A Jew of Taranto, Italy, and thus …
Years: 1033 - 1033
A Jew of Taranto, Italy, and thus a subject of Constantinople’s empire, buys land for vineyards in 1033; Eastern Roman law, in contrast to the laws of western Christendom, allows Jews to own land and engage in agriculture.
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- Jews
- Germans
- Christianity, Chalcedonian
- Greeks, Medieval (Byzantines)
- Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Macedonian dynasty
- German, or Ottonian (Roman) Empire
- Italy, Catepanate of
- French people (Latins)
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Showing 10 events out of 51511 total
The division of Poland, although the distribution is uncertain, is short-lived: Otto is killed in 1033 by one of his own men and Mieszko II takes his domains.
He could probably have expelled Dytryk shortly after and thus has been able to reunite the whole country under his rule.
Oldrich had been invited to the Diet of Merseburg in 1032 and had not appeared.
His absence had raised the ire of the emperor and Conrad, busy with events in Burgundy, charges his son Henry VI, Duke of Bavaria, with punishing the recalcitrant Bohemian.
Jaromír, twice Duke of Bohemia and twice deposed, manages, in a surprise campaign, to depose his brother in 1033.
Oldrich is sent to Bavaria.
Jalal al-Dawla had subsequently become involved in a bitter fight with his nephew Abu Kalijar, who controls Fars and Kerman.
The two Buyids are not always enemies; for example, Jalal al-Dawla provides support to Abu Kalijar when the Ghaznavids invade Kerman in 1033.
Jewish farmers in Palestine, especially in the Sharon Valley, suffer great losses due to an earthquake in 1033, and when additional taxes are levied on non-Muslim landowners, almost all of the Jews remaining in Palestine leave agriculture.
Sancho III’s Expansion and War Against León (1030s CE)
Following the succession of Bermudo III to the throne of León, Sancho III of Pamplona strengthens his influence over Castile and León by arranging the marriage of his son, Ferdinand of Castile, to Sancha of León, the sister of Bermudo III and the former fiancée of the assassinated Count García Sánchez of Castile.
As part of the marriage alliance, Ferdinand receives a dowry that includes contested Leonese lands, further expanding Castilian control.
War with Bermudo III and the Occupation of León
Tensions between Sancho III and Bermudo III quickly escalate into full-scale war. Sancho, commanding combined Castilian and Navarrese forces, launches a military campaign against León, swiftly overrunning much of the kingdom and occupying Astorga.
By March 1033, Sancho III’s dominion extends from Zamora to the borders of Barcelona, marking the height of his power and making him the most dominant Christian ruler in Iberia at the time.
Mieszko II has regained full power, but he still has to fight against the nobility and his own subjects.
It should be noted that in Poland his renunciation of the royal crown isn't counted, and after 1032, in the chronicles he is still called King.
He dies suddenly between May 10 and 11, 1034, probably in Poznań.
The Polish chronicles clearly state that he died of natural causes; the information that he was murdered by the sword-bearer (Miecznik), given by the chronicles of Gottfried of Viterbo, refers to Bezprym.
However, the historians now think that he was killed in a plot hatched by the aristocracy.
He is buried in the Cathedral of St. Peter and St. Paul.
After Mieszko II's death, Poland's peasants revolt in a "pagan reaction."
The exact reasons and date are unknown.
Mieszko II's only son and heir, Casimir I, is either expelled by this insurrection, or the insurrection is caused by the aristocracy's expulsion of him.
Some modern historians argue that the insurrection was caused more by economic than by religious issues, such as new taxes for the Church and the militarization of the early Polish polity.
Priests, monks and knights are killed; cities, churches and monasteries are burned.
Jaromír’s third reign is short-lived.
He is in turn was captured, blinded, and deposed by Oldrich, who seizes power again and drives out Jaromír's son from Moravia.
Oldrich dies abruptly on November 11, 1034 and later examination of his skeleton reveals his skull to have suffered a fatal blow.
Jaromír now renounces the throne in favor of Bretislaus, called the Restorer, who had fled beyond the Bohemian border.
Conrad II had had to enforce his royal prerogatives in the Duchy of Carinthia just as he did in the Duchy of Swabia.
Duke Adalbero of Carinthia had been appointed as duke in 1012 under Emperor Henry II and had remained loyal to imperial authority, supporting Conrad's election as German king in 1024.
At a synod in Frankfurt in September 1027 at which Conrad had attempted to resolve the decades' long Gandersheim Conflict, Adalbero had accompanied the Emperor and acted as his sword-bearer during the proceeding, indicating Conrad's trust in him.
However, from 1028 on, Adalbero has governed his Duchy as an independent state.
In particular, he has attempted to conduct peaceful relations with the King Stephen I of the Kingdom of Hungary.
Under Emperor Henry II, who was the brother-in-law to Stephen, relations between the Empire and Hungary had been friendly.
Upon Henry's death in 1024, Conrad had adopted a more aggressive policy, prompting border raids into the Empire from Hungary.
The raids particularly have affected Adalbero's domain of Carinthia, which shares a long border with eastern border with Hungary.
Conrad summons Adalbero to court at Bamberg on May 18, 1034, to answer an indictment of treason for his actions regarding Hungary.
In the presence of the German dukes, Conrad demands that Adalbero be stripped of all his title and lands.
The dukes, however, hesitate and demand that Conrad's son Henry, the Germany's co-King and Conrad's designated successor, join the assembly before a decision is made.
Henry likewise refuses to depose Adalbero, citing an earlier agreement with Adelbero to be his ally in negotiating a settlement between him and his father.
Only by resorting to exhortations, pleas, and threats to Henry is Conrad able to persuade him to support deposing Adalbero.
Henry's support is soon followed by that of the other dukes.
Conrad then orders Adalbero removed as Duke and sentences him and his son to exile.
After attacking Conrad's allies in Carinthia, Adalbero flees to his mother's estates in Ebersberg in the Duchy of Bavaria, where he will remain until his death in 1039.
Zoë has become self-assertive and jealous: Theodora, though living in retirement, had excited Zoë's jealousy and, on a pretext of conspiracy, has been confined in a monastery.
Zoë, neglected by her husband, has become enamored of her young Paphlagonian chamberlain, Michael, a man of humble origin who owes his elevation to his brother, the influential and capable eunuch John the Orphanotrophus, who had brought him to court.
Emperor Romanus, allegedly poisoned by Zoë, becomes ill in 1034; upon his death on April 11, she at once takes control and marries her lover, who is proclaimed Emperor Michael IV, called the Paphlagonian.
The new emperor had shown great eagerness to make his mark as a ruler, but has mostly been unfortunate in his enterprises.
He has spent large sums upon new buildings and in endowing the monks.
His endeavor to relieve the pressure of taxation has disorganized the finances of the state.
Idealizing Marcus Aurelius, Romanos aspires to be a new "philosopher king", and similarly desires to imitate the military prowess of Trajan.
He had resolved in 1030 to retaliate upon the incursions of the Muslims on the eastern frontier by leading a large army in person against the Mirdasids of Aleppo, but by allowing himself to be surprised on the march he had sustained a serious defeat at Azaz, near Antioch.
Although this disaster had been reduced by the capture and successful defense of Edessa by George Maniakes in 1032, and by the sound defeat of a Saracen fleet in the Adriatic, Romanos has never recovered his early popularity.
As a member of the aristocracy, Romanos III had abandoned his predecessors' curtailment of the privileges of the nobility and reduced their taxes, at the same time allowing peasant freeholders to fall into a condition of serfdom.
In a vain attempt to reduce expenditure, Romanos had limited his wife's expenses, which has merely exacerbated the alienation between the two.
At home, Romanos III has faced several conspiracies, mostly centered around his sister-in-law Theodora, as in 1029 and 1030.
Although he had survived these attempts on the throne, his early death in 1034 is supposed to have been due to poison administered by his wife, though it has also been that he was drowned in a bath on his wife's orders.
He is buried in the Church of St. Mary Peribleptos, which he built.
Years: 1033 - 1033
Locations
Groups
- Jews
- Germans
- Christianity, Chalcedonian
- Greeks, Medieval (Byzantines)
- Papal States (Republic of St. Peter)
- Roman Empire, Eastern: Macedonian dynasty
- German, or Ottonian (Roman) Empire
- Italy, Catepanate of
- French people (Latins)
