List of state leaders in 1237
Asia
- China (Southern Song dynasty) – Emperor Lizong (1224–1264)
- Korea (Goryeo Kingdom) – Gojong (1213–1259)
- Japan (Kamakura period)
- Monarch – Emperor Shijō (1232–1242)
- Kamakura shogunate – Kujō Yoritsune(1226–1244)
- Shikken – Hōjō Yasutoki (1224–1242)
- Khmer Empire – Indravarman II (1220–1243)
- Mongol Empire – Ögedei Khan (1229–1241)
- Pagan Kingdom – Kyaswa (1234–1250)
Europe
- Principality of Achaea – Geoffrey II Villehardouin (c. 1228–1246)
- County of Angoulême – Hugh I (1218–1249)
- Kingdom of Aragon – James I (1213–1276)
- Duchy of Brittany –
- Bulgarian Empire – Ivan Asen II, Tsar of Bulgaria (1218–1241)
- Crown of Castile – Ferdinand III (1217–1252)
- County of Champagne – Theobald IV (1201–1253)
- Kingdom of Denmark – Valdemar II (1202–1241)
- Kingdom of England – Henry III (1216–1272)
- County of Flanders – Jeanne (1205–1244)
- Kingdom of France – Louis IX (1226–1270)
- Kingdom of Gwynedd – Llywelyn the Great, Prince of Gwynedd (1194–1240)
- Holy Roman Empire – Frederick II (1220–1250)
- Duchy of Bohemia – Wenceslaus I, King of Bohemia (1230–1253)
- County of Holland – William II (1234–1256)
- Kingdom of Hungary – Béla IV (1235–1270)
- Grand Duchy of Lithuania – Mindaugas (1236–1253)
- Kingdom of Navarre – Theobald I (1235–1253)
- Kingdom of Norway – Haakon IV (1217–1263)
- Duchy of Poland – Henry I, High Duke of Poland (1232–1238)
- Kingdom of Portugal and the Algarves – Sancho II (1223–1247)
- Kingdom of Scotland – Alexander II (1214–1249)
- Kingdom of Sweden – Eric XI (1222–1229, 1234–1250)
Middle East and North Africa
- Almohad Caliphate – Abdul-Wahid II (1232–1242)
- Principality of Antioch – Bohemond V (1233–1252)
- Kingdom of Armenia – Hethum I (1226–1270)
- Kingdom of Cyprus – Henry I (1218–1253)
- Sultanate of Damascus (Ayyubid dynasty) -
- Al-Ashraf (1229–1237)
- As-Salih Ismail (1237)
- Al-Kamil (1237–1238)
- Egypt (Ayyubid dynasty) – Al-Kamil (1218–1238)
- Sultanate of Rûm
- Kayqubad I (1220–1237)
- Kaykhusraw II (1237–1246)
- Empire of Trebizond – John I (1235–1238)
gollark: So how *do* you make it work?
gollark: Not a fair comparison.
gollark: They don't occur in equal numbers, though.
gollark: I don't think the majority of work can magically be done online, and mental health is a Hard Problem which everyone being at home makes somewhat worse.
gollark: > businesses can move online mental heath crisis is a problem that has other ways to fix it and people don't just abuse their children because of lockdown if they are there were already other problems thereTo some extent. This isn't all easily fixable.
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