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1336 ( MCCCXXXVI) fue un año bisiesto comenzado en lunes del calendario juliano . Acontecimientos. Coronación de Pedro IV el Ceremonioso, rey de Aragón. Subió al trono tras la defunción de su padre, Alfonso IV el Benigno. Batalla de Villanueva de Barcarrota. El ejército portugués es derrotado por las tropas del reino de Castilla.
Year 1336 ( MCCCXXXVI) was a leap year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar . Events. February 25. Rather than be taken captive by the Teutonic Knights, 4,000 defenders of Pilėnai, Lithuania commit mass suicide.
1337x is an online website that provides a directory of torrent files and magnet links used for peer-to-peer file sharing through the BitTorrent protocol. [1] . According to the TorrentFreak news blog, 1337x is the second-most popular torrent website as of 2023. [2] History.
- 2007; 16 years ago
- Torrent index, magnet links provider
- Optional
1336 a. C.: en Egipto nace Tutankamón. 1334 a. C.: en Egipto muere Ajnatón. 1334-1333 a. C.: Tutanjatón se convierte en faraón y se casa con Anjesenpaatón, hija de Ajenatón y Nefertiti. 1331 a. C.: el faraón Tut-anj-Atón es renombrado Tut-anj-Amón y abandona Ajetatón, retornando la capital a Tebas.
- Background
- Internal Conflicts: 1350s
- Rise of The Shugo Lords
- Consolidation of Power: 1360–1370
- Centralization of Power: 1379–1399
- Administration
- Legacy
- Southern Court Emperors
- Northern Court Emperors
- Footnotes
The main conflicts that contributed to the outbreak of the civil war between the courts were the growing conflict between the Hōjō clan and other warrior groups in the wake of the Mongol invasions of Japanof 1274 and 1281 and the failure of the Kenmu Restoration, which triggered the struggle between the supporters of the imperial loyalists and supp...
Takauji was nominally shōgun but, having proved not to be up to the task of ruling the country, for more than ten years Ashikaga Tadayoshi governed in his stead. Relations soured between the brothers during the Kannō disturbance. This started when Takauji made Kō no Moronao his shitsuji (deputy), which led Tadayoshi to unsuccessfully have him assas...
The shōgun Ashikaga Takauji appointed branch family members as shugo lords in the different provinces of western and central Japan. Ashikaga branch families appointed to shugo posts included the Hosokawa, Yamana, Imagawa, Hatakeyama, Niki, Kira, Shiba, Ishido, and the Isshiki families. While some warriors were appointed to shugo posts. Successful g...
In 1358 after the death of Takauji, the shogunate passed to his son Yoshiakira. Under his leadership, and that of the kanrei Hosokawa Yoriyuki's, the regime succeeded in integrating the shugo lords in the 1360s and 1370s. Shugo branch families of the Ashikaga were now employed within the government bureaucracy. This happened due to the emergence of...
One area of resistance after another fell to the Muromachi regime during the crucial decade of the 1360s. Powerful shugo lords like the Ouchi and the Yamana submitted themselves as semi-independent lords; Southern Court resistance became more futile as time passed. Militarily the regime was able to call upon the services of the shugo lords to attac...
Serious fighting between the two sides raged on for nearly 30 years before Ashikaga Takauji and his supporters gained the upper hand. He relied on three main policies to accomplish the task of assembling power: 1. Strengthening vassalage ties to samurai housemen (gokenin); 2. The use of shugo lords as bakufugovernors and vassals in the provinces; 3...
Since the 19th century the Emperors of the Southern Imperial Court have been considered the legitimate Emperors of Japan. Factors contributing to their legitimacy were the Southern Court's control of the Japanese imperial regalia, and Kitabatake Chikafusa's work Jinnō Shōtōki, which legitimized the South's imperial court despite their defeat. The c...
Northern Ashikaga Pretender 1: Emperor Kōgon(光嚴天皇, 1313–1364, r. 1331–1333)Northern Ashikaga Pretender 2: Emperor Kōmyō(光明天皇, 1322–1380, r. 1336–1348) *Northern Ashikaga Pretender 3: Emperor Sukō(崇光天皇, 1334–1398, r. 1348–1351)Interregnum, November 26, 1351 until September 25, 1352a.Shugo (守護?) was a title, commonly translated as "Governor", given to certain officials in feudal Japan. They were each appointed by the shōgun to oversee one or more of the provinces of Japan.b.^ The verb "to enfeoff" is defined by the Random House Dictionary of the English Languageas:"1) to invest with a freehold estate in land" and 2) "to give as a fief".c.^ The story of Tadayoshi's alleged plot to assassinate Moronao is part of the Taiheiki.Temas, acontecimientos y noticias relacionados con el año 1336. Wikimedia Commons alberga una categoría multimedia sobre el año 1336. Wikisource contiene obras originales sobre el año 1336.
Elizabeth of Aragon (Elisabet in Catalan, Isabel in Aragonese, Portuguese and Spanish; 1271 – 4 July 1336), more commonly known as Elizabeth of Portugal, was queen consort of Portugal who is venerated as a saint in the Roman Catholic Church.