1194

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Featured events in 1194
1194·Europe·Disaster

Chartres Cathedral burns

A devastating fire consumed most of the cathedral except the western facade, the crypt, and the tunic of the Virgin, which the townspeople considered miraculously spared. The bishop immediately launched rebuilding in the new Gothic style. The resulting structure would set the template for High Gothic. The rebuilding was financed by donations from across France, as the cult of the Virgin at Chartres drew pilgrims whose offerings funded the most ambitious Gothic cathedral yet attempted.

June 10, 1194High Middle Ages
1194·Central Asia·Politics

End of the Seljuk Empire in Iran

Tughrul III, the last Seljuk sultan of the west, was killed in battle against the Khwarazmshah Tekish at Rey, south of modern Tehran. The Seljuk line that had ruled Persia, Mesopotamia, and Anatolia for a century and a half was extinct. The Khwarazmian empire filled the vacuum. The Seljuk collapse removed the last established dynasty between the Mongols and the Islamic heartlands, leaving the region fatally fragmented.

1194High Middle Ages
1194·South Asia·War

Qutb al-Din Aibak takes Ajmer

The Ghurid slave-general defeated the remnants of Prithviraj Chauhan's Rajput state and occupied the sacred city of Ajmer. He demolished Hindu and Jain temples and used their pillars in the construction of the Quwwat-ul-Islam mosque at Delhi. The visual hybridity of early Delhi Sultanate architecture was born, as Hindu floral carvings and Islamic calligraphic inscriptions coexisted uneasily on the same repurposed stone columns.

1194High Middle Ages
1194·Europe·Politics

Henry VI crowned King of Sicily

Having finally subdued the Sicilian opposition with his ransom wealth, the Hohenstaufen emperor was crowned king of Sicily at Palermo on Christmas Day. The next day his wife Constance gave birth to their only son Frederick in a tent in the Marche of Ancona. The child would be Stupor Mundi.

November 20, 1194High Middle Ages
1194·Europe·Politics

Richard freed after ransom paid

Most of the astronomical ransom of 150,000 marks having been raised in England - by taxing everyone, seizing church silver, and sending Cistercian wool clips abroad - Richard was released from German custody and sailed for England to deal with his brother John's betrayal. Richard's return was marked by a second coronation at Winchester, a symbolic reassertion of royal authority after his long absence.

February 4, 1194High Middle Ages
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