The Founding of the University of Valladolid…
1241 CE
The Founding of the University of Valladolid (1241)
In 1241, the University of Valladolid was established, becoming Spain’s third university after Salamanca and Palencia. It originated as a relocation of studies from the University of Palencia, which had been founded between 1208 and 1212 under the patronage of King Alfonso VIII of Castile.
From Palencia to Valladolid: A Shift in Iberian Higher Education
The University of Palencia, one of the earliest centers of learning in the Iberian Peninsula, had struggled to maintain its status due to declining support and resources. Recognizing Valladolid’s strategic and political importance, Castilian authorities and ecclesiastical leaders opted to transfer the university, ensuring greater stability and long-term growth.
Over time, the University of Valladolid developed into one of Spain’s most prestigious institutions, playing a crucial role in the intellectual, legal, and theological development of medieval Castile.
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The Mongols have fought for six years to regain control of Korea, but the renegade client-king finally submits, sends hostages to Karakorum, and is reinstalled in 1241 as Goryeo’s puppet ruler.
The Mongol invasion of Europe in 1241 first affects the regions of Moldavia and …
…Wallachia (situated east of the Carpathians).
Tens of thousands of Romanians in Transylvania (at this time part of the Kingdom of Hungary) lose their lives defending their territories from the Golden Horde.
Crops and goods plundered from Romanian settlements seem to have been a primary supply source for the Golden Horde.
The invaders kill up to half of the population and burn down most of their settlements, thus destroying much of the cultural and economic records from that period.
Neither Romanians nor the army of Hungary offer much resistance against the Mongols.
The swiftness of the invasion takes many by surprise and forces them to retreat and hide in forests and the enclosed valleys of the Carpathians.
In the end, however, the main target of the invasion is the Kingdom of Hungary.
Kaykhusraw, with the support of the great emirs of Anatolia, had seized the throne of the Sultanate of Rûm upon the death of Kayqubad in 1237.
The architect of his early reign is a certain Sa'd al-Din Köpek, master of the hunt and minister of works under Kayqubad.
Köpek excels at political murder and seeks to protect his newfound influence at the court with a series of executions.
He captures Diyarbakir from the Ayyubids in 1241.
A new danger appears from within the Seljuq state as the Mongols threaten from the outside: a charismatic preacher, Baba Ishak, is fomenting rebellion among the Turkmen of Anatolia.
Nomadic Turkmen had begun moving into Anatolia a few years prior to the Battle of Manzikert.
After 1071, Turkic migration into the region had gone largely unchecked.
Both their number and the persuasive power of their religious leaders, nominally Islamized shamans known as babas or dedes, have played a large part in the conversion of formerly Christian Anatolia.
The Persianized Seljuq military class has expended considerable effort keeping these nomads from invading areas inhabited by farmers and from harassing neighboring Christian states.
The Turkmen have been pushed into marginal lands, mostly mountainous and frontier districts.
Baba Ishak is one such religious leader.
Unlike his predecessors, whose influence had been limited to smaller tribal groups, Baba Ishak’s authority extends over a vast population of Anatolian Turkmen.
It is not known what he preached, but his appropriation of the title rasul, normally applied to Muhammad, suggests something beyond orthodox Islam.
The revolt had begun in about 1240 in the remote borderland of Kafarsud in the eastern Taurus Mountains and quickly spread north to the region of Amasya.
Seljuq armies at Amasya and …
…Malatya are destroyed.
Soon, …
…the very heart of Seljuq Anatolia, the regions around Kayseri, …
…Sivas, and …
…Tokat, are under the control of Baba Ishak’s supporters.
Baba Ishak himself is hanged in 1241, but the Turkmen continue their rebellion against the central Seljuq authority.