1250s

The 1250s decade ran from January 1, 1250, to December 31, 1259.

Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
Categories:
  • Births
  • Deaths
  • By country
  • By topic
  • Establishments
  • Disestablishments

The decade was perhaps most dominated by the Mongols, who under the leadership of Möngke Khan continued their rapid expansion throughout Asia both to the east and west of their home territories. The Mongols destroyed the Kingdom of Dali in Laos, and captured the Goryeo kingdom in Korea, Anatolia in Turkey, and the Islamic center of Baghdad, where tens or hundreds of thousands were killed as the city was burned to the ground. In Thailand the Lannathai kingdom was founded. In Japan, a new sect of Buddhism was formed, while in Korea the carving of Buddhist scriptures on 81,000 wooden blocks was completed.

Europe noted several important cultural milestones, including the completion of several important cathedrals and the beginning of construction of others, as well as the founding of the Collège de Sorbonne at the University of Paris. Significant political developments in Europe included the lack of a Holy Roman Emperor for most of the decade, further erosion of the power of the monarchy in England and Portugal, the end of the failed Seventh Crusade in Egypt, and the expulsion of the Jews from France and the Moors from Portugal. In religion, a papal bull authorized the use of torture in the Medieval Inquisition, and the Roman Catholic Church clarified the concept of purgatory. Several important modern cities, including Stockholm and Lviv, were founded in the 1250s.

One of the largest volcanic eruptions of the Holocene epoch is thought to have occurred circa January 1258, with ice cores pointing to a tropical location such as El Chichón, Mexico or possibly Quilotoa, Ecuador. The aftermath may have led to climatic anomalies in rainfall, effects on agriculture, as well as famine and epidemic disease across Europe.[1]

War and politics

Mongol Empire

  • 1251 Möngke Khan is elected as the fourth khan of the Mongol Empire.
  • 1253 Galicia becomes a vassal state to the expanding Mongol Empire.
  • 1253 The Mongol Empire launches attacks on the Muslim cities of Baghdad and Cairo.
  • 1253 The Mongol Empire destroys the Kingdom of Dali (Yunnan) in Laos and incorporates the region into their empire.
  • 1253 Kublai Khan introduces the baisha xiyue song and dance suite to the music of Yunnan.
  • 1255 Hulagu Khan is dispatched by his brother Möngke Khan to destroy the remaining Muslim states in southwestern Asia.
  • 1256 October Mongol commander Baiju (operating under Hulagu Khan's command) leads his forces in a victory over Kay Ka'us II of the Sultanate of Rum, thereby capturing Anatolia.
  • 1256 December 15 Hulagu Khan captures and destroys the Hashshashin stronghold at Alamut in present-day Iran.
  • 1256 Hulagu Khan establishes the Ilkhanate dynasty of Persia, which will become one of four main divisions of the Mongol Empire.
  • 1258 February 13 The Hulagu Khan's Mongol forces overrun Baghdad, then the leading center of Islamic culture and learning, burning it to the ground and killing as many as 800,000 citizens.
  • 1259 The Goryeo kingdom in Korea surrenders to invading Mongol forces.
  • 1259 Second Mongol Golden Horde raid against Poland, led by Nogai Khan.

Europe

Asia and Africa

Culture

Science and literature

  • 1250 Albertus Magnus isolates the element arsenic. He also first uses the word oriole to describe a type of bird (most likely the golden oriole of Great Britain).
  • 1254 The classic Japanese text Kokin Chomonjo is completed.
  • 1257 Matthew Paris, English historian, personally interviews King Henry III of England for a week straight while compiling his major work of English history, Chronica Majora.

Art and architecture

Cities and institutions

  • 1250 University of Valladolid is founded in Spain.
  • 1251 The German city of Berlin, founded some fifty years earlier, receives its city charter.
  • 1252 The first European gold coins are minted in the Italian city of Florence, and are known as florins.
  • 1252 The Swedish city of Stockholm is founded by Birger Jarl.
  • 1254 The Danish city of Copenhagen receives its city charter.
  • 1254 The Swedish city of Malmö is founded.
  • 1255 The Portuguese capital is moved to Lisbon.
  • 1255 Königsberg (now Kaliningrad) is founded in Prussia.
  • 1256 The city of Lviv, in present-day Ukraine, is founded by Danylo King of Rus.
  • 1257 Robert de Sorbon founds the Collège de Sorbonne at Paris, giving a formal college (and still-common name) to the already existing University of Paris in France.

Religion

Births

Deaths

References

  1. Emile-Geay, J., Seager, R., Cane, M., Cook, E., Haug, G.H., [The volcanic eruption of 1258 A.D. and the subsequent ENSO event, Geophysical Research Letters, 321, XXXX, doi:10.1029/2006JAXYZW, Mar 2006. (available online Archived 2006-09-24 at the Wayback Machine, pdf file)
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