Category
page 11230 deaths
Walther von der Vogelweide
German minstrel singer (c. 1170 – c. 1230)

Alfonso IX of León
King of León and Galicia from 1188 to 1230

Berengaria of Navarre
Medieval English queen consort

Ottokar I of Bohemia
duke and king of Bohemia

Leopold VI, Duke of Austria
Austrian duke
Pietro Ziani
Doge of Venice
Margaret of Blois
French noblewoman (1164-1230)
Demetrius of Montferrat
king of Thessalonica
Pelagio Galvani
Leonese cardinal and canon lawyer (c.1165–1230)
Casimir I of Opole
Duke of Opole-Racibórz
Mathieu II de Montmorency
lord of Montmorency
Urraca López de Haro
Queen consort of Kingdom of León
Gilbert de Clare, 5th Earl of Gloucester
Magna Carta baron
Beatrice of Viennois
Countess consort of Savoy
Hōjō Tokiuji
Japanese samurai of the early Kamakura period
Viestards
Viestards (also Viesthard, Vesthardus, Viesturs; died 1230) was a Semigallian duke in the 13th century, referred to as King Vester ().
Fujiwara no Motofusa
Japanese noble
Raoul de Houdenc
French author
Rainald of Urslingen
Italian duke

Siegfried II
German archbishop
Nicola de la Haye
Sheriff of Lincolnshire
Egino IV.
count of Urach

Al-Dakhwar
Muhadhdhabuddin Abd al-Rahim bin Ali bin Hamid al-Dimashqi () known as al-Dakhwar () (1170–1230) was a leading Arab physician who served various rulers of the Ayyubid dynasty. He was also administratively responsible for medicine in Cairo and Damascus. Al-Dakhwar educated or influenced most of the prominent physicians of Egypt and Syria in the century, including writer Ibn Abi Usaibia and Ibn al-Nafis, the discoverer of blood circulation in the human body.
Ibn Hammad
historian, poet

Ubaldo I Visconti
Iralian noble
Maelgwn ap Rhys
Prince of part of the kingdom of Deheubarth
Jeremias II Al-Amshitti
head of the Maronite Church from 1199 to 1230
Bahramshah
Al-Malik al-Amjad Bahramshah was the Kurdish Ayyubid emir of Baalbek between 1182–1230 (578–627 AH).
Aodh Méith
Irish king of Tír Eoghain

Óspakr-Hákon
Óspakr (died 1230), also known as Hákon, was a King of the Isles. He seems to have been a son of Dubgall mac Somairle, King of the Isles, and therefore a member of the Meic Dubgaill branch of the Meic Somairle kindred. Óspakr spent a considerable portion of his career in the Kingdom of Norway as a member of the Birkibeinar faction in the Civil war era in Norway. He seems to be identical to Óspakr suðreyski, a Birkibeinar who took part in the plundering of Hebrides and the sacking of Iona in 1209/1210. The context of this expedition is uncertain, although it may have been envisioned as a way of
Alfonso Téllez I de Meneses
Castilian noble
William de Braose
English noble