Category
page 112th-century murdered monarchs

Alexios II Komnenos
Byzantine emperor

Eric IX of Sweden
12th-century Swedish King and Saint

Andrey Bogolyubsky
Russian Grand Prince

Conrad of Montferrat
12th century Italian nobleman and major participant in the Third Crusade

Eric II of Denmark
Danish monarch

Canute V of Denmark
King of Denmark (1129-1157)

Ivan Asen I of Bulgaria
Bulgarian tsar

Peter IV of Bulgaria
Bulgarian emperor

Harald IV of Norway
King of Norway
Niels
King of Denmark

Stephen IV of Hungary
King of Hungary and Croatia (1133-1165)
Sverker I of Sweden
King of Sweden
Sigurd II of Norway
king of Norway

Karl Sverkersson
King of Sweden (1130–1167)

Al-Mustarshid
Abu Mansur al-Faḍl ibn Ahmad al-Mustazhir (; 1092 – 29 August 1135) better known by his regnal name Al-Mustarshid Billah () was the Abbasid caliph in Baghdad from 1118 to 1135. He was son of his predecessor, caliph al-Mustazhir. He succeeded his father in the year 1118 as the Abbasid caliph.
Al-Rashid
Abbasid caliph in Baghdad (r. 1135–1136)
Eystein II
King of Norway
Charles I, Count of Flanders
Count of Flanders from 1119 to 1127
Al-Amir bi-Ahkam Allah
Fatimid caliph and imam (1096–1130)
Ragnvald Knaphövde
King of Sweden

Al-Zafir
Abū Manṣūr Ismāʿīl ibn al-Ḥāfiẓ (, February 1133 – April 1154), better known by his regnal name al-Ẓāfir bi-Amr Allāh (, ) or al-Ẓāfir bi-Aʿdāʾ Allāh (, ), was the twelfth Fatimid caliph, reigning in Egypt from 1149 to 1154, and the 22nd imam of the Hafizi Isma'ili branch of Shia Islam.
Otto I, Count of Burgundy
Count of Burgundy
Svatopluk, Duke of Bohemia
Duke of Bohemia
David V of Georgia
Georgian prince
Mleh
Prince of Armenia
Eystein Meyla
Elected a rival King of Norway during the Norwegian Civil War (1157–1177)
Constantine II, Prince of Armenia
Armenian noble
Yasovarman II
ruler of the Khmer empire

Ruben II, Prince of Armenia
Prince of Armenia

Alaungsithu
Alaungsithu or Sithu I ( ; also Caññsū I; 1090–1167) was king of the Pagan Dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1112/13 to 1167. Sithu's reign was a prosperous one in which Pagan was an integral part of inland and maritime trading networks. Sithu engaged in a massive building campaign throughout the kingdom, which included colonies, forts and outposts at strategic locations to strengthen the frontiers, ordination halls and pagodas for the support of religion, as well as reservoirs, dams and other land improvements to assist the farmers. He also introduced standardized weights and measures throughou
John Komnenos
son of Andronikos I

Muirchertach Mac Lochlainn
High King of Ireland
Tigernán Ua Ruairc
Irish chieftain
Khalaf ibn Mula'ib
Arab emir of Homs and Apamea
Naratheinkha
Naratheinkha (, ; 1141–1174) was a king of Pagan dynasty of Burma (Myanmar) from 1171 to 1174. He appointed his brother Narapati Sithu heir apparent and commander-in-chief. It was the first recorded instance in the history of the dynasty that the king had given up the command of the army. The king was assassinated by Aungzwa, one of Sithu's servants, after the king had raised one of Sithu's wives to queen.
Óláfr Guðrøðarson
King of the Isles
Conchobar Maenmaige Ua Conchobair
king of Connacht
Cormac Mac Carthaig
King of Munster