Category
page 11047 deaths

Clement II
Head of the Catholic Church from 1046 to 1047

Magnus the Good
King of Norway and Denmark
Rodulfus Glaber
French historian
Henry VII, Duke of Bavaria
count of Luxembourg (as Henry II) from 1026 and duke of Bavaria from 1042 until his death

Otto II, Duke of Swabia
Count Palatine of Lotharingia and Duke of Swabia

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.
Stephen II of Troyes
French count
Poppo
Archbishop of Trier from 1016 to 1047
Raymond III of Pallars Jussà
Count of Pallars Jussa
Miecław
Miecław (; 10th/11th century – 1047) was a cup-bearer of king Mieszko II Lambert, who in c. 1038 had proclaimed independence of the state that he ruled, from the Duchy of Poland, beginning the rebellion that lasted until his death in 1047.
Grimkjell
Grimketel (died 1047) was an English clergyman who went to Norway as a missionary and was partly responsible for the conversion of Norway to Christianity. He initiated the beatification of Saint Olaf. On his return to England he became Bishop of Selsey and also for a time Bishop of Elmham. He was accused, by some, of being guilty of simony.
Nripa Kama II
King of the Hoysala Empire