1379
Calendar year
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Year 1379 (MCCCLXXIX) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Julian calendar.
Events
JanuaryâDecember
- May 29 â John I succeeds his father, Henry II, as King of Castile and King of León.[1]
- June 30 â New College, Oxford, is founded in England by William of Wykeham, Bishop of Winchester.[2]
- July 1 â Forces of the Republic of Venice and Ottoman Turks, having invaded Constantinople, restore John V Palaiologos as Byzantine co-emperor. Andronikos IV Palaiologos is allowed to remain as co-emperor, but is confined to the city of Silivri for the remainder of his life.[3]
- September 9 â The Treaty of Neuberg is signed, splitting the Austrian Habsburg lands between brothers Albert III and Leopold III. Albert III retains the title of Duke of Austria.[4]
Date unknown
- Bairam Khawaja establishes the independent principality of the Kara Koyunlu (Turkomans of the Black Sheep Empire), in modern-day Armenia.
- Dmitry Donskoy of Moscow raids Estonia.
- In the Hundred Years' War, the French lose control of most of Brittany to the English.[5]
- Wisbech Grammar School is founded in England.[6]
- Timur conquers the Sufid Dynasty of Khwarazm.[7]
Births
- October 4 â King Henry III of Castile (d. 1406)
- date unknown
- Jerome of Prague, Hussite (d. 1416)
- Empress Zhang (Hongxi) of China (d. 1442)
Deaths
- February 18 â Albert II of Mecklenburg (b. c.â1318)
- May 29 â King Henry II of Castile (b. 1333)[8]
- November 15 â Otto V, Duke of Bavaria (b. 1346)
- December 16 â John Fitzalan, Marshal of England (drowned)
- date unknown â Aqsara'i, Persian physician