1110s

Decade From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The 1110s was a decade of the Julian Calendar which began on January 1, 1110, and ended on December 31, 1119.

Events

1110

By date

By place

Asia
Levant
Europe
England
  • King Henry I has improvements made at Windsor Castle, including a chapel, so that he can use the castle as his formal residence.

By topic

Literature
Religion

1111

By place

Levant
Europe
British Isles

By topic

Education
Religion

1112

By place

Byzantine Empire
Levant
Europe

By topic

Literature
Religion
  • Easter The citizens of Laon in France, having proclaimed a commune, murder Bishop Waldric in his cathedral.

1113

By place

Byzantine Empire
Levant
Europe
Asia

By topic

Religion

1114

By place

Europe
Asia

By topic

Earthquake
Religion

1115

By place

Levant
Europe
Asia
Mesoamerica

By topic

Religion

1116

By place

Byzantine Empire
  • Autumn Battle of Philomelion (1116): Emperor Alexios I Komnenos leads an expedition into Anatolia and meets the Seljuk army under Sultan Malik Shah (near Philomelium). The Byzantines introduce a new battle formation of Alexios' devising, the parataxis (a defensive formation, consisting of a hollow square, with the baggage in the centre). During the battle, the Seljuk Turks mount several attacks on the formations, but all are repulsed. The Byzantine cavalry makes two counterattacks; the first is unsuccessful. But a second attack, led by Nikephoros Bryennios the Younger, breaks the Seljuk forces, who then turn to flight. The following day Malik Shah again attacks, his army completely surrounding the Byzantines from all sides. The Seljuk Turks are once more repulsed, with many losses. Alexios claims the victory, and Malik Shah is forced to accept a peace treaty, in which he promises to respect the frontiers of the Byzantine Empire.[29][30]
Levant
  • Summer Crusaders under King Baldwin I of Jerusalem undertake an expedition to Egypt and march as far as Akaba on the Red Sea. After the local inhabitants flee from the town, Baldwin constructs castles in Akaba and on a nearby island. He leaves a garrison in both fortresses. The three Crusader strongholds – Montréal, Eilat and Graye – secure the control of the caravan routes between Syria and Egypt.[31]
  • Autumn Baldwin I hastens to Tyre (modern Lebanon) and begins the construction of a new fortress, known as Scandelion Castle, at the Ladder of Tyre, which completes the blockade of the town from the mainland.[32]
Europe
Wales
Africa

By topic

Art and Music
Religion

1117

By place

Europe
Seljuk Empire
Africa
Levant
Asia

By topic

Education
Technology

1118

By place

Byzantine Empire
Europe
British Isles
Eastern Europe
France
Germany
Italy
Scandinavia
Spain
East Asia
Caucasus
Western Asia
South Asia

1119

By place

Levant

Europe

England

By topic

Religion
Technology
  • Zhu Yu, a Chinese historian, publishes his book Pingzhou Table Talks, describing the earliest known use of bulkheads to provide separate hull compartments in ships. Zhu Yu's book is also the first to report the use of a magnetic compass for navigation at sea. (The first actual description, however, of the magnetic compass is by another Chinese writer Shen Kuo in his Dream Pool Essays, published in 1088.)

Significant people

Births

1110

1111

1112

1113

1114

1115

1116 (some dates approximate)

1117

1118

1119

1116 (some dates approximate)

Deaths

1110

1111

1112

1113

1114

1115

1117

1118

Pope Paschal II d. January 21, 1118
Baldwin I of Jerusalem d. April 2, 1118

1119

References

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