Events relating to europe

A laurel wreath is placed on the brow of Petrarch in Rome, in a renewal of interest in the classical world

The great Byzantine altarpiece of St Mark's, the Pala d'Oro, is adjusted to take its present form

Edward III of England, defaulting on his massive debts, drives the Florentine banking families of Bardi and Peruzzi into bankruptcy

The more mobile English force, of longbows and infantry, defeats at Crécy the unwieldy crossbows and heavy cavalry of the French

The English siege of Calais ends when six burghers of the town, with ropes around their necks, offer their lives to save their fellow citizens

Cola di Rienzo, appointed tribune of the people, enjoys a few months of dictatorial powers in Rome before the citizens tire of him

The Black Death, making its way through Europe, is described in vivid detail by Boccaccio who sees its devastating effect in Florence

Massacres of Jews, rumoured to have caused the Black Death by poisoning wells, begin in southern France and spread through much of Europe

Boccaccio begins his Decameron, supposedly the stories told by young Florentine men and women sheltering from the Black Death

Boccaccio, visiting Petrarch in Florence, is inspired to devote himself to the pursuit of classical studies

The battle of Poitiers ends, on the third day, with victory for the English and the capture of the French king, John II

After four years of captivity in Bordeaux and London, the French king John II is released for a promised ransom of 3 million gold crowns

Portable guns are introduced not long after artillery, being mentioned in several European texts of the second half of the fourteenth century

A narrator who calls himself Will, and whose name may be Langland, begins the epic poem of Piers Plowman

One of four new yeomen of the chamber in Edward III's household is Geoffrey Chaucer

The marriage of the duke of Burgundy to the heiress of Flanders lays the foundation for the great territorial expansion of Burgundy

John Wycliffe, writing mainly in Oxford, is critical of the contemporary church and can find no basis for the pope's authority

The papal curia returns to Rome in what would seem a conclusive move if there were not, two years later, two popes - one of them elected back in Avignon

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