Category
page 11010s births

Gregory VII
Pope of the Catholic Church from 1073 to 1085
Benedict IX
Pope of the Catholic Church
Victor II
pope

Ramanuja
Ramanuja ('; Middle Tamil: Rāmāṉujam; Classical Sanskrit: Rāmānuja; 1077 – 1157, trad. date 1017-1137), also known as Ramanujacharya''', was an Indian Hindu philosopher, guru and social reformer. He is one of the most important exponents of the Sri Vaishnavism tradition in Hinduism. His philosophical foundations for devotional practice were influential in the Bhakti movement.

Harald III of Norway
King of Norway from 1046 to 1066
Harold Harefoot
King of England from 1035 to 1040

Harthacanute
Harthacnut (c. 1018 – 8 June 1042) was King of Denmark from 1035, and King of England from 1040 until his death in 1042. He was the last monarch of the North Sea Empire, an empire consisting of England and Denmark, and was also the last monarch of the House of Knýtlinga.

Robert Guiscard
Duke of Apulia and Calabria

Michael Psellos
11th-century Byzantine monk, writer and court official
Michael V Kalaphates
Byzantine emperor

Michael IV the Paphlagonian
Byzantine emperor

Ferdinand I of León and Castile
King of Castile, then León and Castile (c.1015-1065) (r. 1035-1037 then 1037-1065)

Béla I of Hungary
King of Hungary (1016-1063)

Peter, King of Hungary
King of Hungary (r. 1038–1041, 1044–1046)

Andrew I of Hungary
King of Hungary (1015-1060)

Sweyn II of Denmark
King of Denmark from 1047 to 1076

Yusuf Khass Hajib
Turkic poet

Baldwin V, Count of Flanders
Count of Flanders (1012-1067)

Bermudo III of León
King of León (c.1017–1037) (r.1028-1037)
García Sánchez III of Pamplona
King of Pamplona from 1034 to 1054
Sancha of León
Queen of León
Edward the Exile
son of King Edmund Ironside and of Ealdgyth
Floris I, Count of Holland
Dutch noble (1025-1061)
Eustace II, Count of Boulogne
Count of Boulogne from 1049 to 1087
Benno
bishop and saint
Svein Knutsson
Son of Cnut the Great, ruled as King of Norway
Gruffudd ap Llywelyn
Welsh monarch
Maria Dobroniega of Kiev
Polish queen (1012-1087)
Anno II, Archbishop of Cologne
Archbishop of Cologne from 1056 to 1075
Eleanor of Normandy
Countess consort of Flanders (c.1012–1071)
Herman IV, Duke of Swabia
Duke of Swabia
Ermengarde of Anjou, Duchess of Burgundy
Countess consort of Gâtinais and later Duchess consort of Burgundy
Alī ibn Ahmad al-Nasawī
Persian mathematician
John Komnenos
Byzantine aristocrat and military leader, brother of Isaac I Komnenos
Odo of Gascony
Frankish nobleman
Guaimar IV of Salerno
Italian prince

Levente
Levente (between 1010 and 1015 – 1047) was a member of the House of Árpád, a great-grandson of Taksony, Grand Prince of the Hungarians. He was expelled from Hungary in 1031 or 1032, and spent many years in Bohemia, Poland and the Kievan Rus'. He returned to Hungary, where a pagan uprising was developing around that time, in 1046. Levente remained a devout pagan, but did not hinder the election of his Christian brother, Andrew I as king.
Thimo the Brave, Count of Wettin
count of Wettin and Brehna

Otto II, Marquess of Montferrat
Italian noble

Otloh of St. Emmeram
German clergyman and writer

Roger de Beaumont
Anglo-Norman companion of William the Conqueror
Śrīpati
Śrīpati ( – 1066), also transliterated as Shri-pati, was an Indian astronomer, astrologer and mathematician. His major works include Dhīkotida-karana (1039), a work of twenty verses on solar and lunar eclipses; Dhruva-mānasa (written in 1056), a work of 105 verses on calculating planetary longitudes, eclipses and planetary transits; Siddhānta-śekhara a major work on astronomy in 19 chapters; and Gaṇita-tilaka, an incomplete arithmetical treatise in 125 verses based on a work by Shridhara.
Adalbero III of Luxembourg
Bishop of Metz (1047-1072)

Arialdo
Saint Arialdo (c. 1010 – June 27, 1066) is a Christian saint of the eleventh century. He was assassinated because of his efforts to reform the Milanese clergy.
Adalbero of Würzburg
Bishop of Würzburg
Edmund Ætheling
Son of King Edmund Ironside of England.
Abe no Yoritoki
samurai
Gebhard of Salzburg
Catholic archbishop of Salzburg
Siegfried I of Sponheim
Count of Sponheim

Ralph the Staller
Anglo-Norman politician
Yan Vyshatich
Russian knight
Cynan ab Iago
Prince of Kingdom of Gwynedd
Al-Bazdawi
'''Abu al-Hasan 'Ali ibn Muhammad al-Bazdawi () (c. 1010-1089 A.D.), known with the honorific title of Fakhr al-Islam' (the pride of Islam), was a leading Hanafi scholar in the principles of Islamic jurisprudence. He is author of the acclaimed Kanz al-Wusul ila Ma'refat al-Usul (), popularly known as Usul al-Bazdawi'', a seminal work in Hanafi Usul al-Fiqh.
Arnórr jarlaskáld
Icelandic skald
John V of Gaeta
Italian duke

Tunka Manin
ruler of the Ghana Empire gago to si tunka manin
Eberhard von Trier
Archbishop of Trier