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  1. ro.wikipedia.org › wiki › 11691169 - Wikipedia

    1169 (MCLXIX) a fost un an obișnuit al calendarului iulian. Evenimente. 2 ianuarie: Regele Amalric I al Ierusalimului se retrage din Egipt.; 6 ianuarie: Pacea de la Montmirail: regii Henric al II-lea al Angliei și Ludovic al VII-lea al Franței încheie un tratat, prognozând căsătoria dintre copiii lor Richard (duce de Aquitania), respectiv Adele (contesă de Vexin); totodată ...

  2. 3 killed, several ships destroyed. 18 killed. The siege of Wexford took place in early May 1169 and was the first major clash of the Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland. The town was besieged by a combined force of Normans under Robert Fitz-Stephen and soldiers loyal to Diarmait mac Murchadha.

  3. Some Tamils captured from the war were brought to Sri Lanka to renovate the Ruwanwelisaya, Rameshvaram temple plundered by Sinhala army. The Pandyan Civil War [3] [4] from 1169 to 1177 [1] [4] was precipitated by rival claims of succession to the Pandyan throne. The Civil War began between Parakrama Pandyan and his nephew Kulasekhara Pandyan ...

  4. Code page 1169. Code page 1169 is an 8-bit character encoding, designed to cover several Asian languages that use the Cyrillic script which are not covered by the older Windows-1251 (which this code page is based on): Azerbaijani (in Russia; outside of Russia switched to Latin), Bashkir, Kazakh, Kyrgyz, Mongolian, Tajik, Tatar, Turkmen ...

  5. Burga de Stuteville. Eustace de Vesci (1169–1216) was an English lord of Alnwick Castle, and a Magna Carta surety. [1] He also held lands in Sprouston, Roxburghshire, Scotland as brother in-law to King Alexander II of Scotland. Eustace was a leader during the Barons' War in 1215 and was killed while undertaking a siege of Barnard Castle in 1216.

  6. Shirkuh. Saladin. A series of Crusader invasions of Egypt were undertaken by the Kingdom of Jerusalem from 1163 to 1169 to strengthen its position in the Levant by taking advantage of the weakness of the Fatimid Caliphate . The invasions began as part of a succession crisis in the caliphate, which began to crumble under the pressure of Muslim ...

  7. Hugh IX "le Brun" of Lusignan (1163/1168 – 5 November 1219) [1] was the grandson of Hugh VIII. His father, also Hugh (b. c. 1141), was the co-seigneur of Lusignan from 1164, marrying a woman named Orengarde before 1162 or about 1167 and dying in 1169. Hugh IX became seigneur of Lusignan in 1172, seigneur of Couhé and Chateau-Larcher in the ...

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