1180
Battle of Uji and start of the Genpei War
In central Japan, the Minamoto prince Yorimasa and a force of warrior-monks fought a Taira army at a river bridge near Uji and lost. Yorimasa committed ritual suicide on the battlefield, reportedly the first recorded seppuku. Years of civil war between Taira and Minamoto had begun. The conflict would be immortalized in the Tale of the Heike, one of the masterpieces of Japanese literature.
Philip II crowned King of France
The sickly fifteen-year-old son of Louis VII, crowned at Reims, would grow into the king who doubled Capetian royal territory, took Normandy from John of England, and walked into Paris as the man who had beaten the Plantagenets. Contemporaries would call him Augustus. His forty-three-year reign transformed France from a modest feudal kingdom into the most powerful state in western Europe.
Toltec Tula collapses
The central Mexican Toltec capital was sacked and burned around this time, its warrior columns toppled and temples looted. Later Aztec legend would blame Quetzalcoatl's exile for the fall. The rupture scattered populations across the Valley of Mexico and opened space for later Mexica migration. Refugee Toltec artisans carried their skills to other Mesoamerican cities, spreading architectural and artistic traditions that would influence Aztec builders for generations.
Death of Manuel I Komnenos
The charismatic, Latin-loving Byzantine emperor died leaving an eleven-year-old heir and an empire overstretched by forty years of campaigning. His cousin Andronikos would seize power two years later in a bloodbath. Byzantine recovery staggered and fell. Manuel's death ended the last sustained period of Byzantine military and diplomatic assertiveness, and the empire entered a long decline from which it would never fully recover.
Yoritomo raises the eastern war banner
Hearing that a Taira edict had been issued for his execution, the young Minamoto clan-head, exiled to the Izu Peninsula since his father's defeat twenty years earlier, rallied eastern warriors to his cause and established a base at Kamakura. The Genpei War had begun. Yoritomo's genius lay not in battlefield tactics but in political organization; from Kamakura he built the administrative machinery of the future shogunate.