The Battle of Formigny came to an end as France defeated the last English forces.
The South Korean alphabet, called 'Hangul,' was published.
The Prussian Confederation was formed.
From this day until February 10, 1435, London's Thames river completely froze.
Joan of Arc was burned at the stake.
Joan of Arc was accused of reverting into heresy by donning male clothing again.
The trial against Joan of Arc begins.
Joan of Arc was captured by the Burgundian Faction at the siege of Compiègne.
After a second siege, Joan of Arc liberated the town of Saint-Pierre-le-Moûtier, France.
After laying siege to Orléans for nearly seven months, England's forces finally gave up and simply marched away.
The Valais Witch Trials started in Switzerland, making it the first witch hunt of its kind, which became much more widespread over the next few decades.
King Henry V of England died aged 35 in Château de Vincennes, France.
St. Elizabeth's flood began in the evening when a seawall at the Zuiderzee dike in the Netherlands broke.
The Battle of Agincourt between the English and the French took place.
King Charles VI of France granted a monopoly for the ripening of Roquefort cheese to the village of Roquefort-Sur-Soulzon.
The Battle of Grunwald began.
Pope Gregory XII was appointed head of the Catholic Church by a conclave of 15 cardinals in Rome.
Chinese mariner and explorer Zheng He set sail with his fleet to explore the world for the first time.
The Battle of Ankara commenced when Turco-Mongol conqueror Timur invaded Anatolia.
Owain Glyndŵr was declared Prince of Wales by his followers.
Parliament officially nominated Henry IV as Richard II's successor and proclaimed him king of England.
King Charles VI of France suddenly declared that no Jew may live under his rule, following complaints from Christians in France.
Muhammed VII became the twelfth sultan of the Emirate of Granada.
Tbilisi, the capital of Georgia, fell to the armies of Timur.
Germany's oldest university, and one of the world's oldest surviving universities, The Universität Heidelberg, held a lecture for the first time.
Tvrtko I became the first king of Bosnia.
A mysterious outbreak of dancing plague or choreomania occurred in the German city of Aachen.
Robert Stewart ascended to the Scottish throne, marking the beginning of the House of Stewart.
The Battle of Auray took place in the French town of Auray. The battle was between England and France, with the English winning.
An earthquake destroyed the town of Basel, Switzerland.
Between 100 and 3000 Jews were killed in riots in The Erfurt Massacre in the town of Erfurt, Germany.
Hundreds of Jews in Strasbourg, France, were publicly burnt to death.
During the Black Death persecutions, 700 Jews were burned alive in their own homes in Basel, Netherlands.
The First English order of knighthood was instituted.
The Battle of Crécy occurred when the French army attacked the English army while they traversed northern France.
The first stone of Giotto's Campanile in Italy was laid.
Philip VI was coronated and became King of France.
The Declaration of Arbroath was signed in Scotland to reaffirm the country's independence.
King Berger of Sweden celebrated Christmas with his brothers before throwing them in his dungeons to die.
Holy Emperor Louis IV of Bavaria defeated Frederick I of Austria during the Battle of Gammelsdorf.
Scottish knight William Wallace was executed for treason by being hung, drawn, and quartered by order of King Edward I of England.
The leader in Scotland's fight for independence, William Wallace, was captured and later trialed and executed in London.
The English were defeated at the Battle of Stirling Bridge.
King Edward I of England fought the Scots to punish King John Balliol for not being an ally against France with England.
Pope Celestine V resigned after just five months in the job to return to his life as an ascetic hermit.
The Crusaders lost control of the city of Acre, the Kingdom of Jerusalem's last bastion, after a fourteen-day siege.
King Edward I of England decreed that all Jews must leave the country by November.
Northern Germany and the Netherlands were struck by St. Lucia's flood, killing more than 50,000 people.
The last Prince of Wales, Dafydd ap Gruffudd, was the first person recorded to have been hanged, drawn, and quartered.
Peter III of Aragon became the King of Sicily.