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(September 2014 )
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Petrarch (1304-1374)
Yoshida Kenkō
1370–1398 – Approximate date of production of the earliest part of the Sankt Florian Psalter , one of the earliest surviving texts to use the Polish language .
1372 – Old Permic alphabet introduced by Stephen of Perm .
1374
1377 – Production of the earliest known copy of the Laurentian Codex .
1381: 30 May –November – Peasants' Revolt in England. Preacher John Ball apparently cites the poem Piers Plowman (which is revised during this decade) and John Gower includes an account of the events in his Vox Clamantis . On 15 June, the University of Cambridge 's library and archives are burnt in the centre of the town, with one Margery Starre leading the mob in a dance to the rallying cry "Away with the learning of clerks, away with it! ".[3] The events inspire the late 16th century play The Life and Death of Jack Straw ,[4] Robert Southey 's dramatic poem Wat Tyler (1794 ),[5] and novels such as Pierce Egan the Younger 's Wat Tyler (1841 ),[6] William Harrison Ainsworth 's Merry England (1874 )[7] and William Morris 's A Dream of John Ball (1886 ).[8]
1382 – Earliest recorded appearance of Wycliffe's Bible .
1384 – Henry of Langenstein writes his letter, De scismate , to Echard von Dersch , Bishop of Worms.[9]
1386: October – Geoffrey Chaucer is obliged to give up most of his official offices in London and retires to Kent where he may work on The Canterbury Tales .[10]
1388 – Revision of Wycliffe's Bible is completed by John Purvey , and Wyclif's followers, known as Lollards , begin to be persecuted in England.
1390–1 – Production of the Book of Ballymote in Ireland .
1390s – Production of the Yellow Book of Lecan in Ireland.
1397 – Production of the Kiev Psalter in Kiev Rus .
1398 – The early 13th century carved wooden text of the Tripitaka Koreana is moved to the Haeinsa Buddhist temple in modern-day South Korea , where it will remain into the 21st century.
unknown dates
c. 1300
c. 1300–10
Early to mid-14th century
1307
c. 1308–21
c. 1309–24
1310
1310–1320
1312
1315–16
c. 1315–25
1316–18
1318
c. 1320–35
c. 1320–30
1320
1320–23
c. 1321
Liber Legum Regum Antiquorum (attributed to Andrew Horn )
c. 1321–23
Sanguozhi Pinghua (三國志平話, Sānguózhì Pínghuà) Records of the Three Kingdoms in Plain Language )
1326
1328
c. 1329–32
1330
c. 1330–40
1330–43
c. 1330–1400
1335
1335–40
1338–14 (first published 1396–1397)
1340
c. 1340
c. 1340–41
c. 1340–1349
1345
1346
c. 1350
c. 1352
1353
c. 1355
c. 1360–84
1365
c. 1367
1368–71
1370
1371
c. 1374
1375
1376
1377
1378
1381
1382
c. 1383
1384
Late 1380s
1387
1389
Gopalraj Vamshavali (गोपालराज वंशावली, a history of Nepal)
c. 1390
1390
1390s
1395
c. 1399
Bernat Metge - The Dream (Lo Somni) , first humanist work in Catalan.
Christine de Pizan
Cent Ballades d'Amant et de Dame, Virelyas, Rondeaux
L'Épistre au Dieu d'amours
L'Épistre de Othéa a Hector
Unknown
1303 – Bridget of Sweden (Birgitta Birgersdotter), Swedish mystic, writer and saint (died 1373)
1304 – Petrarch (Francesco Petrarca) Tuscan poet (died 1374)
1313 – Giovanni Boccaccio , Italian writer (died 1375)
c. 1315 or 1317 – Hafez , Persian poet (died 1390)
1320 – Lalleshwari , Kashmiri Hindu poet (died 1392)
1332: 27 May – Ibn Khaldun , North African historiographer and philosopher (died 1406)
c. 1332 – Catherine of Vadstena , Swedish mystic, writer and saint (died 1381)
1333 – Kan'ami (Kan'ami Kiyotsugu (観阿弥 清次), Japanese Noh actor (died 1384)
c. 1340–45 – Walter Hilton , English mystic writing in Latin and English (died 1396)
c. November 1342 – Julian of Norwich , English religious writer and mystic (died c. 1416)
1343 – Geoffrey Chaucer , English poet (died 1400)
1347 – Catherine of Siena , Italian theologian and saint (died 1380)
1348 – Jan of Jenštejn , Archbishop of Prague, writer, composer and poet (died 1400)
c. 1363 – Zeami Motokiyo (世阿弥 元清), Japanese Noh actor and playwright (died c. 1443)
1364 – Christine de Pizan , Venetian-born Middle French court poet and writer (died c. 1430)
c. 1368 – Thomas Hoccleve , English poet and clerk (died 1426)
c. 1373 – Margery Kempe , English mystic and autobiographer (died c. 1440)
1378 – Zhu Quan (朱權), Prince of Ning, Chinese military commander, feudal lord, historian and playwright (died 1448)
1384 – Enrique de Villena , Spanish writer, theologian and poet (died 1434)
1393 – John Capgrave , English historian and scholastic theologian (died 1464)
1398 – Íñigo López de Mendoza, 1st Marquis of Santillana , Castilian politician and poet (died 1458)
After 1306 – Adam de la Halle , French trouvère poet (born c. 1237)
1308 – Duns Scotus , Scottish philosopher and theologian (born c. 1266)
1309 – Angela of Foligno , Italian mystic and saint (born 1248 )
1310: 1 June – Marguerite Porete , French mystic (burnt as heretic, year of birth unknown)
1315: 10 March – Agnes Blannbekin , Austrian Beguine and Christian mystic (born c. 1244)
c. 1315 – Ramon Llull , Majorcan polymath and novelist in Catalan (born c. 1232)
1321: 14 September – Dante Alighieri , Italian poet (born c. 1265)[14]
1325:
1345: 14 April – Richard de Bury , English bishop and bibliophile (born 1287)
1349: September – Richard Rolle , English hermit, mystic and religious writer (probably born between 1390 and 1400)
c. 1350 – Yoshida Kenkō (吉田 兼好), Japanese author and Buddhist monk (probably born 1283)
1364: 12 March – Ranulf Higden , English chronicler
1373: 23 July – Bridget of Sweden (Birgitta Birgersdotter), Swedish mystic, writer and saint[15]
1374: 19 July – Petrarch , Italian poet[16]
1375: 21 December – Giovanni Boccaccio , Italian poet[17]
1377: April – Guillaume de Machaut , French poet and composer
1380:
1381: 24 March – Catherine of Vadstena , Swedish mystic, writer and saint
1384:
1392 – Lalleshwari , Kashmiri Shaivite poet and mystic
1395: 13 March – John Barbour , Scottish poet
1396: 24 March – Walter Hilton , English Augustinian mystic writing in Latin and English (born c. 1340–45)
1400: 25 October – Geoffrey Chaucer , English poet (born c. 1343)[2]
Dunn, Alastair (2002). The Great Rising of 1381: the Peasants' Revolt and England's Failed Revolution . Stroud: Tempus. pp. 128–129. ISBN 978-0-7524-2323-4 .
anonymous (1593). The Life and Death of Iacke Straw, A notable Rebell in England Who was kild in Smithfield by the Lord Maior of London . STC (2nd ed.), 23356. London.
Sommerfeldt, Historisches Jahrbuch (Munich, 1909), XXX, 46–61
Strohm, Paul (2014). The Poet's Tale: Chaucer and the year that made the Canterbury Tales . London: Profile Books. ISBN 978-178125-059-4 .
Fr. Paolo O. Pirlo, SHMI (1997). "St. Bridget". My First Book of Saints . Sons of Holy Mary Immaculate – Quality Catholic Publications. pp. 158–159. ISBN 971-91595-4-5 .
Reetzke, James. Biographical Sketches: A Brief History of the Lord's Recovery. Chicago: Chicago Bibles and Books, 2003: 29. Print.