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1283 deaths

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Ata-Malik Juvayni
Iranian historian
Zakariya al-Qazwini
Persian scientist (1203–1283)
Wen Tianxiang
Chinese politician of the Song Dynasty
Margaret of Scotland
Queen of Norway
Philip of Courtenay
Emperor of Constantinople
Blanche of Navarre
Duchess of Brittany
Karma Pakshi
Tibetan Buddhist religious figure (1204–1283)
Dafydd ap Gruffudd
Prince of Wales and last independent ruler of Wales
Muhyi al-Dīn al-Maghribī
Medieval Spanish astronomer
Abutsu-ni
Abutsu-ni (阿仏尼, c. 12221283; the -ni suffix means "nun") was a Japanese poet and nun. She served as a lady-in-waiting to Princess Kuniko, later known as Empress Ankamon-in. In approximately 1250 she married fellow poet Fujiwara no Tameie. She had two children with him. Following his death in 1275, she became a nun. A dispute over her son's inheritance led her, in either 1277 or 1279, to travel from Kyoto to Kamakura in order to plead on her son's behalf. Her account of this journey, told in poems and letters, was published as Izayoi nikki (Diary of the Waning Moon or Journal of the Sixteenth-N
Joseph I of Constantinople
Ecumenical Patriarch in 1266–1275 and 1282–1283
Ermengarde of Limburg
German noblewoman
Yaghmurasan
Zayyanid ruler of Tlemcen from 1236 to 1283
Sirāj al-Dīn Maḥmūd ibn Abī Bakr Urmawī
Iranian writer
Manuel of Castile
Senhor de Villena, Escalona e Peñafiel
Yolanda of Vianden
Luxembourg prioress (1231-1283)
John of Vercelli
Italian priest
Abu-Ishaq Ibrahim
Emir of Hafsid Sultanate from 1279 to 1283
Alexander Stewart, 4th High Steward of Scotland
High Steward of Scotland
John I of Werle
Lord of Werle, then Lord of Werle-Parchim
Empress Xie Daoqing
Song Dynasty empress
Jean de Montfort
Christian crusader
Hermann III, Count of Weimar-Orlamünde
Count of the Weimar-Orlamünde
Kuniko-naishinnō
[邦子] daughter of Morisada-shinnō ; entitled Empress consort
Eskivat de Chabanais
Count of Bigorre
Peter of Castile, Lord of Ledesma
Castilian infante
Arnold III, Count of Guînes
13th century French nobleman
Kutlugh Turkan
Ruler of Kirman (r. 1257-1282)