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===January – March=== * [[January 17]] – Queen Oljath, who had been the Queen consort of the [[Kingdom of Georgia]] as wife of [[Vakhtang II of Georgia|King Vakhtang II]] (d. 1292), and then his cousin, [[David VIII of Georgia|King David VIII]] (d. 1302), marries a third time, taking as her husband Qara Sonqur, Governor of [[Maragheh]] (in the modern-day East Azerbaijan province of Iran), in exchange for a [[dowry]] of 30,000 dinars.<ref>W. B. Fisher, ''The Cambridge History of Iran'' (Cambridge University Press, 1968) p.403</ref> * [[January 21]] (3 Shawwal 713 AH) – [[Muhammad III of Granada]], Sultan from 1302 to 1309, is murdered by being drowned in the pool of the Dar al-Kubra on orders of his brother, Sultan [[Nasr of Granada|Nas]]r.<ref>[https://dbe.rah.es/biografias/6552/muhammad-iii "Muhammad III"], by Francisco Vidal Castro, in ''Diccionario Biográfico electrónico'' (Real Academia de la Historia (ed.)</ref> * [[February 8]] (21 Shawwal 713 AH) – Sultan [[Nasr of Granada]] is forced to abdicate after 18 days as the ruler of the [[Emirate of Granada]] (in modern-day [[Spain]]) by his nephew, [[Ismail I of Granada|Abu'l-Walid Ismail I ibn Faraj]], who is proclaimed at the [[Alhambra]] as the new Sultan. * [[March 18]] – [[Jacques de Molay]], Grand Master of the [[Knights Templar]] and [[Geoffroi de Charney]], are, by orders of King [[Philip IV of France]] ("Philip the Fair"), [[Death by burning|burned at the stake]] in front of the cathedral of [[Notre-Dame de Paris]] on the [[Île de la Cité]] in the [[Seine]]. Jacques declares his innocence and that the Templar Order is also innocent of all the charges of [[heresy]]. It is said that Jacques correctly predicts the deaths of both Philip and [[Pope Clement V]] within the year.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Elizabeth A. R. Brown |year=2015 |title=Philip the Fair, Clement V, and the end of the Knights Templar: The execution of Jacques de Molay and Geoffroi de Charny in March |journal=Viator |volume=47 |issue=1 |pages=229–292. |doi=10.1484/J.VIATOR.5.109474}}</ref> * [[March]] – [[Tour de Nesle Affair]]: After confirmation that two of his sons' wives are engaged in [[adultery]], King Philip IV of France orders the arrest of his daughters-in-law, [[Margaret of Burgundy, Queen of France|Margaret of Burgundy]] (the wife of [[Louis X of France|Prince Louis X]]), [[Blanche of Burgundy]] (wife of [[Charles IV of France|Prince Charles of Valois]]), and [[Joan II, Countess of Burgundy]] (wife of [[Philip V of France|Prince Philip V]]). The arrests come after the accusations of King Philip's daughter, [[Isabella of France|Isabella, Queen consort of England]], and surveillance of the Tower of Nesle.<ref>Alison Weir, ''Isabella: She-Wolf of France, Queen of England'' (Pimlico, 2006) p.92,99</ref> Joan II is charged with being an accessory for being aware of the crime and not reporting it, and put under house arrest until after King Philip's death later in the year. Blanche is imprisoned at the [[Château Gaillard]] until 1322. Margaret will die of illness in prison a year later, and five months after technically becoming Queen consort of France.<ref>Jacqueline Broad and Karen Green, ''Virtue, Liberty, and Toleration: Political Ideas of European Women, 1400–1800'' (Springer, 2007) p.8</ref> Two knights, [[Philip of Aunay]] and his older brother Walter of Aunay, are also arrested for adultery (with Margaret and Blanche respectively), imprisoned, tortured at the Place du Grand Martroy in [[Pontoise]] and brutally executed on [[April 19]].<ref>Gillmeister, Heiner (1998). ''Tennis: A Cultural History'', pp. 17–21. London: Leicester University Press. {{ISBN|978-0-7185-0147-1}}.</ref><ref>Didier Audinot, ''Histoires effrayantes'' (Editions Grancher, 2006)</ref>
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