1190s - Wikipedia 1190s The 1190s was a decade of the Julian Calendar which began on January 1, 1190, and ended on December 31, 1199. Contents 1 Events 1.1 1190 1.2 1191 1.3 1192 1.4 1193 1.5 1194 1.6 1195 1.7 1196 1.8 1197 1.9 1198 1.10 1199 2 Significant people 3 Births 4 Deaths 5 References Events 1190 By place [ edit] Byzantine Empire [ edit]
May 27, 1199 Friday – John Lackland ( 1167 – 1216) became King of England upon the death of his older brother Richard the Lion Hearted. His coronation took place in Westminster Abbey. Lackland was so called, because his inheritance of the Angevin Empire did not have land for him; he was the youngest son of Henry II, so this event could not happen..
The 1190s BC is a decade which lasted from 1199 BC to 1190 BC. Events and trends [ edit] 1197 BC —The beginning of the first period ( 1197 BC – 982 BC) according to Shao Yong 's concept of the I Ching and history. 1194 BC —The beginning of the legendary Trojan War.
1140s; 1150s; 1160s; 1170s; 1180s; 1190s; 1200s; 1210s; 1220s; 1230s; 1240s; Subcategories. This category has the following 23 subcategories, out of 23 total.
From c. 1190 – ' Cliff Palace ' in Mesa Verde (modern-day Colorado) constructed by Ancestral Puebloans of the Pueblo III Era. [1] 1191 – St. Gereon's Basilica in Cologne, Holy Roman Empire, consecrated. 1191 – Preah Khan Baray built in Angkor, Khmer Empire. 1192 – Torpo Stave Church, Norway, built. 1192 – Rebuilding of Lincoln Cathedral begun. [2]
18 March – massacre of 57 Jews at Bury St. Edmunds. 4 July – Kings Richard I of England and Philip II of France set out from France to join the Third Crusade. [2] Summer – William Longchamp arrests his co-regent Hugh de Puiset and rules alone as Lord Chancellor, Justiciar, and papal legate. [1]
1192: Kaikei sculpts Maitreya in Sanbō-in, an Important Cultural Property of Japan. 1194: Kaikei sculpts Vairocana in Ishiyama-dera, an Important Cultural Property of Japan. 1195: Kaikei sculpts Amitābha Triad in Jōdo-ji, a National Treasure of Japan. 1196: Jōkei sculpts Yuima in Kōfuku-ji. 1196: Unknown Kei school artist sculpts Monju ...