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1067 deaths

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Konstantinos X Doukas
Byzantine emperor
Emperor Yingzong of Song
5th Emperor of the Northern Song Dynasty
Baldwin V, Count of Flanders
Count of Flanders (1012-1067)
Sancha of León
Queen of León
Shaykh Tusi
Iranian scholar
Cai Xiang
Chinese calligrapher-architect (1012–1067)
Albert II of Namur
-1063
Otto I, Margrave of Meissen
Margrave of Meissen from 1062 to 1067
John Komnenos
Byzantine aristocrat and military leader, brother of Isaac I Komnenos
Emperor Yizong of Western Xia
emperor of the Western Xia Dynasty
Richard, Count of Évreux
Son of Robert II
Eric and Eric
Swedish kings
Geoffrey II of Provence
French noble
Robert de Turlande
French monk
Abu-l-Aswar Shavur I bin al-Fadl I
ruler of Dvin and Arran
Prohor of Pchinja
Bulgarian saint
Maurilius
Maurilius (–1067) was a Norman Archbishop of Rouen from 1055 to 1067.
Osulf II of Bamburgh
Anglo-Saxon Soldier & earl
Copsi
Copsi (or Copsig; ; died 1067) was a Northumbrian magnate in late Anglo-Saxon England. He was a supporter of Tostig, and was exiled along with him in 1065. Copsi soon fled to Orkney (then a part of Norway). The next year (1066), he joined Tostig at Sandwich, in Kent, with 17 ships. Copsi survived Tostig's defeat at Stamford Bridge, and when William the Conqueror prevailed at Hastings he travelled, in March 1067, to pay William homage at Barking (where William was staying while his tower was being constructed in London). In return, William made Copsi Earl of Northumbria and sent him back to Yor
Ibn Charaf
Zirid writer and poet
Salvador Gonzalez
castilian nobleman
Áed in Gai Bernaig
King of Connacht
Gervais de Château-du-Loir
Bishop of Le Mans and Archbishop of Reims