1293
Mongol invasion of Java ends in fiasco
A Yuan expedition of twenty thousand men landed on Java at the invitation of Raden Wijaya, who was fighting a local rival. Once the rival was crushed, Wijaya turned on his Mongol allies and drove them to their ships. They sailed home with only their dignity dented. The fiasco marked the farthest reach of Mongol military power and the last attempt to extend the Yuan empire by sea.
Ordinances of Justice in Florence
The popolo of Florence enacted the Ordinances of Justice, excluding magnates from the highest civic offices and tightening the grip of the guilds. The reform shaped Florentine politics for a century and reflected the city's unusual experiment in merchant self-rule. The ordinances empowered the Gonfaloniere di Giustizia, a new office charged with enforcing the law against noble violence, giving teeth to guild government.
Earthquake devastates Kamakura, Japan
A powerful earthquake struck the shogunal capital of Kamakura, collapsing temples, splitting hillsides, and generating a tsunami that flooded the coastal lowlands. The Great Buddha at Kotoku-in survived, but its surrounding hall was destroyed and never rebuilt, leaving the bronze colossus to sit in the open air where it remains today.
Marco Polo visits Pandya and Sri Lanka
The Venetian traveler, homeward bound from China, stopped in the Pandya kingdom and Sri Lanka. He marveled at the pearl fishery in the Gulf of Mannar, the nakedness of the king's courtiers, and a ruby he claimed was as large as a man's arm. His accounts are our best outside sources.
Venetian glass industry consolidated on Murano
The Venetian Republic ordered all its glassmakers to relocate their furnaces to the island of Murano, ostensibly to reduce fire risk but also to guard trade secrets. The concentration of talent produced an explosion of innovation in cristallo glass, mirrors, and beadwork that made Murano synonymous with glass for centuries.