1304
Petrarch is born in Arezzo
Francesco Petrarca arrived in the world of exile, his notary father banished with the Whites from Florence. He would grow into the first modern man of letters, climbing Mont Ventoux for the view, coining 'Dark Ages,' hunting lost Ciceros in monastery cupboards, inventing a personal humanism in Latin and composing the sonnets to Laura that would reshape European lyric poetry.
Ilkhan Öljaitü converts to Shia Islam
The Mongol ruler of Persia, baptized a Christian and once a Buddhist, declared himself a Shia Muslim and struck coins bearing the names of the Twelve Imams. He also commissioned a magnificent mausoleum at Sultaniyya whose soaring dome remains one of the largest brick vaults ever built. His conversion shifted the religious landscape of Iran and foreshadowed the Safavid establishment of Shiism as state faith.
Giotto summoned to paint at Assisi
The Florentine master labored in the upper basilica of San Francesco, rendering the life of Saint Francis in plaster and pigment. His figures breathed with a new naturalism - weight, grief, and tenderness rendered as no painter before him had managed - that would scandalize conservatives and electrify apprentices. The frescoes made Assisi a pilgrimage not just for the devout but for painters.
Edward I captures Stirling Castle
After twelve weeks under Edward's siege engines, including the monstrous 'Warwolf' trebuchet - the largest ever built in the British Isles - Stirling surrendered. The Hammer of the Scots made the garrison wait outside the gate until he had finished watching his machine knock a wall down. The conquest looked complete. It was not.