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1347

Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
1347 by topic
Leaders
Political entities - State leaders - Religious leaders
Birth and death categories
Births - Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments - Disestablishments
Art and literature
1347 in poetry
1347 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar 1347
MCCCXLVII
Ab urbe condita 2100
Armenian calendar 796
ԹՎ ՉՂԶ
Assyrian calendar 6097
Bengali calendar 754
Berber calendar 2297
English Regnal year 20 Edw. 3 – 21 Edw. 3
Buddhist calendar 1891
Burmese calendar 709
Byzantine calendar 6855–6856
Chinese calendar 丙戌(Fire Dog)
4043 or 3983
    — to —
丁亥年 (Fire Pig)
4044 or 3984
Coptic calendar 1063–1064
Discordian calendar 2513
Ethiopian calendar 1339–1340
Hebrew calendar 5107–5108
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat 1403–1404
 - Shaka Samvat 1268–1269
 - Kali Yuga 4447–4448
Holocene calendar 11347
Igbo calendar 347–348
Iranian calendar 725–726
Islamic calendar 747–748
Japanese calendar Jōwa 3
(貞和3年)
Javanese calendar 1259–1260
Julian calendar 1347
MCCCXLVII
Korean calendar 3680
Minguo calendar 565 before ROC
民前565年
Nanakshahi calendar −121
Thai solar calendar 1889–1890


Year 1347 (MCCCXLVII) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.


The Mamluke Empire was hit by the plague in the autumn.Baghdad was hit in the same year.

After years of resistance against the Delhi Sultan Muhammud bin Tughluq, the Bahmani Kingdom, a Muslim Sultanate in Deccan, was established on August 3, when King Ala-ud-din Hasan Bahman Shah was crowned in a mosque in Daulatabad. Later in the year, the Kingdom's capital was moved from Daulatabad to the more central Gulbarga. Southeast Asia suffered a drought which dried up an important river which ran through the capital city of the Kingdom of Ayodhya, forcing the King to move the capital to a new location on the Lop Buri River.

On 2 February the Byzantine Empire's civil war between John VI Kantakouzenos and the regency ended with John VI entering Constantinople. On 8 February, an agreement was concluded with the empress Anna of Savoy, whereby he and John V Palaiologos would rule jointly. The agreement was finalized in May when John V married Kantakouzenos' 15-year-old daughter. The war had come at a high cost economically and territorially, and much of the Empire was in need of rebuilding. To make matters worse, in May Genoese ships fleeing the Black Death in Kaffa stopped in Constantinople. The plague soon spread from their ships to the city. By autumn, the epidemic had spread throughout the Balkans, possibly through contact with Venetian ports along the Adriatic Sea. Specific cases were recorded in the northern Balkans on 25 December, in the city of Split.


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