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  1. The 14th century BC was the century that lasted from the year 1400 BC until 1301 BC. Events. 1350 – 1250 BC: the Bajío phase of the San Lorenzo site in Mexico; large public buildings are constructed. [1] Pastoral nomadism develops in the steppes of Central Asia; cattle are watched on horseback. [2] Middle East and Africa. The Near East c. 1400 BC.

    • Inquisition
    • Western Schism
    • Western Theology
    • Monasticism
    • Protestant Reformation Precursors
    • Crusade Aftermath
    • Serbian Church
    • Spread of Christianity
    • See Also
    • References

    King Philip IV of France created an inquisition for his suppression of the Knights Templar during the 14th century. King Ferdinand and Queen Isabella formed another in 1480, originally to deal with distrusted ex-Jewish and ex-Muslim converts. Over a 350-year period, this Spanish Inquisition executed between 3,000 and 4,000 people, representing arou...

    The Western Schism, or Papal Schism, was a prolonged period of crisis in Latin Christendom from 1378 to 1416, when there were two or more claimants to the See of Rome and there was conflict concerning the rightful holder of the papacy. The conflict was political, rather than doctrinal, in nature. To escape instability in Rome, Clement V in 1309 bec...

    Scholastic theology continued to develop as the 13th century gave way to the fourteenth, becoming ever more complex and subtle in its distinctions and arguments. There was a rise to dominance of the nominalist or voluntarist theologies of men like William of Ockham. The 14th century was also a time in which movements of widely varying character wor...

    Roman Catholic orders

    Many distinct monastic orders developed within Roman Catholicism and Anglicanism. 1. Bridgettines, founded c.1350 2. Hieronymites, founded in Spain in 1364, an eremiticcommunity formally known as the "Order of Saint Jerome"

    Protestant monasticism

    Monasticism in the Protestant tradition proceeds from John Wycliffe who organized the LollardPreacher Order (the "Poor Priests") to promote his reformation views.

    Unrest because of the Western Schism excited wars between princes, uprisings among the peasants, and widespread concern over corruption in the Church. A new nationalism also challenged the relatively internationalist medieval world. The first of a series of disruptive and new perspectives came from John Wycliffe at Oxford University, then from Jan ...

    The island of Ruad, three kilometers from the Syrian shore, was occupied by the Knights Templar but was ultimately lost to the Mamluks in the Fall of Ruad on September 26, 1302. The Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia, which was not a crusader state and was not Latin Christian but was closely associated with the crusader states and was ruled by the Latin C...

    The status of the Serbian Orthodox Church grew along with the expansion and heightened prestige of the Serbian kingdom. On April 16, 1346 (Easter), King Stefan Dušan of Serbia convoked a grand assembly at Skopje, attended by the Serbian Archbishop Joanikije II, Archbishop Nicholas I of Ohrid, Patriarch Simeon of Bulgaria and various religious leade...

    Lithuania

    Lithuania and Samogitia were ultimately Christianized from 1386 until 1417 by the initiative of the Grand Duke of Lithuania Jogaila and his cousin Vytautas.

    Works cited

    1. Ćirković, Sima (2004). The Serbs. Malden: Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9781405142915. 2. Fine, John Van Antwerp Jr. (1994) [1987]. The Late Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Late Twelfth Century to the Ottoman Conquest. Ann Arbor, Michigan: University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0472082604. 3. Ostrogorsky, George (1956). History of the Byzantine State. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. 4. Pavlowitch, Stevan K. (2002). Serbia: The History behind the Name. London: Hurst & Company. ISBN 978185065...

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  3. W. 14th-century BC works ‎ (2 C, 16 P) Pages in category "14th century BC" The following 16 pages are in this category, out of 16 total. This list may not reflect recent changes . 14th century BC. 1300s BC (decade) 1310s BC. 1320s BC. 1330s BC. 1340s BC.

  4. Apr 9, 2024 · Defying centuries of traditional worship of the Egyptian pantheon, Egyptian Pharaoh Akhenaten decreed during his reign in the mid-14th century B.C.E. that his subjects were to worship only one god: the sun-disk Aten. Akhenaten is sometimes called the world’s first monotheist.

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