1197
Lalibela ascends in Ethiopia
The Zagwe king Gebre Meskel Lalibela took the throne and began rebuilding his mountain capital as a New Jerusalem, commissioning a dozen churches carved downward out of the living basalt bedrock. Several took decades to complete and still stand, carved from a single stone each. The rock-hewn churches of Lalibela remain active sites of Ethiopian Orthodox worship and one of the most extraordinary architectural achievements on the African continent.
Nalanda destroyed by Bakhtiyar Khalji
Turkish cavalry under the Ghurid general Bakhtiyar Khalji swept through the plains of Bihar and put the ancient Buddhist university of Nalanda to the torch. Monks were massacred, irreplaceable manuscripts heaped and burned, and the legendary library - one of the greatest repositories of knowledge in the entire ancient world - was reduced to smoke and rubble. Buddhism as a living tradition in India never recovered from the blow.
Jayavarman VII builds the Bayon
At the geometric center of his newly constructed capital Angkor Thom, the Khmer king Jayavarman VII raised the Bayon - a man-made mountain of stone carved with over two hundred enormous serene faces gazing outward in every direction, each wearing the same faint and enigmatic smile. The Buddhist temple, utterly unlike anything built before or since in human architecture, remains the most mysterious monument in all of Southeast Asian history.
Death of Henry VI
At thirty-two, the Hohenstaufen emperor who had inherited Germany and conquered Sicily died of malaria at Messina while preparing a new crusade. His three-year-old son Frederick was left under the nominal regency of the pope. Germany fell into civil war and Sicily into chaos. Henry's premature death shattered the union of Germany and Sicily that had been the central project of Hohenstaufen diplomacy.
German crusade to the Holy Land
Before his death the Hohenstaufen emperor had gathered crusader contingents from across Germany and staged them in southern Italy to sail for the Holy Land. After his death most turned around and went home. Those who sailed briefly recovered Beirut before losing their nerve. The aborted crusade illustrated how dependent medieval military expeditions were on the personal authority and prestige of a single commanding figure.