Category
page 11130 deaths
Honorius II
Pope from 1124 to 1130

Sigurd the Crusader
King of Norway from 1103 to 1130

Ibn Tumart
Amazigh religious scholar, teacher and politician
Isidore the Laborer
Spanish farmer and saint

Bohemond II of Antioch
Prince of Antioch

Theresa of León
Countess-Queen of Portugal
Al-Amir bi-Ahkam Allah
Fatimid caliph and imam (1096–1130)
Margaret Fredkulla
Medieval Scandinavian queen
Li Tang
Chinese painter (1050–1130)
Aenor de Châtellerault
Mother of Eleanor of Aquitaine
Domenico Michiel
Doge of Venise
Maud, Countess of Huntingdon
Queen of Scotland from 1124 to c. 1130
Herman II, Margrave of Baden
German noble
Baldric of Dol
Breton bishop and writer
Abd-al-Màlik ibn Àhmad Imad-ad-Dawla
ruler of Taifa Zaragoza (1110)
Clementia of Aquitaine
Countess consort of Luxembourg
Adolf I of Holstein
Count of Holstein
Thomas, Lord of Coucy
Christian crusader
Tumbinai Khan
Mongolian khan
Hugh II, Count of Saint-Pol
crusader
Brahmadeva
Brahmadeva (c. 1060–1130) was an Indian mathematician. He was the author of Karanaprakasa, which is a commentary on Aryabhata's Aryabhatiya. Its contents deal partly with trigonometry and its applications to astronomy.
Udo IV, Margrave of the Nordmark
Margrave of the Nordmark
Empress Xiansu
Song dynasty empress
Berardo dei Marsi
Roman Catholic Italian cardinal

Torchitorio II of Cagliari
Sardinian ruler
Alam al-Malika
politician
Stephen of La Ferté
Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem
Pedro González de Lara
Kingdom of Castile magnate Peerage person ID=113323
Óengus of Moray
King of Moray
Hafliði Másson
Icelandic goði and chieftain
Vidyakara
Vidyakara (c. 1050–1130) was a Buddhist scholar and poetry anthologist, noted for the Sanskrit poetry compilation Subhashita-ratna-kosha (IAST: Subhāṣitaratnakoṣa), which has been considered the "most celebrated" anthology of Sanskrit verse. Most of the verses, where authorship is noted, range over the two centuries prior to compilation; hence it may be thought of as a compilation of "modern verse" for the period.
Ramapala
Ramapala (r. 1077–1130 CE) was the successor to the Pala king Shurapala II in the Bengal region of the Indian subcontinent, and fifteenth ruler of the Pala line.