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1223 deaths

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Philip II of France
King of France, and the first to be called by that title (1165–1223)
Afonso II of Portugal
King of Portugal
George IV of Georgia
King of Georgia
Wincenty Kadłubek
Polish Roman Catholic monk, bishop and blessed (c. 1150 – 8 March 1223)
Muqali
Muqali (; 1170–1223), also spelt Mukhali and Mukhulai, was a Mongol general who became a trusted and esteemed commander under Genghis Khan. The son of Gü'ün U'a, a Jalair leader who had sworn fealty to the Mongols, he became known by his epithet "Muqali" ('one who dulls'), earned through his committed and able service to the Great Khan and the Mongol Empire.
Ibn Qudamah
Arab Muslim scholar and Jurist (1147–1223)
Unkei
was a Japanese sculptor of the Kei school, which flourished in the Kamakura period. He specialized in statues of the Buddha and other important Buddhist figures. Unkei's early works are fairly traditional, similar in style to pieces by his father, Kōkei. However, the sculptures he produced for the Tōdai-ji in Nara show a flair for realism different from anything Japan had seen before. Today, Unkei is the best known of the Kei artists, and many art historians consider him its "most distinguished member".
Mstislav III of Kyiv
Russian prince
Sancho, Count of Provence
Count of Provence
Raymond-Roger, Count of Foix
Occitan noble
Konoe Motomichi
Kugyō and kampaku
Henry I of Mödling
Otto of Sankt Blasien
German chronicler
Ye Shi
neo-Confucian philosopher
Alamanda de Castelnau
French troubadour
Morisada-shinnō
son of emperor Takakura; father of Go-Horikawa
Ibn Tumlus
valencian scholar (1164-1223)
Fernán Gutiérrez de Castro
politician
Mstislav II Svyatoslavich
Russian prince
Gedko Sasinowic
Polish bishop