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1150s and was
The earliest was probably Tibors de Sarenom, who was active in the 1150s ( the date of her known composition is uncertain ).
However, although this new coinage made long distance trade easier it was very detrimental to local trade which spread “ hatred throughout Italy .” By the 1150s most of this coinage was no longer in use and soon after, it disappeared all together.
An ancient abbey church founded at ' Eaton ' in the 1150s was home to Benedictine nuns and gave the present town the name ' Nuneaton '.
The town lay in the parish of Silkstone and developed little until in the 1150s when it was given to the monastery of St John, Pontefract.
He is ignored in all Swedish bishop chronicles, unless he is the same Henry who was later redated to 1150s.
Kvenland appears once in a list of countries found in Leiðarvísir og borgarskipan, which was basically a guidebook for pilgrims about the routes from Northern Europe to Rome and Jerusalem, written by an Icelandic Abbot Níkulás Bergsson in the monastery of Þverá ( Munkaþverá ) in the late 1150s CE.
Palaeographical comparisons to other texts produced in Jerusalem suggest it was written in the 1140s ( or even the 1150s ), but the later texts may have used the Melisende Psalter as a source.
The Sententiae was revised twice, probably during the 1150s and the 1160s.
The cupolas are thought to have acquired their present helmet-like shape in the 1150s, when the cathedral was restored after a fire.

1150s and also
During the 1150s, the Knights Templar also acquired land in Tripoli.
According to some medieval accounts and maps, Kvenland included also the Kola Peninsula north from Bjarmaland, as stated e. g. in the late 1150s ' AD Leiðarvísir og borgarskipan in which the Icelandic Abbot Níkulás Bergsson writes that north from Värmland there are " two Kvenlands ( Kvenlönd ), which extend to north of Bjarmia ( Bjarmalandi )".

1150s and with
In the 1150s with the creation of the Angevin Empire the Normans controlled half of France and all of England, dwarfing the power of France.
He served in the archbishop's household with near-contemporaries Thomas Becket and John of Salisbury in the 1150s.
The Lendman Party ( Norwegian: Lendmannsflokken or Lendmannspartiet ), which appeared after the 1150s, and its successor, the Baglers, formed in 1196, were movements consisting of persons of the secular aristocracy ( feudal lords ) and of the clerical aristocracy ( bishops ), among others Earl Erling ‘ the Slanted ’ Ormsson, who, preferably with a descendant of Olaf ‘ the Holy ’, sought to introduce a one-king hereditary monarchy on the continental European model.

1150s and which
There is a specific Latin influence in Chrétien ’ s romances the likes of which ( The Iliad, The Aeneid, Metamorphoses ) were “ translated into the Old French vernacular during the 1150s ”.
Carols were very popular as dance songs from the 1150s to the 1350s, after which their use expanded as processional songs sung during festivals, while others were written to accompany religious mystery plays ( such as the Coventry Carol, written in 1591 ).
Hill notes that paper mills appear in early Christian Catalonian documentation from the 1150s, which may imply Islamic origins, but here too hard evidence is lacking, and the case for early Catalan water-powered paper mills has been thoroughly dismissed after a re-examination of the evidence cited by Burns.
The hill in the centre of Aberdyfi, Pen-y-Bryn, has been claimed to be the site of fortifications in the 1150s, which were soon destroyed.

1150s and .
His earliest writings were likely written in the 1150s, and probably in Paris.
The term " common law " originally derives from the 1150s and 1160s, when Henry II of England established the secular English tribunals.
* 1150s – Bhaskara calculates the planetary mean motion, ellipses, first visibilities of the planets, the lunar crescent, the seasons, and the length of the Earth's revolution around the Sun to 9 decimal places.
* 1150s – Gerard of Cremona translates Ptolemy's Almagest from Arabic into Latin, eventually leading to its adoption by the Catholic Church as an approved text.
By the early 1150s the barons and the Church mostly wanted a long-term peace.
A network of treaties had emerged by the 1150s, reducing – but not eliminating – the degree of local fighting in England.
Later in 1150s Yuri couple of times occupied Kiev as well.
A group of Benedictine monks, dependent upon Ely Abbey, moved here from their water-logged monastery at Elmeney ( a vanished settlement about a mile to the northeast ) in the 1150s, at the suggestion of Duke Conan IV of Brittany.
1150s — d.?
Wooden keeps on mottes ceased to be built across most of England by the 1150s, although they continued to be erected in Wales and along the Welsh Marches.
The sagas Heimskringla and Orkneyinga saga relates that at some point in the early 1150s, king Eystein went on a campaign to Scotland and England.
The Andalusian traveler Abū Hamid al-Gharnāti who visited Bulghar in the 1150s, noted that Iskandar Dhū 1-Qarnayn passed through Bulghar, that is, the Volga-Kama region, on his way to build the iron walls that contained Yā ' jūj and Mā ' jūj and Magog within the land of darkness ... while Najib al-Hamadāni reports that the rulers of Bulghar claimed descent from Iskandar Dhūl-Qarnayn.

Bishop and Uppsala
Rudbeck, one of several sons of Johannes Rudbeckius, a former Uppsala professor who became Bishop of Västerås, was sent for a year to the progressive University of Leiden in the Netherlands.
* Henry ( Bishop of Uppsala ), Saint
* Lesser Feasts and Commemorations on the Lutheran liturgical calendar include Anthony of Egypt on January 17, Henry, Bishop of Uppsala, martyr Henry of Uppsala on January 19, Timothy, Titus and Silas, missionaries St Timothy, St Titus and St Silas Day on January 26, Ansgar, Bishop of Hamburg, missionary to Denmark and Sweden St Ansgar on February 3, Cyril, monk and Methodius, bishop, missionaries to the Slavs St Cyril and St Methodius on February 14, Gregory the Great on March 12, St Patrick on March 17, Olavus Petri, priest and Laurentius Petri, Bishop of Uppsala, on April 19, St Anselm on April 21, Catherine of Siena on April 29, St Athanasius on May 2, St Monica on May 4, Eric IX of Sweden on May 18, St Boniface on June 5, Basil the Great, Gregory of Nyssa and Gregory of Nazianzus on June 14, Benedict of Nursia on July 11, Birgitta of Sweden on July 23, St Anne, Mother of Mary on July 26, St Dominic on August 8, Augustine of Hippo on August 28, St Cyprian on September 16, Teresa of Avila on October 15, Martin de Porres on November 3, Martin of Tours on November 11, Elizabeth of Hungary on November 17, St Lucy on December 13.
According to a late 13th century legend, Erik undertook the so-called First Swedish Crusade to Finland together with the equally legendary Bishop Henry of Uppsala, conquering the country and building many churches there.
Through the King's influence he would later become professor of theology at Uppsala University and Bishop of Skara.
He is said to have been an English-born Bishop of Uppsala at the time of King Eric the Saint of Sweden in the mid-12th century, ruling the peaceful kingdom with the king in heavenly co-existence.
The legend strongly emphasizes that Henry was a Bishop of Uppsala, not a Bishop of Finland which became a conventional claim later on, also by the church itself.
Noteworthy in the development of the legend is that the first canonically elected Bishop of Turku, a certain Johan ( 1286 – 1289 ) of Polish origin, was elected as the Archbishop of Uppsala in 1289, after three years in office in Turku.
The first mention of Bishop Henry in historical sources is from 1298, when he is mentioned along with king Eric in a document from a provincial synod of Uppsala in Telge.
Notable bishops that died violently included the Archbishop of Uppsala in 1187, Bishop of Estonia in 1219 and Bishop of Linköping in 1220.
There is no historical record of a Bishop of Uppsala called Henry during the reign of King Eric ( about 1156 – 1160 ).
A late 15th century legenda nova claimed that Henry had come to Sweden in the retinue of papal legate Nicholas Breakspear, the later Pope Adrian IV, and appointed as the Bishop of Uppsala by him.
In the late 16th century, Bishop Paulus Juusten claimed that Henry had been the Bishop of Uppsala for two years before the crusade.

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