1250s in England
Appearance
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Events from the 1250s in England.
Incumbents
Monarch - Henry III
Events
- 1250
- 1 October - A storm damages the port of Winchelsea.[1]
- Gascons revolt against English governor Simon de Montfort, 6th Earl of Leicester.[2]
- First written reference to Summer is icumen in, one of the oldest known English song lyrics.[3]
- 1251
- May - de Montfort suppresses the revolt in Gascony.[2]
- 26 December - King Alexander III of Scotland marries Margaret, daughter of King Henry III of England, precipitating a power struggle between the two monarchs.[3]
- 1252
- 14 January - A storm further damages the port of Winchelsea.[1]
- September - Henry receives a gift of a polar bear from Norway, which he allows to swim in the Thames.[3]
- Gascon leaders travel to England to put their case against Simon de Montfort, who eventually resigns.[3]
- 1253
- 6 August - Expedition to Gascony to repel a rumoured invasion from Castile.[3]
- de Montfort returns to England where he allies himself with barons who oppose Henry III.[2]
- The Domus Conversorum established in London for Jewish converts to Christianity.
- 1254
- 11 February - Parliament is summoned, for the first time including elected representatives; two knights from each shire.[3]
- 1 April - Treaty of Toledo ensures peace between England and Castile.[3]
- 26 April - A Parliament assembles which refuses to grant a subsidy to Henry III.[2]
- 1 November - Edward Plantagenet (the future Edward I of England, aged 15) marries Eleanor of Castile (aged c. 13) at the Abbey of Santa María la Real de Las Huelgas, Burgos. His father Henry III has demanded the marriage in exchange for ending the war with her brother Alfonso X of Castile.
- 1255
- Llewelyn the Last becomes sole ruler of northern Wales.[3]
- August - Henry III has his supporters put in control of the Scottish regency council.[3]
- In an example of blood libel, nineteen Jews of Lincoln are executed on suspicion of being involved in a boy's murder.[3]
- King Louis IX of France gifts Henry with an elephant, which he keeps in the Tower of London.[3]
- Approximate date - Benedictine cell established on the Farne Islands.
- 1256
- Earliest recorded endowment of Abingdon School.[4]
- 1257
- 13 January - Richard, 1st Earl of Cornwall elected King of the Romans.[2]
- August - A gold penny is introduced, but swiftly withdrawn when it proves too valuable to use.[3]
- 1258
- 2 May - Simon de Montfort, together with six other barons, forces King Henry III to accept legal reforms.[2]
- 12 June - Provisions of Oxford enacted, creating an elected Council of barons to advise the King.[3]
- 27 October–4 November - The Oxford Parliament assembles, with Peter de Montfort presiding.
- Irish, assisted by Scottish gallowglasses, halt the English advance westward through Ireland.[3]
- Consecration of the newly rebuilt Salisbury Cathedral.[3]
- 1259
- 1 August - Henry III makes peace with Llywelyn the Last, now claiming the title "Prince of Wales".[2]
- 13 October - The Provisions of Westminster enacted, reforming the legal system.[2]
- 4 December - By the Treaty of Paris, Henry III renounces his claim to Normandy to Louis IX of France.[2]
Births
- 1252
- Eleanor de Montfort, princess of Wales (died 1282)
Deaths
- 1250
- 8 February - William II Longespee, crusader (born c. 1212)
- 1253
- 9 October - Robert Grosseteste, statesman and theologian (born c. 1175)
- Saint Richard of Chichester (born 1197)
- 1254
- William de Ferrers, 5th Earl of Derby (born 1193)
- Silvester de Everdon, bishop (year of birth unknown)
- William of Nottingham I, Franciscan Provincial superior
- 1255
- 1 May - Walter de Gray, prelate and statesman (year of birth unknown)
- Little Saint Hugh of Lincoln (born 1247)
- 1256
- William of Kilkenny, Lord Chancellor (year of birth unknown)
- Johannes de Sacrobosco, scholar (born c. 1195)
- 1259
- 18 November - Adam Marsh, scholar and theologian (born c. 1200)
- Matthew Paris, chronicler (born c. 1200)
References
- ^ a b Simons, Paul (2008). Since Records Began. London: Collins. pp. 135–6. ISBN 978-0-00-728463-4.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 141–144. ISBN 0-304-35730-8.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Palmer, Alan; Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 84–86. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2.
- ^ "Abbey arms". Abingdon School. Retrieved 2011-11-30.