13th century in literature GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21

      This article contains information about the literary events and publications of the 13th century.


      Events



      1202 – Leonardo Fibonacci writes Liber Abaci, about the modus Indorum, the Hindu–Arabic numeral system, including the use of zero; it is the first major work in Europe to move away from the use of Roman numerals.
      1204 – The Imperial Library of Constantinople is destroyed by Christian knights of the Fourth Crusade and its contents burned or sold.
      1211 – Hélinand of Froidmont begins compiling his Chronicon.
      1215 – Bhiksu Ananda of Kapitanagar completes writing the Buddhist book Arya Astasahasrika Prajnaparamita (Sutra), in gold ink in Ranjana script.
      1216 – Roger of Wendover, English monk and chronicler, at St Albans Abbey, begins to cover contemporary events, in his continuation of the chronicle Flores Historiarum.
      1217 – Alexander Neckam, English scholar and theologian, writes De naturis rerum ("On the Nature of Things"), a scientific encyclopedia.
      1220 – A new shrine built at Canterbury Cathedral in England to house the remains of St Thomas Becket quickly becomes one of Europe's major places of pilgrimage, and the destination of the fictional pilgrims in Geoffrey Chaucer's set of narrative poems The Canterbury Tales, written about 170 years later.
      1226: By August – The biographical poem L'histoire de Guillaume le Maréchal, commissioned to commemorate William Marshal, 1st Earl of Pembroke (died 1219), a rare example at this time of a life of a lay person, is completed, probably by a Tourangeau layman called John in the southern Welsh Marches.
      1240 – Albert of Stade joins the Franciscan order and begins his chronicle.
      1249: September 27 – Chronicler Guillaume de Puylaurens is present at the death of Raymond VII of Toulouse.
      1251 – The carving is completed of the Tripitaka Koreana, a collection of Buddhist scriptures recorded on some 81,000 wooden blocks, thought to have been started in 1236.
      1258: February 13 – The House of Wisdom in Baghdad is destroyed by forces of the Mongol Empire after the Siege of Baghdad. The waters of the Tigris are said to have run black with ink from the huge quantities of books flung into it, and red from the blood of the philosophers and scientists killed.
      1274: May 1 – In Florence, the nine-year-old Dante Alighieri first sees the eight-year-old Beatrice, his lifelong muse.
      1276 – Merton College, Oxford, is first recorded as having a collection of books, making its Library the world's oldest in continuous daily use. During the first century of its existence the books are probably kept in a chest.
      1283 – Ram Khamhaeng, ruler of the Sukhothai Kingdom, creates the Thai alphabet (อักษรไทย), according to tradition.
      1289 – Library of the Collège de Sorbonne, earliest predecessor of the Bibliothèque de la Sorbonne, is founded in Paris.
      1298–1299 – Marco Polo dictates his Travels to Rustichello da Pisa while in prison in Genoa, according to tradition.
      1300, Easter – The events of Dante's Divine Comedy take place.


      New works


      13th century
      Huon of Bordeaux
      Sagas of Icelanders (Íslendingasögur)
      Beatrice of Nazareth – Seven Ways of Holy Love, the earliest prose work in Dutch
      Conrad of Saxony – Speculum Beatæ Mariæ Virginis
      Śivadāsa – "The five and twenty tales of the genie" (version of the Baital Pachisi)
      Zhou Mi – Miscellaneous observations from the year of Guixin (癸辛雜識)
      c. 1200
      Layamon – Brut
      Nibelungenlied
      Early 13th century
      Ancrene Wisse
      Færeyinga saga
      Farid al-Din Attar – Mantiqu 't-Tayr (The Conference of the Birds)
      Codex Gigas
      Le Conte de Poitiers
      Gautier de Coincy – Les miracles de Nostre-Dame
      Anonymus (notary of Béla III) – Gesta Hungarorum
      Guido delle Colonne – Historia destructionis Troiae
      Hervarar saga ok Heiðreks (The Saga of Hervar and Heidrek)
      Gerbert de Montreuil – Le Roman de la Violette
      Raghavanka – Harishchandra Kavya
      Jean Renart – Guillaume de Dole
      Roi Flore et la belle Jeanne
      Wolfram von Eschenbach – Parzival
      c. 1203 – Hartmann von Aue – Iwein
      1205 – Lancelot-Grail
      1205–1234 – Estoire d'Eracles (Old French translation of William of Tyre's Historia)
      c. 1208 – Saxo Grammaticus – Gesta Danorum
      c. 1210
      Herbers – Li romans de Dolopathos (translation of Seven Wise Masters)
      Raimon Vidal de Bezaudun – Razós de trobar
      Gottfried von Strassburg – Tristan
      1210–1225 – Sa'ad al-Din Varavini – Marzban-nama (مرزبان‌نامه)
      1212 – Kamo no Chōmei (鴨 長明) – Hōjōki (方丈記, Account of a Ten-Foot-Square Hut)
      1214 – Gervase of Tilbury – Otia Imperialia
      c. 1215
      Bertrand de Bar-sur-Aube – Girard de Vienne
      Rumi – Diwan-e Shams-e Tabrizi (masnavi in Persian)
      c. 1217–1235 – Andayya – Kabbigara Kava (Poets' Defender)
      c. 1217–1263 – Strengleikar, Old Norse translation of the Lais of Marie de France, perhaps (partly) by Brother Robert
      1220 – Ibn Hammad – Akhbar muluk bani Ubayd
      c. 1220s – Snorri Sturlusson – Prose Edda
      c. 1225
      Francis of Assisi – Laudes creaturarum or Cantico delle creature (Praise of God's creation), the oldest known Italian poetry
      King Horn, the oldest known English verse romance
      1225 or 1226 – L'Histoire de Guillaume le Marechal (early example of a political biography, in Norman French)
      1227 – Brother Robert – Tristrams saga ok Ísöndar, an Old Norse translation of the Tristan and Iseult legend
      c. 1227 – Henry of Latvia – Livonian Chronicle of Henry
      c. 1230
      La Mort le roi Artu, French prose romance
      Guillaume de Lorris – First section of Romance of the Rose
      Johannes de Sacrobosco – De sphaera mundi
      Snorri Sturlusson – Heimskringla
      c. 1230s – Post-Vulgate Cycle
      Mainly before 1235 – Henry de Bracton – De Legibus et Consuetudinibus Angliae (The Laws and Customs of England)
      c. 1240
      Bartholomeus Anglicus – De proprietatibus rerum
      Egil's Saga
      Johannes de Garlandia – De Mensurabili Musica
      Rudolf von Ems – Alexanderroman
      c. 1240–1250 – Roger Bacon – Summa Grammatica
      mid-13th century
      Black Book of Carmarthen completed
      Doön de Mayence
      Franco of Cologne – Ars cantus mensurabilis
      Jean de Mailly – Chronica universalis Mettensis
      Old incidents in the Xuanhe period of the great Song Dynasty (大宋宣和遺事)
      c. 1250 – Willem die Madoc maecte – Van den vos Reynaerde
      1250s – Stephen of Bourbon – De septem donis Spiritus Sancti
      c. 1250–1266 – Poema de Fernán González
      c. 1250–1282 – Mechthild of Magdeburg – Das fließende Licht der Gottheit (The Flowing Light of Divinity; originally composed in Middle Low German)
      1252
      Calyla e Dymna, translation of the Panchatantra into Castilian
      Jikkunshō
      After 1255 – Epic of Sundiata, in Mandinka oral tradition
      1258–1273 – Rumi – Masnavi
      1259 – Bonaventure – Itinerarium Mentis ad Deum (Journey of the Mind to God)
      c. 1259–1265 – Thomas Aquinas – Summa contra Gentiles
      c. 1259–1266 – Jacobus de Voragine – Golden Legend (Legenda sanctorum)
      completed 1260 – Minhaj-i-Siraj – Tabaqat-i Nasiri
      c. 1260
      Le Récit d'un ménestrel de Reims
      Sa'di – Gulistan, Bustan poets and texts in Persian
      1263 – Bonaventure – Life of St. Francis of Assisi
      c. 1263 – Jacob van Maerlant – Der Naturen Bloeme
      c. 1264 – Jacob van Maerlant – De Spieghel Historiael
      1265
      Book of Aneirin (written or copied at about this date)
      Shokukokin Wakashū (続古今和歌集, Collection of Ancient and Modern Times Continued, completed)
      c. 1268–1285 – Jean de Meun – Second section of Romance of the Rose
      c. 1270
      Ibn al-Nafis – Theologus Autodidactus
      John of Capua – Directorium Vitae Humanae, translation of the Panchatantra
      Poetic Edda written in Codex Regius, including Hávamál and Völwpá
      c. 1270–1278 – Witelo – Perspectiva
      1274
      Joseph ben Abraham Gikatilla – Ginnat Egoz (Garden of Nuts)
      Bonvesin da la Riva – Libro de le tre scritture (Negra, Rubra, Aurea; Western Lombard)
      late 13th century
      Amir Khusrow – The Tale of the Four Dervishes (Persian: قصه چهار درویش, Ghesseh-ye Chahār Darvīsh)
      Njáls saga
      c. 1280
      Bernard of Besse – Liber de Laudibus Beati Francisci
      Heinrich der Vogler – Dietrichs Flucht
      c. 1280s
      Havelok the Dane
      The Owl and the Nightingale
      'Anonymous IV' – Concerning the Measurement of Polyphonic Song
      1283
      Ramon Llull – Blanquerna
      Mujū – Shasekishū
      1288 – Bonvesin da la Riva – De magnalibus urbis Mediolani (On the Marvels of Milan)
      1288–1289 – Amir Khusrow – Qiran-us-Sa’dain (Meeting of the Two Auspicious Stars – masnavi)
      c. 1290s – "Sir Patrick Spens" (Scottish ballad)
      1290–1291
      Dnyaneshwar – Dnyaneshwari
      Amir Khusrow – Miftah-ul-Futooh (Key to the Victories – masnavi)
      1293 – Dante Alighieri – La Vita Nuova
      1294 – Amir Khusrow – Ghurratul-Kamal (diwan)
      c. 1295 – Mathieu of Boulogne – Liber lamentationum Matheoluli (Book of the Lamentations of Matheolus)
      1298
      Amir Khusrow – Khamsa-e-Nizami
      Gertrude the Great (begins) – Legatus Memorialis Abundantiae Divinae Pietatis (The Herald of Divine Love)
      1299 – Rustichello da Pisa – The Travels of Marco Polo
      c. 1300
      Cursor Mundi
      Gesta Romanorum
      The Interlude of the Student and the Girl (Interludium de clerico et puella)


      New drama


      The Orphan of Zhao (趙氏孤兒 Zhaoshi guer)


      Births


      c. 1200 – Matthew Paris, English chronicler and monk (died 1259)
      1200 – Rudolf von Ems, German nobleman, knight and poet (d. 1254)
      1205 – Tikkana, Telugu poet (died 1288)
      1207: September 9 – Rumi, Persian poet (died 1273)
      c. 1210 – Henry de Bracton, English cleric and jurist (died c. 1268)
      c. 1212 – Ibn Sahl of Seville, poet (died 1251)
      1214 – Sturla Þórðarson, Icelandic writer of sagas and politician (died 1284)
      1225: January 28 – Thomas Aquinas, Italian philosopher and theologian (died 1274)
      c. 1230–1240 – Jacob van Maerlant, Flemish poet and writer in Middle Dutch (died c. 1288–1300)
      1240 or 1241 – Mechtilde, German religious writer and saint (died 1298)
      1248 – Angela of Foligno Italian mystic and saint (died 1309)
      1265 – Dante Alighieri, Italian poet (died 1321)
      1266 (probable) – Duns Scotus, Scottish philosopher and theologian (died 1308)
      1275 – Dnyaneshwar, Maharashtrian sant and writer (died 1296)
      1279 – Muktabai, Maharashtrian sant and Abhang poet (died 1297)
      c. 1280 – Ranulf Higden, English chronicler and Benedictine monk (died 1364)
      1283 (approximate)
      Juan Ruiz, Archpriest of Hita, Castilian poet (died c. 1350)
      Yoshida Kenkō (吉田 兼好), Japanese author and Buddhist monk (died c. 1350)
      1287: January 24 – Richard de Bury, English bishop and bibliophile (died 1345)
      1293 or 1294 – John of Ruysbroeck (Jan van Ruysbroeck), Flemish mystic (died 1381)
      Unknown year – Thomas the Rhymer, Scottish laird and prophet


      Deaths


      Unknown – Palkuriki Somanatha, Telugu, Kannada and Sanskrit poet
      1209
      Nizami Ganjavi, Seljuk Empire Persian romantic epic poet (born c. 1141)
      December 29 – Lu You, Chinese poet (born 1125)
      c. 1210 – Gottfried von Strassburg, German writer
      1212 – Adam of Dryburgh, Anglo-Scots theologian (born c. 1140)
      1223 – Gerald of Wales, Cambro-Norman churchman and topographer (born c. 1146)
      1228 (probable) – Gervase of Tilbury, English lawyer, statesman and writer (born c. 1150)
      1241: September 23 – Snorri Sturluson, Icelandic historian, poet, and politician (born 1179)
      1241: September 26 – Fujiwara no Teika (藤原定家), Japanese waka poet, calligrapher, novelist, and scholar (born 1162)
      1251
      Ibn Sahl of Seville, poet (born c. 1212)
      (probable) – Albertanus of Brescia, Latin prose writer (born c. 1195)
      1252 (probable) – Alberic of Trois-Fontaines, Cistercian chronicler
      1253: October 9 – Robert Grosseteste, English churchman and scholar (born c. 1175)
      1259: June – Matthew Paris, English chronicler and monk (born c. 1200)
      1268 – Henry de Bracton, English writer and jurist (born c. 1210)
      1273: December 17 – Rumi, Persian poet (born 1207)
      1274
      March 7 – Thomas Aquinas, Italian philosopher and theologian (born 1225)
      July 12 – Bonaventure, philosopher and theologian
      1285 – Rutebeuf, French trouvère (probable; born c. 1245)
      1287: August 31 – Konrad von Würzburg, German poet
      1294
      Roger Bacon, English scholar (born c. 1214)
      Guittone d'Arezzo, Tuscan poet (born c. 1235)
      1298: July 13 or 16: Jacobus de Voragine, archbishop of Genoa and chronicler (born c. 1230)


      See also


      13th century in poetry
      12th century in literature
      14th century in literature
      List of years in literature


      References

    Kata Kunci Pencarian:

    13th century in literature13th century english literature13th century icelandic literature13th century vernacular literature such as quest of the holy grail sought to13th century french literature
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