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1167 and marriage
The marriage of Amalric I of Jerusalem and Maria Comnena at Tyre ( Lebanon ) | Tyre in 1167, as depicted in a MS of the Histoire d ' Outremer, painted in Paris c. 1295-1300.
Empress Matilda ( 1102 – 1167 ) is the only British monarch commonly referred to as " emperor " or " empress ", but acquired her title through her marriage to Henry V, Holy Roman Emperor, and had little legitimacy as Queen of England.
A possible second marriage, in 1167, was to Jeanne / Eléonore de Léon, daughter of Guiomar III, Vicomte de Léon & his unnamed wife.
* Philip of Alsace ( 1167 – 1185 ), Count of Flanders ( 1168 – 1191 ), Count of Vermandois and of Valois by marriage

1167 and third
Thus it was held by Roland de Dinan, a Breton lord, in 1167 ; Robert de Beaumont, 4th Earl of Leicester before 1204 ; Theodoric the Teuton, a servant of King John, after 1204 ; William Marshal, 2nd Earl of Pembroke, in 1217, and intermittently by the third and fourth Earls up to 1237 ; Simon de Steyland, the King's clerk, around 1237 ; John son of Geoffrey, described as " of the lands of the Bretons ", from 1240 ; Nicholas of Ely, Bishop of Winchester, from about 1272 ; and then by three successive queens: Queen Eleanor, Queen Margaret, and Queen Isabella, from 1280 until 1331.
The present building, the third to be built on the site, is the last in a series of successive castles and palaces constructed on the same site since the erection of the first castle in 1167.
By 1167, Richeza married her third and last husband, Count Albert III of Everstein, who fought at the side of Frederick Barbarossa in his wars against the Guelphs.

1167 and daughter
* February 7 – Matilda, daughter of Henry I of England ( d. 1167 )
Empress Matilda ( c. 7 February 1102 – 10 September 1167 ), also known as Matilda of England or Maude, was the daughter and heir of King Henry I of England.
* 1166 – 1167 Douce II, daughter of previous
(* c. 1155 – 1167 Charles VII of Sweden ( his mother was the widow of Inge the Younger ) who married Kirsten Stigsdatter, according to Norse legends daughter's daughter's daughter of Inge the Elder ; this couple continued the in c 1130 ascended dynasty of Sverker )

1167 and Matilda
Matilda died at Notre Dame du Pré near Rouen in 1167 and was buried in the Abbey of Bec-Hellouin, Normandy.
* Empress Matilda ( c. 1102 – 1167 ), Matilda of England, Holy Roman Empress, Queen of Germany, claimant to throne of England

1167 and Henry
Emperor Frederick Barbarossa and his sons King Henry VI and Duke Frederick V, Duke of Swabia | Frederick V of Swabia, Welfenchronik, 1167 / 79, Weingarten Abbey
Consequently, his younger son Frederick V became the new Duke of Swabia in 1167, while his eldest son Henry was crowned King of the Romans in 1169, alongside his father who also retained the title.
Henry did not invade Gwynedd again and Owain was able to regain his eastern conquests, recapturing Rhuddlan castle in 1167 after a siege of three months.
She later returned to France, where she died in 1167, though her son succeeded Stephen as King Henry II in 1154.
In 1167, Henry gave the County of Schwerin to his vassal Gunzelin von Hagen, and the rest of the country around the city was returned to Niklot's son Pribislav, forming a ducal hereditary line that lasted until 1918.
In 1167, his father had tried to arrange marriages for him and Conrad to daughters of Henry II of England or sisters of William I of Scotland-but these failed, the English match probably because of consanguinity ( the boy's mother Judith was related to Eleanor of Aquitaine ), the Scottish match because the princesses were already married.
In 1167 Henry II marched on Auvergne, and in 1170 he also attacked Bourges.
In 1167, he unsuccessfully tried to negotiate marriages for his eldest sons to daughters of Henry II of England-but the girls were very young at the time and were related through Judith's descent from William V of Aquitaine.
Through the ages it was called Stanahala in 1143, Stanhala in 1167 and Stonhal during Henry III's reign.

1167 and ;
In 1167, Nur ad-Din sent Shirkuh back to Egypt and Amalric once again followed him, establishing a camp near Cairo ; Shawar again allied with Amalric and a treaty was signed with the caliph al-Adid himself.
He began besieging Ancona in 1167, which had acknowledged the authority of Manuel I ; at the same time, Frederick's forces achieved a great victory over the Romans at the Battle of Monte Porzio.
It is arranged, but was not written, chronologically ; the first sections to be written were probably the chapters about the invasion of Egypt in 1167, which are extremely detailed and were likely composed before the Fatimid dynasty was overthrown in 1171.
Rabbi Abraham Ben Meir Ibn Ezra ( Hebrew: אברהם אבן עזרא or ראב " ע, Arabic ابن عزرا ; also known as Abenezra ) ( 1089 — 1164 ) was born at Tudela, Navarre Tudela, Navarre ( now in Spain ) in 1089, and died c. 1167, apparently in Calahorra.
Around that time ( in 1164 or in 1167 ) Thoros visited Jerusalem and suggested the colonization of a large number of Armenians ; but the Latin prelates forced King Amalric I to refuse the offer by their insistence that they should pay the dime ( a special tax ).
Sverker II ( English exonym: Sweartgar ; Swedish: Sverker den yngre or Sverker Karlsson, born before 1167 – died 17 July 1210 ) was King of Sweden from 1196 to 1208.
Shirkuh was sent back into Egypt in 1167, with Shawar once again allying with Amalric, who besieged Shirkuh in Alexandria until he agreed to leave ; however, a Crusader garrison remained in Egypt and Amalric allied with the Byzantine Empire, planning to conquer it entirely.
In 1167 the Roman communal army attacked Tusculum ( Battle of Monte Porzio ), but it was defeated by the Emperor-allied army, headed by Christian I, Archbishop of Mainz ; in the summer of the same year, however, a plague decimated the imperial army and Frederick Barbarossa was forced to get back to Germany.

1167 and remained
Floris was captured in Bruges and remained in prison until 1167, at which point he was being ransomed in exchange for recognition of Flemish suzerainty over Zeeland.
After the disastrous defeat of Pope Alexander III at the Battle of Monte Porzio in May 1167 by the imperial forces, the Lombard League remained as the last legitimate fighting force opposing the emperor and was therefore heavily backed by the pope.
From 1167 the residents of Tusculum moved to the neighbours ( Locus ) or little villages as Monte Porzio Catone, Grottaferrata and mostly to Frascati: only a little group of defense troops remained in the old city.

1167 and England
He led a life of restless wandering, which took him to North Africa, Egypt ( in 1109, maybe in the company of Yehuda Halevi ), the Land of Israel, Italy ( Rome in 1140-1143, Lucca, Mantua, Verona ), Southern France ( Rodez, Narbonne, Béziers ), Northern France ( Dreux ), England ( London, and Oxford in 1158 ), and back again to Narbonne in 1161, until his death on January 23 or 28, 1167, the exact location unknown: maybe at Calahorra at the border of Navarre and Aragon, or maybe in Rome or in the Holy Land.
King John ( 24 December 1167 – October 19, 1216 ) was King of England from 1199 to 1216.
Robert of Melun ( c. 1100 – 27 February 1167 ) was an English scholastic Christian theologian who taught in France, and later became Bishop of Hereford in England.

1167 and with
Amalric cemented his alliance with Manuel by marrying Manuel's niece Maria Komnene in 1167, and an embassy led by William of Tyre was sent to Constantinople to negotiate a military expedition, but in 1168 Amalric pillaged Bilbeis without waiting for the naval support promised by Manuel.
In 1167 the episcopal see of Hebron was created along with that of Kerak and Sebastia ( the tomb of John the Baptist ).
In 1167 an alliance ( called the Lombard League ) was formed among the Venetian cities such as Venice, Padua, Treviso, Vicenza, and Verona with other cities of Northern Italy to assert their rights against the Holy Roman Emperor.
In 1167 he was appointed archdeacon of the cathedral of Tyre by Frederick de la Roche, archbishop of Tyre, with the support of King Amalric I.
It took an active part in the League with Verona and, most of all, in the Lombard League ( 1164 – 1167 ) against Emperor Frederick I Barbarossa compelling Padua and Treviso to join: its podestà, Ezzelino II il Balbo, was captain of the league.
Uppsala became the seat of the Archbishop of Sweden in 1167, with Scandinavia's largest church building Uppsala Cathedral inaugurated in the 1440s.
* Pylos: A bay in the Peloponnese, shut in by the island of Sphacteria, it is associated with Cleon's famous victory and there are many references to it in the play: as a cake that Cleon pinched from Demosthenes ( lines 57, 355, 1167 ); as a place where Cleon like a colossus has got one foot ( 76 ); as an oath by which Cleon swears ( 702 ); as the place where Cleon snatched victory from the Athenian generals ( 742 ); as the origin of captured Spartan shields ( 846 ); as an epithet of the goddess Athena ( 1172 ); and as an equivalent of the hare that Agoracritus stole from Cleon ( 1201 ).
Peter went with Stephen du Perche and Walter of the Mill to Sicily in 1166 and there became the tutor to King William II in 1167.
Amalric followed him at the beginning of 1167, and a formal treaty was established between Amalric and Shawar, with the nominal support of the caliph.
Burislev, Richeza's son with Sverker I, became a rival claimant of the Swedish throne against Knud Eriksson, and in 1167 he finally took part in his paternal heritage and was chosen King of Östergötland.
In 1167, Amalric made a lucrative political alliance with Byzantium by marrying princess Maria Comnena, great-niece to emperor Manuel I Comnenus.
When his father Karl had been murdered in Visingsö in 1167, apparently by minions of the next king Canute I of Sweden, Sverker was taken to Denmark while a boy and grew up with his mother's clan of Hvide, leaders of Zealand.
The index reached bottom on 13 June with 1167 points after legislative elections, but ended the year with 1589 points.
In 1167, with his authority as catapan, Gilbert forced German troops out of the Campania and compelled Frederick Barbarossa to raise the siege of Ancona.
The Barnwells had arrived in Ireland with Strongbow in 1167 and had settled in Berehaven in Munster.
Together with Christian I of Buch, archbishop of Mainz, and under Rainald's guidance an army won a victory over a much larger force of Roman troops at the Battle of Monte Porzio on 29 May 1167.

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