Category
page 11312 deaths

Otto V or III, Duke of Bavaria
Duke of Lower Bavaria and King of Hungary (1261-1312)

Ferdinand IV of Castile
Spanish monarch
Piers Gaveston, 1st Earl of Cornwall
Favourite of King Edward II of England (1284-1312)
Arthur II, Duke of Brittany
Duke of Brittany from 1305 to 1312
Elizabeth of Carinthia, Queen of Germany
German queen
Marino Zorzi
Doge of Venice
John II
Duke of Brabant (1275-1312)
Sultan Walad
philosopher and poet of Persian origin, son of Jalal al-Din Rumi
Isabella of Villehardouin
Greek noble (1263-1312)

Gaddo Gaddi
Italian painter and mosaicist
Paul I Šubić of Bribir
Croatian nobleman and soldier (1245-1312)
Theobald II, Duke of Lorraine
Duke of Lorraine
Euphemia of Rügen
Norwegian queen
Malatesta da Verucchio
Italian condottieri

Christina von Stommeln
Roman Catholic mystic and blessed
Casimir of Bytom
Duke of Opole and Bytom
Pierre du bois
French Lawyer (1255-1312)
Gerhard II, Count of Holstein-Plön
Count of Holstein-Plön
Siemowit, Duke of Kuyavia-Brieg
Peerage person ID=114664
Zayn al-Din al-Amidi
Islamic scholar
Beatrice, Countess of Montfort
French noble
Valdemar IV, Duke of Schleswig
German noble
Guido della Torre
Lord of Milan (1302-1312)
Gentile Portino da Montefiore
Italian papal legate

Afonso of Portugal
Lord of Portalegre
Giovanni Mincio da Morrovalle
Catholic cardinal
Eschive d'Ibelin
Lady of Beirut
Hōjō Munenobu
11th Shikken of the Kamakura shogunate
Mujū
Mujū Dōkyō (; 1 January 1227 – 9 November 1312), birth name Ichien Dōkyō, was a Buddhist monk of the Japanese Kamakura period. He is superficially considered a Rinzai monk by some due to his compilation of the Shasekishū and similar books of koans, but there is good evidence that he was also an eager student of the Tendai, Pure Land, and Hosso sects, and he is occasionally placed in the Shingon and Ritsu sects as well.
Yeheidie'erding
'''Yeheidie'erding (, ? – 1312), also known as Amir al-Din' (, Amīr al-Dīn''), was a Muslim architect who helped design and led the construction of the capital of the Yuan dynasty, Khanbaliq, located in present-day Beijing, the current capital of the People's Republic of China. According to Cary Y. Liu interpretation of the Ma-ho-ma-sha Stele inscription, either Amir al-Din's ancestors came from the Western Regions, although originating from Arabia, or that he directly came from Arabia.
Theobald, Bishop of Liège
Roman Catholic bishop
Landolfo Brancaccio
Italian cardinal (1300-1312)
Mahmut of Karaman
Karaman bey
Xenia of Tarusa
Russian noblewoman

John I of Isenburg-Limburg
Lord of Limburg