war of 1341 – 1347 formally begins with the proclamation of John VI Kantakouzenos as Byzantine Emperor at Didymoteicho.
* September-October: The Byzantine civil war of 1341 – 1347 between John VI Kantakouzenos and the regency for the infant John V Palaiologos breaks out.
Victorious in 1347, John Kantakouzenos ruled as co-emperor until John V's attack on his son Matthew in 1352 led to a second civil war. In this second civil war John V asked the ruler of Serbia, Stephan Dushan for help and Dushan obliged by sending 4, 000 Serbian horsemen to his aid.
He married Helena Kantakouzene, daughter of his co-emperor John VI Kantakouzenos and Irene Asanina, on 28 May 1347.
John VI Kantakouzenos or Cantacuzenus (, Iōannēs VI Kantakouzēnos ) ( c. 1292 – 15 June 1383 ) was the Byzantine emperor from 1347 to 1354.
In 1347, he entered Constantinople in triumph with an army of 1, 000 men, and forced his opponents to an arrangement by which he became joint emperor with John V Palaiologos and sole administrator during the minority of his colleague.
In 1347, he owed £ 40 to a money lender, Roger Rikeman, which he was unable to pay, and so his land in Ickenham was passed by Rikeman in 1350 to John de Charlton.
The Yorkshire lands ceded to The Crown on the death without issue of John de Warenne, 7th Earl of Surrey in 1347.
The will of John de Croydon, fishmonger, dated 6 December 1347, includes a bequest to " the church of S John de Croydon ", the earliest clear record of its dedication.
1347 and Earl
On Christmas Eve 1347, Edward III granted Marie de St Pol, widow of the Earl of Pembroke, the licence for the foundation of a new educational establishment in the young university at Cambridge.
Mary was the daughter of Humphrey de Bohun, 7th Earl of Hereford, and Joan Fitzalan ( 1347 / 48 – 1419 ), the daughter of Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel and Eleanor of Lancaster.
Worminghall became part of the Honour of Gloucester and passed via Hugh de Audley, 1st Earl of Gloucester ( 1291 – 1347 ) and then Margaret de Audley, 2nd Baroness Audley to Hugh de Stafford, 2nd Earl of Stafford ( died 1386 ).
Edmund was nevertheless knighted, married at the age of twenty, in the summer of 1347 Sybil de Montacute, a younger daughter of William Montacute, 1st Earl of Salisbury and Catherine Grandison, whose elder sister Elizabeth was married to his maternal uncle ( the uncle may have arranged this marriage ).
Thomas de Beauchamp, 11th Earl of Warwick depicted in 1347 as one of the 8 mourners attached to the monumental brass of Sir Hugh Hastings ( d. 1347 ) at St Mary's Church, Elsing, Norfolk.
With the failure of the second de Warenne male line in 1347, the earldom passed to Richard FitzAlan, 10th Earl of Arundel, who was a nephew of the last de Warenne earl, although he did not assume the title until after the death of the previous earl's widow in 1351.
John de Warenne ( 30 June 1286 – June 1347 ), 7th Earl of Surrey or Warenne, was the last Warenne earl of Surrey.
When the last of the Warennes John, the 7th Earl died without issue in 1347, he was buried in Lewes Priory.
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