Skip to content
Category

1202 deaths

page 1
Sverre of Norway
king of Norway
Canute VI of Denmark
King of Denmark
Joachim of Fiore
Italian abbot
Mieszko III the Old
High Duke of Poland (1121-1202)
Blondel de Nesle
French trouvère
Myeongjong
the king of the Goryeo dynasty of Korea
Birger Brosa
Swedish politician in the 12th century
Guillaume aux Blanches Mains
French cardinal (1135–1202)
Gaucelm Faidit
Limousin troubadour
Jakuren
200px|thumb|right|Jakuren in the Hyakunin Isshu. ' (also known as Fujiwara no Sadanaga' (藤原定長) before becoming a monk) (1139–1202) was a Japanese Buddhist priest and poet. He was adopted by the noted poet Fujiwara no Shunzei upon the death of Shunzei's younger brother. Shunzei originally intended for Sadanaga to be his heir; however, he subsequently had two male offspring of his own, and Sadanaga was forced to step aside in favor of Fujiwara no Sadaie. As was common practice at the time, he became a monk, and acquired the religious name of Jakuren. Taking Saigyo as his model, he traveled aroun
Reginald of Sidon
Crusader noble
Inge Magnusson
Pretender to the Norwegian throne
William VIII of Montpellier
Lord of montpellier
Geoffroy de Donjon
11th Grand Master of the Knights Hospitaller
Ulrich II of Carinthia
Duke of Carinthia
Markward von Annweiler
regent of the Kingdom of Sicily
Hamelin de Warenne, Earl of Surrey
English Earl
Konrad of Querfurt
Bishop of Hildesheim (1194–1199), Bishop of Würzburg (1198–1202)
Eugenius of Palermo
Italian admiral
Fujiwara no Tashi
empress consort of Japan
Conrad of Urslingen
Duke of Spoleto (1150-1202)
Geoffrey III, Count of Perche
French aristocrat
Aymer, Count of Angoulême
Last Count of Angoulême of the House of Taillefer
Joscius
Archbishop of Tyre, Jerusalem
Sultan Mu'adzam Shah
Sultan of Kedah
Kojijū
Kojijū (小侍従; 1121–1202 CE) (also Matsuyoi no Kojijū) was a waka poet and Japanese noblewoman active in the late Heian period.
Hong Mai
Southern Song minister
Pedro Manrique de Lara
Spanish noble
Hammad al-Harrani
Islamic scholar
Ludan
thumb | right | alt=The death of Saint Ludan, 19th century lithograph. | The death of Saint Ludan, 19th century lithograph. Ludan, also known as Ludain or Luden, was a Scottish pilgrim to Jerusalem. On his return he died at Scherkirchen, near the city of Strasbourg, France, at which time the bells of a local church began to ring.
Minamoto no Yoshishige
samurai
Bernard of Fezensaguet
French noble
Cathal Carragh Ua Conchobair
King of Connacht
Minamoto no Michichika
Japanese noble
Q10351152
Spanish noble
Simon I, Count of Tecklenburg
Count of Tecklenburg
Alfie Hugill
Anglo-Norman knight and assassin of Thomas Becket