1297
William Wallace wins at Stirling Bridge
A low-born Scottish outlaw led a force of spearmen against an English army crossing the narrow wooden bridge over the Forth. Wallace caught them half across and slaughtered them in the marsh. The English treasurer was skinned; the victory made Wallace guardian of Scotland. The battle demonstrated that disciplined infantry could defeat heavily armored cavalry by choosing ground that negated the horsemen's advantage.
Louis IX canonized by Boniface VIII
Twenty-seven years after his death on crusade, the French king was formally declared a saint of the Roman church. The canonization bolstered Capetian prestige and gave Paris a new royal cult centered at the Sainte-Chapelle, which already housed the relic crown of thorns. The process of canonization, which examined Louis's life in meticulous detail, left behind a biographical record unmatched for any medieval monarch.
Genoese merchants open Black Sea trade routes
Genoese trading colonies at Caffa in Crimea and Tana at the mouth of the Don River thrived under Mongol protection, funneling Chinese silk, Indian spices, and Caspian sturgeon westward. The Pax Mongolica had turned the Black Sea into an Italian lake connected by caravan to the Pacific. These same trade routes would later carry the Black Death westward from Central Asia to Europe with devastating consequences.
Frances dominates Flemish towns briefly
Philip IV of France invaded Flanders in pursuit of its count, and French knights occupied Bruges, Ghent, and other towns. The occupation was heavy-handed and would soon provoke the popular uprising that led to Courtrai in 1302, but the flag was French for now. The French garrison's arrogance toward Flemish merchants and weavers planted the seeds of a revolt that would humiliate French chivalry.