- male, deceased (1114)
- Nestor (c. 1056 - c. 1114) was the reputed author of the earliest East Slavic chronicle, the "Lives of St Theodosius" and of "Boris and Gleb", and...
- male, deceased (1259)
- Matthew Paris (c. 1200-1259) was a Benedictine monk, English chronicler, artist in illuminated manuscripts and cartographer, based at St Albans...
- male, deceased (1405)
- Jean Froissart (c.1337 - c.1405) was one of the most important of the chroniclers of medieval France. For centuries, "Froissart's Chronicles" have...
- male, deceased (1185)
- William of Tyre (c. 1130 - 1185) was archbishop of Tyre and a chronicler of the Crusades and the Middle Ages.
- male, deceased (1236)
- Roger of Wendover (died May 6, 1236), probably a native of Wendover in Buckinghamshire, was an English chronicler of the 13th century. At some...
- male, 519 years old
- Antonio Pigafetta (c. 1491 - c. 1534), was an Italian navigator born in Vicenza. He paid a large sum of money to accompany and assist the...
- male, deceased (1142)
- Orderic Vitalis (1075-c. 1142) was an English chronicler who wrote one of the great contemporary chronicles of 11th and 12th century Normandy and...
- male, 1009 years old
- Adam of Bremen (also: Adam Bremensis) was one of the most important German medieval chroniclers. He lived and worked in the second half of the 11th...
- male, deceased (1348)
- Giovanni Villani ("ca" 1275-1348), the Florentine writer of the famous chronicles (the "Cronica") is the greatest Italian chronicler of his own...
- male, deceased (1449)
- Walter Bower or Bowmaker (1385-1449), Scottish chronicler, was born about 1385 at Haddington, East Lothian. He was abbot of Inchcolm Abbey (in the...
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