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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › 13171317 - Wikipedia

    January 9 – The 23-year-old Philip the Tall, younger brother of the late King Louis X of France, is hastily crowned King of France, as King Philip V, at Rheims. The only son of King Louis X had been born posthumously, but died after four days. Supporters of King Louis felt that his eldest daughter, Joan II of Navarre, should have been crowned ...

  2. 1317 fue un año común comenzado en sábado del calendario juliano. Acontecimientos. 6 de enero - Felipe de Poitiers es coronado rey de Francia, con el nombre de Felipe V, si bien había sido regente desde la muerte de su hermano y rey de facto desde la muerte de su sobrino, en noviembre del año anterior. Fallecimientos

  3. The Great Famine of 1315–1317 (occasionally dated 1315–1322) was the first of a series of large-scale crises that struck parts of Europe early in the 14th century. Most of Europe (extending east to Poland and south to the Alps) was affected.

  4. Inductorless (Charge Pump) DC/DC Converters. Explore Inductorless (Charge Pump) DC/DC Converters. The AD1317 is an ultrahigh speed window comparator with a latch. It uses a high speed monolithic process to provide high dc accuracy without sacrificing input voltage range. The AD1317 guarantees a 2.

  5. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › 13151315 - Wikipedia

    August 19 – King Louis X of France, nicknamed "Louis the Quarrelsome", marries the 22-year-old Clementia of Hungary ,daughter of Charles Martel of Anjou (titular king of Hungary ). He and his second wife are five days later crowned at Reims. Louis becomes the 12th Capetian ruler of France.

  6. Este conflicto llevó a una seria división dentro de la orden franciscana. Por lo que Juan XXII el 7 de octubre de 1317, por medio de la bula papal Quorumdam exigit ordenó que los así llamados espirituales, que habían iniciado formas de vida eremítica, se sometieran a la obediencia de los superiores de su comunidad.

  7. 354 European Famine of 1315, 1316, 1317. Saints' Day five pounds, at St Andrew's (November 30) seven, at Christmas Eve ten, at Easter, 1316, twelve, and at the Feast of St John the Baptist (June 24) sixteen.1 Thus in the space of only seven months after the first of November, 1315, the price of wheat, which was already very high, rose three ...