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1364 and Duke
* January 25 – Charles II, Duke of Lorraine ( b. 1364 )
** Charles, Duke of Brittany ( d. 1364 )
When Henry died 1335 Jan, King of Bohemia, renounced his claims, and Albrecht, Duke of Austria, received Carniola ; it was proclaimed a duchy by Rudolf IV, in 1364.
* Charles, Duke of Brittany ( 1319 – 1364 ), Blessed Charles of Blois
In 1364 the Scottish parliament indignantly rejected a proposal to make Lionel, Duke of Clarence, the next king ; but over the next few years David strung out secret negotiations with Edward III, which apparently appeased the matter.
On 13 June 1364, the lands of Chiny were sold to Wenceslas, Duke of Luxembourg.
Albert ( Albrekt av Mecklenburg in Swedish ; Albrecht von Mecklenburg in German ; c. 1338 – 1 April 1412 ) was King of Sweden from 1364 to 1389 and Duke of Mecklenburg-Schwerin from 1384 to 1412 as Albert III.
Duke Valdemar V of Slesvig's son, Henry, was in 1364 nominally entfeoffed with the Duchy, although he never reached to regain more than the northernmost parts as he couldn't raise the necessary funds to repay the loans.
John of Gaunt was made Duke of Lancaster in 1364, and the Three Castles would remain part of the Duchy of Lancaster until 1825.
The Austrian Habsburgs received the Carniolan March from the hands of Emperor Louis IV in 1335 and in 1364 Rudolf " the Founder " proclaimed himself a Duke of Carniola.
After his death John de Montfort claimed his rights as Duke, but French monarchy supported the Blois faction, triggering the Breton War of Succession ( 1341 – 1364 ), which opposed the House of Blois to the House of Montfort.
Charles of Blois ( Blois, 1319 – 29 September 1364 ), claimed the title Duke of Brittany, from 1341 to his death.
* Charles II, Duke of Lorraine ( 1364 – 1431 )
On 29 September 1364, Chandos led the forces of Duke John de Montfort to victory at the Battle of Auray, winning the Breton War of Succession and enabling de Montfort to become John V, Duke of Brittany.
Rudolf IV der Stifter (" the Founder ") ( November 1, 1339 – July 27, 1365 ) was a scion of the House of Habsburg and Duke ( self-proclaimed Archduke ) of Austria and Duke of Styria and Carinthia from 1358, as well as Count of Tyrol from 1363 and first Duke of Carniola from 1364 until his death.
Valdemar III ( 1314 – 1364 ) was a king of Denmark from 1326 to 1329 briefly when underage, as well as in 1325 – 26 and from 1330 to 1364 Duke of Schleswig as Valdemar V. He was a rival king set up against the unsuccessful Christopher II and was widely opposed by his many subjects.
On September 29, 1364, at the Battle of Auray, the army of Charles of Blois was heavily defeated by John V, Duke of Brittany and the English forces under Sir John Chandos.
* John V, Duke of Brittany ( 1339-1399 ), son of the former, Duke of Brittany from 1364 to 1399, count of Richemont and count of Montfort ( 1345-1399 ).
After the line had become extinct in 1209, the possessions passed to the Carniolan margraves from the Bavarian House of Andechs, Dukes of Merania, and were finally acquired for the House of Habsburg by Archduke Rudolf IV of Austria, who proclaimed himself Duke of Carniola in 1364.

1364 and Albert
The national coat of arms is a combination of King Albert of Mecklenburg's coat of arms of 1364 and King Magnus Birgersson's coat of arms of 1275, and is blue divided quarterly by a golden cross pattée.
Albert was proclaimed King of Sweden and officially crowned on 18 February 1364.
Albert was proclaimed King of Sweden and crowned on 18 February 1364.
He was King of Norway from 1343 until his death in 1380 ; he was also King of Sweden between 1362 and 1364, co-ruling with his father Magnus IV ( Magnus VII of Norway ), until they were both deposed there by Haakon's cousin Albert of Mecklenburg and a clique of exiled Swedish noblemen led by Bo Jonsson Grip.
In November 1365, Albert was formally hailed as the King of Sweden, though he had already been crowned on 18 February 1364.
Albert had been King of Sweden since 1364 and Duke of Mecklenburg since 1383.
He was executed by Albert, Duke of Bavaria in 1364, leaving the titular Duchy to his son Walter IV of Enghien.

1364 and II
* 1319 – John II of France ( d. 1364 )
** John II ( 1350 – 1364 )
* John II ( 1350 – 1364 )
** John II the Good, 1350 – 1364
** Malatesta II Malatesta, Italian condottiero ( d. 1364 )
The childless dukes Louis and Otto had already promised Charles IV the succession in Brandenburg in 1364 as revenge for a conflict with their brother Stephen II over the Bavarian succession after the death of their nephew Meinhard, the son of Louis V. Louis the Roman died in Berlin in 1365.
* April 16 – King John II of France ( d. 1364 )
In France, meanwhile, the decade following the Treaty of Brétigny was one of relative tranquillity, but on 8 April 1364 John II died in captivity in England, after unsuccessfully trying to raise his own ransom at home.
Du Guesclin also defeated Charles II of Navarre at the Battle of Cocherel in 1364 and eliminated the noble's threat to Paris.
* John II ( 26 April 1319 – 8 April 1364 )
John II ( 16 April 1319 – 8 April 1364 ), called John the Good (), was the King of France from 1350 until his death.
She is likely the Elizabeth Chaucer who, along with a Margaret Swynford, was nominated a nun by royal privilege at the accession of Richard II in 1377, thus she may have been born as early as 1364.
Federico II Paolo Novello da Montefeltro ( died c. 1370 ) was Count of Urbino from 1364 until his death.
* Jean II Le Meingre ( 1364 – 1421 ), Marshal of France in 1391
The family granted the estate to Edward II but in 1364 it was passed to Thomas Cheyne.
Soumada has a very ancient history at least in Cyprus, stretching back into the Roman period, and it was given as an exotic eastern delicacy by King Peter II of Cyprus to King Casimir the Great of Poland at the Congress of Kraków, held in Poland in 1364.
* John II of France ( 1319 – 1364 )
* Otto II of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel ( c. 1364 – 1406 ), Archbishop of Bremen
* Niccolò II ( 1364 – 71 )
Charles II ( 1364 – January 25, 1431 ), called the Bold () was the duke of Lorraine from 1390 to his death and constable of France from 1418 to 1425.

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