Category
page 11180s births
Francis of Assisi
Italian Catholic saint, friar, deacon and preacher and founder of the Franciscan Order (1181/2–1226)

Ögedei Khan
Khan of the Mongol Empire (c.1186-1241) (r. 1229-1241)

Chagatai Khan
second son of Genghis Khan and Börte (1183–1242)

Jochi
Jochi (; ), also spelled Jüchi, was a prince of the early Mongol Empire. His life was marked by controversy over the circumstances of his birth and culminated in his estrangement from his family. He was nevertheless a prominent military commander and the progenitor of the family who ruled over the khanate of the Golden Horde.

Alexios IV Angelos
Byzantine emperor; (1192-1204)

Giovanni da Pian del Carpine
Roman Catholic archbishop and traveller (1182–1252)

Isabella of Angoulême
Queen consort of England as the second wife of King John

Alexios I of Trebizond
Emperor of Trebizond
Haakon III of Norway
King of Norway

Konrad I of Masovia
High Duke of Poland (1187-1247)

Thomas of Celano
Italian religious, poet and writer

Urraca of Castile
Queen of Portugal
Eric X of Sweden
King of Sweden (1180-1216)

Leszek I the White
High Duke of Poland (1186-1227)
Irene Angelina
Byzantine queen (1180-1208)

Alexander of Hales
English Franciscan theologian and philosopher (c.1185-1245)
William III of Sicily
King of Sicily
Theodore Komnenos Doukas
Emperor of Thessalonica
Gertrude of Merania
Queen consort of Hungary (*1185-†1213)
Dagmar of Bohemia
Queen of Denmark from 1205 to 1212
Henry of Latvia
priest, missionary and historian (died 1259)
Mychailo of Chernigiv
Grand Prince of Kyiv
Hyacinth of Poland
Polish Dominican priest
Richeza of Denmark
Queen consort of Sweden
David I of Trebizond
Emperor of Trebizond
Peter I, Duke of Brittany
French duke

Ada, Countess of Holland
Countess regnant of Holland from 1203 to 1207

Accursius
thumb|Accursius by Cristofano dell'Altissimo.
thumb|The grave for Accursius and for his son Franciscus Accursius (1225-1293)|Franciscus, in [[Bologna, Italy.]]
Accursius (Italian: Accursio or Accorso di Bagnolo; c. 11821263) was an Italian jurist. He is notable for his organization of the glosses, the medieval comments on Justinian's codification of Roman law, the Corpus Juris Civilis. He was not proficient in the classics, but he was called "the Idol of the Jurisconsults".
Eleanor, Fair Maid of Brittany
5th Countess of Richmond, heiress to England and Brittany de jure
William of Modena
Italian cardinal (died 1251)

Caesar of Heisterbach
German Cistercian, author
Constance of Hungary
Queen consort of Bohemia (c. 1180 – 1240)
Albert IV, Count of Habsburg
Count of Habsburg and ancestor of the royal House of Habsburg
Engelbert II of Berg
Archbishop of Cologne (1185 or 1186–1225)
Otto I
Duke of Merania
Herman V, Margrave of Baden-Baden
Margrave of Baden
Manuel Komnenos Doukas
Ruler of Thessalonica
Peire Cardenal
Occitan writer
Garsende
Occitan poet and countess of Forcalquier
Hugh X of Lusignan
French noble
Skule Bårdsson
Norwegian nobleman and claimant to the royal throne
Elias of Cortona
Italian franciscan and politician
Berthold III, Duke of Zähringen
duke of Zähringen
Eike von Repgow
author of the Sachsenspiegel, the oldest legal book written in German
Ibn al-Salah
Muslim Imam
Berthold
Roman Catholic archbishop (1180-1251)
Izz al-Din ibn 'Abd al-Salam
theologian
Frederick IV, Count of Zollern
count of Zollern (c. 1188 – c. 1255)
Margaret of Geneva
countess of Savoy by marriage to Thomas I of Savoy
Adolf of Osnabrück
German Cistercian monk, Bishop of Osnabrück and saint
Conrad I, Burgrave of Nuremberg
Burgrave of Nuremberg of the House of Hohenzollern (1186-1261)
ʻAbd al-Wāḥid al-Marrākushī
Moroccan historian (1185–1250)
Henry II of Nassau
Count of Nassau (1198-1247)
Vitslav I, Prince of Rügen
Prince of Rügen
Dietrich V, Count of Cleves
German noble
Sibt ibn al-Jawzi
Islamic scholar

Sukaphaa
Sukaphaa (), also Siu-Ka-Pha, was the founder and the first king of the Ahom kingdom in medieval Assam. A Tai prince from Möng Mao, the kingdom he established in 1228 existed until 1826 and came to incorporate large parts of modern Assam. In reverence to his position in Assam's history, the honorific Chaolung is associated with his name (Chao: lord; Lung: great). In 1996, the Assam Government decreed his annual remembrance on 2 December as Sukaphaa Divas, or Asom Divas (Assam Day), to commemorate his advent and entry into Assam.
Albert IV
Count of Tyrol
Albert of Stade
Franciscan friar and chronicler
Nuño Sánchez
Catalan noble