Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
1269 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1269
MCCLXIX
Ab urbe condita2022
Armenian calendar718
ԹՎ ՉԺԸ
Assyrian calendar6019
Balinese saka calendar1190–1191
Bengali calendar676
Berber calendar2219
English Regnal year53 Hen. 3  54 Hen. 3
Buddhist calendar1813
Burmese calendar631
Byzantine calendar6777–6778
Chinese calendar戊辰年 (Earth Dragon)
3966 or 3759
     to 
己巳年 (Earth Snake)
3967 or 3760
Coptic calendar985–986
Discordian calendar2435
Ethiopian calendar1261–1262
Hebrew calendar5029–5030
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1325–1326
 - Shaka Samvat1190–1191
 - Kali Yuga4369–4370
Holocene calendar11269
Igbo calendar269–270
Iranian calendar647–648
Islamic calendar667–668
Japanese calendarBun'ei 6
(文永6年)
Javanese calendar1179–1180
Julian calendar1269
MCCLXIX
Korean calendar3602
Minguo calendar643 before ROC
民前643年
Nanakshahi calendar−199
Thai solar calendar1811–1812
Tibetan calendar阳土龙年
(male Earth-Dragon)
1395 or 1014 or 242
     to 
阴土蛇年
(female Earth-Snake)
1396 or 1015 or 243
King Louis IX (the Saint) (1214–1270)

Year 1269 (MCCLXIX) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

Events

By place

Europe

England

  • Prince Edward (the Lord Edward) obtains the right to levy a twentieth of the value of the Church's wealth to finance the Ninth Crusade. That sum turns out to be insufficient, and Edward has to borrow to reach his target.[1]
  • John Comyn begins the construction of Blair Castle, in Scotland.

Africa

By topic

Religion

Science

  • Pierre de Maricourt, French mathematician and writer, performs a series of experiments with magnetic poles and proposes that a machine can be run forever in perpetual motion using the properties of magnets.

Births

Deaths

References

  1. Ferris, Eleanor (1902). "The Financial Relations of the Knights Templars to the English Crown". American Historical Review. 8 (1).
  2. Abun-Nasir, Jamil (1987). A history of the Maghrib in the Islamic period, pp. 103–118. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521337674.
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