1106 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar 1106
MCVI
Ab urbe condita 1859
Armenian calendar 555
ԹՎ ՇԾԵ
Assyrian calendar 5856
Balinese saka calendar 1027–1028
Bengali calendar 512–513
Berber calendar 2056
English Regnal year Hen. 1 – 7 Hen. 1
Buddhist calendar 1650
Burmese calendar 468
Byzantine calendar 6614–6615
Chinese calendar 乙酉年 (Wood Rooster)
3803 or 3596
    — to —
丙戌年 (Fire Dog)
3804 or 3597
Coptic calendar 822–823
Discordian calendar 2272
Ethiopian calendar 1098–1099
Hebrew calendar 4866–4867
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat 1162–1163
 - Shaka Samvat 1027–1028
 - Kali Yuga 4206–4207
Holocene calendar 11106
Igbo calendar 106–107
Iranian calendar 484–485
Islamic calendar 499–500
Japanese calendar Chōji 3 / Kajō 1
(嘉承元年)
Javanese calendar 1011–1012
Julian calendar 1106
MCVI
Korean calendar 3439
Minguo calendar 806 before ROC
民前806年
Nanakshahi calendar −362
Seleucid era 1417/1418 AG
Thai solar calendar 1648–1649
Tibetan calendar ཤིང་མོ་བྱ་ལོ་
(female Wood-Bird)
1232 or 851 or 79
    — to —
མེ་ཕོ་ཁྱི་ལོ་
(male Fire-Dog)
1233 or 852 or 80
Medieval picture of Battle of Tinchebray

Year 1106 (MCVI) was a common year starting on Monday the Julian calendar.

Events

By place

Europe

  • Spring – Bohemond I, prince of Antioch, marries Constance of France (daughter of King Philip I) in the cathedral of Chartres. Philip agrees to marry his second daughter, the 9-year-old Cecile of France, to Tancred (nephew of Bohemond). Meanwhile, Bohemond mobilises an expeditionary force (some 30,000 men) to begin a campaign against Emperor Alexios I.[1]
  • August 7 – Emperor Henry IV escapes his captors at Ingelheim. He enters into negotiations at Cologne with English, French and Danish noblemen, and begins to collect an army to oppose his son Henry V but dies at Liège after a 49-year reign. Henry leads a successful expedition against Count Robert II of Flanders and is forced to swear his allegiance to him.
  • September 28Battle of Tinchebray: King Henry I defeats and imprisons his older brother Robert II, duke of Normandy, in Devizes Castle. Edgar Atheling (uncle of Henry's wife) and the 3-year-old William Clito, son of Robert, are also taken prisoner. Henry places his nephew William in the custody of Helias of Saint-Saens, count of Arques.[2]
  • Autumn – Bohemond I returns to Apulia (Southern Italy) with an expeditionary force to prepare an offensive against the Byzantines. He is accompanied by his newlywed wife Constance (who is pregnant by him) and followers.
  • Sultan Yusuf ibn Tashfin dies after a 45-year reign. He is succeeded by his 22-year-old son Ali ibn Yusuf as ruler of the Almoravid Empire. Ali appoints his brother Tamin ibn Yusuf as governor of Al-Andalus (modern Spain).
  • Bolesław III, duke of Poland, begins a civil war against his half-brother Zbigniew, for control over Lesser Poland and Silesia.
  • The city of Balaguer (located in Catalonia) is conquered from the Moors by Ermengol VI, count of Urgell.

Britain

  • Roger le Poer, bishop of Salisbury, is granted land in south Wales by Henry I. He starts the construction of Kidwelly Castle on the banks of the river Gwendraeth.
  • Magnus Erlendsson becomes Earl of Orkney (until 1115).[3]

By topic

Astronomy

  • February 2 – A comet (the Great Comet of 1106) is seen and reported by several civilisations around the world. Lasting for 40 days, the comet grows steadily in brightness until finally fading away.[4]


Births

  • Alexios Komnenos, Byzantine co-emperor (d. 1142)
  • Celestine III, pope of the Catholic Church (d. 1198)
  • David FitzGerald, bishop of St. Davids (d. 1176)
  • Fujiwara no Michinori, Japanese nobleman (d. 1160)
  • Hugh II, French nobleman (d. 1134)
  • Hugh de Beaumont, 1st Earl of Bedford (d. 1141)
  • Ibn Asakir, Syrian scholar and historian (d. 1175)
  • Chŏng Chung-bu, Korean military leader (d. 1179)
  • Magnus Nielsen, king of Västergötland (d. 1134)[5]
  • Matilda of Anjou, duchess of Normandy (d. 1154)
  • Minamoto no Yorimasa, Japanese military leader (d. 1180)
  • Xing, Chinese empress (d. 1139)

Deaths

  • February 3Khalaf ibn Mula'ib, Uqaylid emir
  • April 16Arnold I, Lotharingian nobleman
  • May 1Conon, Lotharingian nobleman
  • May 19Geoffrey IV, French nobleman
  • June 16Benno, bishop of Meissen (b. 1010)
  • June 24Yan Vyshatich, Kievan nobleman
  • August 7Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor (b. 1050)
  • August 23Magnus, German nobleman (b. 1045)
  • September 13Peter, French nobleman
  • September 17Manasses II, archbishop of Reims
  • October 7Hugh of Die, French bishop (b. 1040)
  • Ali ibn Tahir al-Sulami, Syrian jurist and philologist
  • Domnall Ua Conchobair, king of Connacht
  • Gonzalo Núñez de Lara, Castilian nobleman
  • Hugh of Fauquembergues, prince of Galilee (or 1105)
  • Jikirmish, Seljuk ruler
  • John of Lodi, Italian hermit and bishop (b. 1025)
  • Li Gonglin, Chinese painter and antiquarian (b. 1049)
  • Lothair Udo III, margrave of the Nordmark (b. 1070)
  • Máel Muire mac Céilechair, Irish cleric and writer
  • Minamoto no Yoshiie, Japanese samurai (b. 1039)
  • Nathan ben Jehiel, Italian Jewish lexicographer
  • Richard II, prince of Capua (or 1105)
  • Yusuf ibn Tashfin, sultan of Morocco (b. 1009)

References

  1. ^ Steven Runciman (1952). A History of the Crusades. Vol: The Kingdom of Jerusalem, p. 39. ISBN 978-0-241-29876-3.
  2. ^ C. Warren Hollister (2003). Henry I, p. 206. (Yale University Press, New Haven & London)
  3. ^ Muir, Tom (2005). Orkney in the Sagas: The Story of the Earldom of Orkney as told in the Icelandic Sagas. Kirkwall: The Orcadian. p. 63. ISBN 0954886232.
  4. ^ Cometography.com[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ Pajung, Stefan; Lund, Niels (October 2, 2024). "Magnus Nielssøn". Denmarks Nationalleksikon (in Danish). Retrieved November 8, 2025.