1387
| Years |
|---|
| Millennium |
| 2nd millennium |
| Centuries |
| Decades |
| Years |
| 1387 by topic |
|---|
| Leaders |
|
| Birth and death categories |
| Births – Deaths |
| Establishments and disestablishments categories |
| Establishments – Disestablishments |
| Art and literature |
| 1387 in poetry |
| Gregorian calendar | 1387 MCCCLXXXVII |
| Ab urbe condita | 2140 |
| Armenian calendar | 836 ԹՎ ՊԼԶ |
| Assyrian calendar | 6137 |
| Balinese saka calendar | 1308–1309 |
| Bengali calendar | 793–794 |
| Berber calendar | 2337 |
| English Regnal year | 10 Ric. 2 – 11 Ric. 2 |
| Buddhist calendar | 1931 |
| Burmese calendar | 749 |
| Byzantine calendar | 6895–6896 |
| Chinese calendar | 丙寅年 (Fire Tiger) 4084 or 3877 — to — 丁卯年 (Fire Rabbit) 4085 or 3878 |
| Coptic calendar | 1103–1104 |
| Discordian calendar | 2553 |
| Ethiopian calendar | 1379–1380 |
| Hebrew calendar | 5147–5148 |
| Hindu calendars | |
| - Vikram Samvat | 1443–1444 |
| - Shaka Samvat | 1308–1309 |
| - Kali Yuga | 4487–4488 |
| Holocene calendar | 11387 |
| Igbo calendar | 387–388 |
| Iranian calendar | 765–766 |
| Islamic calendar | 788–789 |
| Japanese calendar | Shitoku 4 / Kakei 1 (嘉慶元年) |
| Javanese calendar | 1300–1301 |
| Julian calendar | 1387 MCCCLXXXVII |
| Korean calendar | 3720 |
| Minguo calendar | 525 before ROC 民前525年 |
| Nanakshahi calendar | −81 |
| Thai solar calendar | 1929–1930 |
| Tibetan calendar | མེ་ཕོ་སྟག་ལོ་ (male Fire-Tiger) 1513 or 1132 or 360 — to — མེ་མོ་ཡོས་ལོ་ (female Fire-Hare) 1514 or 1133 or 361 |
Year 1387 (MCCCLXXXVII) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Julian calendar.
Events
January–December
- Elizabeta Kotromanic, mother of Mary, Queen of Hungary and the regent of Hungary, is murdered in prison by the Croatian rebels (her daughter is liberated on 4 June).
- January 1 – Charles III ascends to the throne of Navarre, after the death of his father, Charles II.[1]
- January 5 – John I succeeds his father, Peter IV, as King of Aragon and Valencia, and forms an alliance with France and Castile.
- March 11 – Battle of Castagnaro: Padua, led by John Hawkwood, is victorious over Giovanni Ordelaffi of Verona.
- March 24–25 – Battle of Margate off the coast of Margate: The Kingdom of England is victorious over a Franco-Castilian-Flemish fleet.
- June 2 – John Holland, a maternal half-brother of Richard II of England, is created Earl of Huntingdon.
- August 22 – Olaf, King of Norway and Denmark and claimant to the throne of Sweden, dies. The vacant thrones come under the regency of his mother Margaret I of Denmark, who will soon become queen in her own right.
- September 27 – Petru of Moldavia pays homage to Władysław II Jagiełło, making Moldavia a Polish fief (which it will remain until 1497).
- December 19 – Battle of Radcot Bridge: Forces loyal to Richard II of England are defeated by a group of rebellious barons known as the Lords Appellant. Richard II is imprisoned, until he agrees to replace all the councillors in his court.
Date unknown
- Timur conquers the Muzaffarid Empire in central Persia, and appoints three puppet rulers.
- Khan Tokhtamysh of the Golden Horde invades the Timurid Empire, but has to withdraw soon after, due to heavy snow.
- Maghan II succeeds his brother, Musa II, as Mansa of the Mali Empire
Births
- July 6 – Queen Blanche I of Navarre (d. 1441)
- date unknown – Henriette, Countess of Montbéliard, regent of Württemberg (d. 1444)
Deaths
- January – Elizabeth of Bosnia, regent of Hungary
- January 1 – King Charles II of Navarre (b. 1332)[2]
- January 6 – Peter IV of Aragon (b. 1319)
- July 20 – Robert IV of Artois, Count of Eu (poisoned) (b. 1356)
- July 22 – Frans Ackerman, Flemish statesman (b. 1330)
- August 23 – King Olaf IV of Norway/Olaf II of Denmark (b. 1370)
- date unknown
- Richard Óg Burke, second Clanricarde of Ireland
- Sir David Hanmer, Welsh judge, father-in-law of Owain Glyndŵr
References
- ^ Woodward, Bernard Bolingbroke; Cates, William Leist Readwin (1872). Encyclopaedia of Chronology: Historical and Biographical. Lee and Shepard. p. 313.
- ^ "Charles II | king of Navarre". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved March 21, 2019.