1303
The slap at Anagni
Philip IV's agent Guillaume de Nogaret rode into Anagni with Sciarra Colonna and laid hands on the aged pope in his own chamber. Boniface was freed by townsmen but died a month later, broken in body and spirit. The papacy's claim to rule kings had been publicly assaulted and would not recover its former authority over secular monarchs.
Earthquake destroys the Pharos of Alexandria
A devastating tremor cracked the ancient lighthouse's weakened core, bringing down the upper tiers of one of the Seven Wonders. The Pharos had guided Mediterranean sailors for fifteen centuries, its beacon visible thirty miles out to sea. Sultan Qaitbay would later build his fortress from its toppled stones, recycling one civilization's marvel into another's rampart.
Mongol raid on Delhi repulsed at Siri
Chagatayid horsemen under Targhi besieged Delhi for two months while Sultan Alauddin Khalji crouched behind hastily raised walls. The Mongols withdrew hungry, their supply lines overextended across the arid plains of Rajasthan. The sultan responded by fortifying Siri as his new cantonment and raising taxes to fund a permanent standing army against the steppe threat.
Siege of Chittor immortalized by Padmini legend
Alauddin Khalji marched against the Mewar capital, where tradition says he coveted Queen Padmini. The fortress fell after months of siege, its massive walls breached by persistent assault. The queen and her attendants reportedly burned themselves on a vast pyre rather than surrender. The legend, elaborated two centuries later by the poet Malik Muhammad Jayasi, became Rajput honor's founding myth.
University of Rome founded by Boniface VIII
In the bull In supremae praeminentia dignitatis, the embattled pope chartered a studium generale in Rome, hoping to rival Paris and Bologna in theological and legal instruction. It was a last act of cultural ambition from a pontiff whose temporal power was collapsing. The university would survive through the centuries; Boniface's political authority would not.