1250
| Years | 
|---|
| Millennium | 
| 2nd millennium | 
| Centuries | 
| Decades | 
| Years | 
| 1250 by topic | 
|---|
| Leaders | 
 
  |  
| Birth and death categories | 
| Births – Deaths | 
| Establishments and disestablishments categories | 
| Establishments – Disestablishments | 
| Art and literature | 
| 1250 in poetry | 
| Gregorian calendar | 1250 MCCL  | 
| Ab urbe condita | 2003 | 
| Armenian calendar | 699 ԹՎ ՈՂԹ  | 
| Assyrian calendar | 6000 | 
| Balinese saka calendar | 1171–1172 | 
| Bengali calendar | 656–657 | 
| Berber calendar | 2200 | 
| English Regnal year | 34 Hen. 3 – 35 Hen. 3 | 
| Buddhist calendar | 1794 | 
| Burmese calendar | 612 | 
| Byzantine calendar | 6758–6759 | 
| Chinese calendar | 己酉年 (Earth Rooster) 3947 or 3740 — to — 庚戌年 (Metal Dog) 3948 or 3741  | 
| Coptic calendar | 966–967 | 
| Discordian calendar | 2416 | 
| Ethiopian calendar | 1242–1243 | 
| Hebrew calendar | 5010–5011 | 
| Hindu calendars | |
| - Vikram Samvat | 1306–1307 | 
| - Shaka Samvat | 1171–1172 | 
| - Kali Yuga | 4350–4351 | 
| Holocene calendar | 11250 | 
| Igbo calendar | 250–251 | 
| Iranian calendar | 628–629 | 
| Islamic calendar | 647–648 | 
| Japanese calendar | Kenchō 2 (建長2年)  | 
| Javanese calendar | 1159–1160 | 
| Julian calendar | 1250 MCCL  | 
| Korean calendar | 3583 | 
| Minguo calendar | 662 before ROC 民前662年  | 
| Nanakshahi calendar | −218 | 
| Thai solar calendar | 1792–1793 | 
| Tibetan calendar | ས་མོ་བྱ་ལོ་ (female Earth-Bird) 1376 or 995 or 223 — to — ལྕགས་ཕོ་ཁྱི་ལོ་ (male Iron-Dog) 1377 or 996 or 224  | 
Year 1250 (MCCL) was a common year starting on Saturday of the Julian calendar.
Events
By place
World
- The world population is estimated at between 400 and 416 million individuals.
 - World climate transitions from the Medieval Warm Period to the Little Ice Age.[1]
 
Europe
- February 2 – King Erik Eriksson of Sweden dies. The ten-year-old Valdemar, the eldest son of Birger Jarl, is elected King of Sweden, and becomes the first king from the House of Bjälbo.
 - October 12 – A great storm shifts the mouth of the River Rother in England 12 miles (20 km) to the west; a battering series of strong storms significantly alters other coastal geography around Romney Marsh.
 - December 13 – Emperor Frederick II dies, beginning the 23-year-long "Great Interregnum". Frederick is the last Holy Roman Emperor of the Hohenstaufen dynasty; after the interregnum, the empire passes to the Habsburgs.
 - The Lombard League dissolves upon the death of its member states' nemesis, Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor.
 - Albertus Magnus isolates the element arsenic, as the 8th discovered metal. He also first uses the word "oriole" to describe a type of bird (most likely the golden oriole).
 - The Rialto Bridge in Venice (in modern-day Italy) is converted from a pontoon bridge to a permanent, raised wooden structure.
 - The Ponts Couverts fortified bridges of Strasbourg (in modern-day France) are completed.
 - Vincent of Beauvais completes his proto-encyclopedic work Speculum Maius ("Greater mirror").
 - The first of the Parlements of Ancien Régime France is established.
 - Villard de Honnecourt draws the first known image of a sawmill.
 - The first usage is made of the English word "cuckold", according to the Oxford English Dictionary.
 - Medieval music: The Notre Dame school of polyphony ends.
 
Asia
- July 9 – The Qaymariyya tribe engineers a coup d'état to hand over Damascus to An-Nasir Yusuf. The garrison in the citadel surrenders later to him.[2]
 - A kurultai is called by Batu Khan in Siberia as part of maneuverings which will elect Möngke Khan as khan of the Mongol Empire in 1251.
 - Starting in this year and ending in 1275, the Muslim Shougeng Pu, likely a Persian or an Arab, serves as the Commissioner of Merchant Shipping for the Song dynasty Chinese seaport at Quanzhou, due to his effort in defeating pirates.[3]
 
Africa
- April 8 – Battle of Fariskur: Louis IX (the Saint) is captured by Baibars' Mamluk army while he is in Egypt conducting the Seventh Crusade; he later has to ransom himself.
 - April 30 – King Louis IX (the Saint) is released by his Egyptian captors after paying a ransom of one million dinars and turning over the city of Damietta.
 - May 2 – Al-Muazzam Turanshah, Ayyubid ruler of Egypt, is murdered, ending effective Ayyubid Dynasty rule in the country. He is briefly succeeded by his widow, Sultana Shajar al-Durr.[4]
 - July 21 – Aybak becomes ruler of Egypt, beginning the Bahri Dynasty of the Mamluk Sultanate. After 5 days he stands down and the six-year-old Al-Ashraf Musa is nominally proclaimed sultan.[4]
 - The Welayta state is founded in modern-day Ethiopia.
 - In Tunis, a popular rebellion against newly arrived, wealthy and influential Andalusian refugees breaks out, and is violently put down.[5]
 - The Hafsid caliph al-Mustansir enforces laws of ghiyar, or differentiation for non-Muslims. As such, Jews have to wear a distinguishing badge (shikla) which Tunisian Jews will have to wear into the nineteenth century.[6][7]
 
Oceania
- Samoa frees itself from Tongan rule, which begins the Malietoa dynasty in Samoa (approximate date).
 
By topic
Markets
- The Flemish town of Douai emits the first recorded redeemable annuities in medieval Europe, confirming a trend of consolidation of local public debt started in 1218, in Rheims.[8]
 - The Sienese bankers belonging to the firm known as the Gran Tavola, under the steering of the Bonsignori Brothers, become the main financiers of the Papacy.[9]
 
Births
- April 8 – John Tristan, son of Louis IX (d. 1270)
 - December – al-Allama al-Hilli, Persian Shia theologian (d. 1325)
 - December 25 – John IV Doukas Laskaris, emperor of Nicaea (d. 1305)
 - Agnes of Baden, German noblewoman (d. 1295)
 - Albertus de Chiavari, Italian Master General (d. 1300)
 - Beatrice of Savoy, Swiss noblewoman (d. 1292)
 - Bonconte I da Montefeltro, Italian general (d. 1289)
 - Dmitry of Pereslavl, Kievan Grand Prince (d. 1294)
 - Esclaramunda of Foix, queen consort of Majorca (d. 1315)
 - Jeanne de Montfort de Chambéon, Swiss noblewoman (d. 1300)
 - Margaret of Burgundy, queen of Sicily (d. 1308)
 - Matteo I Visconti, Italian imperial vicar (d. 1322)
 - Nijō Tameyo, Japanese official and poet (d. 1338)
 - Niklot I, German nobleman and knight (d. 1323)
 - Robert II, French nobleman and knight (d. 1302)
 - Sancho of Aragon, Spanish archbishop (d. 1275)
 - approximate date
 - Adolf II of Waldeck, prince-bishop of Liège (d. 1302)
 - Albert II, Duke of Saxony, German nobleman (d. 1298)
 - Albert III, Margrave of Brandenburg-Salzwedel, German nobleman and knight (d. 1300)
 - 1250 or 1259 – Asher ben Jehiel, German Jewish rabbi (d. 1327)
 - Diether of Nassau, archbishop of Trier (d. 1307)
 - Fra Dolcino, Italian priest and reformist (d. 1307)
 - Grigorije II of Ras, Serbian monk-scribe (d. 1321)
 - 1250–1259 – Guido Cavalcanti, Italian poet and writer (d. 1300)
 - Konrad II of Masovia, Polish nobleman (d. 1294)
 - Mordechai ben Hillel, German scholar (d. 1298)
 - Rhys ap Maredudd, Welsh nobleman (d. 1292)
 - Theodoric of Freiberg, German physicist (d. 1311)
 - Záviš of Falkenstein, Bohemian nobleman (d. 1290)
 
Deaths
- February 2 – Erik Eriksson, king of Sweden (b. 1216)
 - February 6 – Geoffrey VI, French nobleman and knight
 - February 8 
- Andrew III, French nobleman and knight (b. 1200)
 - Fakhr ad-Din, Egyptian ruler and military leader
 - Robert I (the Good), French nobleman (b. 1216)
 - William Longespée (the Younger), English knight
 
 - February 11 – Jean de Ronay, French Grand Master
 - March 29 – Ludolph of Ratzeburg, German bishop
 - April 6 
- Guillaume de Sonnac, French Grand Master
 - Hugh XI of Lusignan, French nobleman (b. 1221)
 
 - May 2 – Al-Muazzam Turanshah, Ayyubid ruler of Egypt[4]
 - May 21 – Humbert V, French nobleman and knight (b. 1198)
 - May 26 – Peter I (Mauclerc), French nobleman (b. 1187)
 - May 27 – Raniero Capocci, Italian priest and cardinal
 - June 7 – Vitslav I, Danish nobleman and knight (b. 1180)
 - June 11 – Alice of Schaerbeek, Flemish Cistercian lay sister (b. c. 1220)
 - June 18 – Theresa of Portugal, queen of León (b. 1176)
 - August 10 – Eric IV (Ploughpenny), king of Denmark
 - October 4 – Herman VI, German nobleman and knight
 - October 12 – Richard Wendene, English bishop (b. 1219)
 - December 13 – Frederick II, Holy Roman Emperor (b. 1194)[10]
 - Yang Miaozhen, Chinese female military leader (b. 1193)
 - approximate date
 - Gilbertus Anglicus, English physician and writer (b. 1180)
 - Julian of Speyer, German Franciscan composer and poet
 - Fibonacci (Leonardo Bonacci), Pisan mathematician and writer (b. c. 1170)
 - Romée de Villeneuve, French nobleman and seneschal
 - Shihab al-Din Muhammad al-Nasawi, Persian biographer
 - Walter of Serviliano, Italian Benedictine hermit and abbot
 
References
- ^ Le Roy Ladurie, Emmanuel; Bray, Barbara (1971). Times of Feast, Times of Famine: a History of Climate Since the Year 1000. Garden City, NY: Doubleday. ISBN 0-374-52122-0. OCLC 164590.
 - ^ Humphreys, R. Stephen (1977). From Saladin to the Mongols: The Ayyubids of Damascus, 1193–1260, pp. 305–307. State University of New York Press.
 - ^ According to a monograph on the maritime economy of the Song dynasty written by Jitsuzo Kuwabara (桑原騭藏, 1870–1931).
 - ^ a b c Humphreys, R. Stephen (1977). From Saladin to the Mongols: The Ayyubids of Damascus 1193-1260. Albany: State University of New York Press. ISBN 9780873952637.
 - ^ de Epalza, Miguel (1999). Negotiating cultures: bilingual surrender treaties in Muslim-Crusader Spain under James the Conqueror. Brill. p. 106. ISBN 90-04-11244-8.
 - ^ Stillman, Norman (June 8, 2022). Arab Dress, A Short History: From the Dawn of Islam to Modern Times. BRILL. pp. 113–114. ISBN 978-90-04-49162-5. Retrieved October 3, 2024.
 - ^ Joffé, George (November 20, 2023). Routledge Handbook on the Modern Maghrib. Taylor & Francis. p. 328. ISBN 978-0-429-99964-2. Retrieved October 3, 2024.
 - ^ Zuijderduijn, Jaco (2009). Medieval Capital Markets. Markets for renten, state formation and private investment in Holland (1300-1550). Leiden/Boston: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-17565-5.
 - ^ Catoni, Giuliano. "Bonsignori". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani. Retrieved December 20, 2011.
 - ^ "Frederick II | Biography, Accomplishments, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved September 29, 2020.