1132
{{Use mdy dates|date=February 2011}}
{{About year|1132}}
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File:Malaquías de Armagh (cropped).jpg (1094–1148)]]
Year 1132 (MCXXXII) was a leap year starting on Friday of the Julian calendar.
Events
= By place =
== Levant ==
- Summer – Imad al-Din Zengi, Seljuk governor (atabeg) of Aleppo and Mosul, marches on Baghdad (the capital of the Abbasid Caliphate), to add it to his dominions. He is defeated by the forces of Caliph Al-Mustarshid, near Tikrit (modern Iraq). Zengi flees and escapes, with the help of Tikrit's governor Najm ad-Din Ayyub (the father of Saladin), who conveys him across the River Tigris.Steven Runciman (1952). A History of The Crusades. Vol II: The Kingdom of Jerusalem, p. 156. {{ISBN|978-0-241-29876-3}}.
== Europe ==
== England ==
- Barnwell Castle is erected in Northamptonshire.
== Asia ==
- June – A fire breaks out in the Chinese capital of Hangzhou, destroying 13,000 houses and forcing many to flee to the nearby hills. Due to large fires as this, the government installs an effective fire fighting force for the city. Items such as bamboo, planks, and rush-matting are temporarily exempted from taxation, 120 tons of rice are distributed among the poor. The government suspends the housing rent requirement of the city's residents.
- The Southern Song court establishes the first permanent standing navy, with the headquarters of the Chinese admiralty based at Dinghai.
= By topic =
== Religion ==
- Diarmait Mac Murchada has the abbey of Kildare in Ireland burned, and the abbess raped.{{cite web | title=Annals of Loch Cé | url=http://www.ucc.ie/celt/published/G100010A/}}{{cite web | title=Chronicon Scotorum | url=http://www.ucc.ie/research/celt/published/T100016/}} He becomes king of the province of Leinster.{{cite web | title= True Origins | url= http://deskeenan.com/3Trchapter_seventeen.htm#Events |access-date=2007-11-14 }}
- Malachy is appointed archbishop of Armagh in Ireland, to impose the Roman liturgy on the independent Irish Church.
- March 5 – Rievaulx Abbey is founded by the Cistercian order, near Helmsley in Yorkshire.{{cite book
|last = Coppack
|first = Glyn
|title = Fountains Abbey
|publisher = Amberley
|date = 2009
|page =11
|id= {{ISBN|978-1-84868-418-8}}
}}{{rp|19}}
- December 27 – Fountains Abbey soon to join the Cistercian order, is founded near Ripon in Yorkshire.{{rp|11}}
- Basingwerk Abbey originally Benedictine, and later Cistercian, is founded near Holywell in Wales.{{cite web
|title = The ruins of Basingwerk Abbey, Wales: artistic and economic center for over 400 years
| url =https://www.abandonedspaces.com/public/basingwerk-abbey.html
|last = Ivanov
|first = Bojan
|date = 4 May 2018
|access-date = 5 February 2021
|website = Abandoned Spaces
}}
Births
- February 2 – William of Norwich, English martyr (d. 1144)
- April 21 – Sancho VI (the Wise), king of Navarre (d. 1194)
- Andronikos Kontostephanos, Byzantine aristocrat (or 1133)
- Ephraim of Bonn, German Jewish rabbi and writer (d. 1196)
- Maurice II de Craon, Norman nobleman and knight (d. 1196)
- Philip of France, French prince and archdeacon (d. 1160)
- Rhys ap Gruffydd, Welsh prince of Deheubarth (d. 1197)
- Vladimir III Mstislavich, Kievan Grand Prince (d. 1171)
Deaths
- February 9 – Maredudd ap Bleddyn, king of Powys (b. 1047)
- March 26 – Geoffrey of Vendôme, French abbot (b. 1070)
- April 1 – Hugh of Châteauneuf, bishop of Grenoble (b. 1053)
- April 14 – Mstislav I (the Great), Kievan Grand Prince (b. 1076)
- June 6 – Taj al-Muluk Buri, Seljuk governor and regent
- October 26 – Floris the Black, Dutch count of Holland
- Conrad von Plötzkau, margrave of the Northern March
- Hugh III of Le Puiset, French nobleman and crusader
- William of Zardana (or Saône), French nobleman (or 1133)