Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 44. Chapters: 1402 births, 1402 deaths, 1402 disestablishments, 1402 establishments, 1402 in Europe, 1402 in law, 1402 works, Conflicts in 1402, Gian Galeazzo Visconti, Principality of Zeta, Kangnido, Battle of Ankara, Humphrey Stafford, 1st Duke of Buckingham, Andre Beauneveu, Ferdinand the Saint Prince, Nezahualcoyotl, Battle of Bryn Glas, University of Wurzburg, Edmund of Langley, 1st Duke of York, Denis the Carthusian, Philip De Carteret, 6th of St Ouen, Anne of Armagnac, Alexander Leslie, Earl of Ross, Jianwen Emperor, Evtimiy of Tarnovo, Brussels Town Hall, Moravian Serbia, Jean de Dunois, Battle of Humbleton Hill, Pedro Bordo de San Superano, John Seymour, Perenelle Flamel, Louis I, Landgrave of Hesse, Battle of Nesbit Moor, John Trevisa, Jean de La Grange, Ra cov, Bonne of Bourbon, Amadeus, Prince of Achaea, List of state leaders in 1402, Adam de Gordon, David Stewart, Duke of Rothesay, Ichij Kaneyoshi, William I of Guelders and Julich, Richard Waldegrave, Robert de Scales, 5th Baron Scales, Elizabeth de Burghersh, 3rd Baroness Burghersh, Battle of Casalecchio, Walter de Danielston, Rudolf of Rudesheim, Gun Temur Khan, Battle of Tripolje, Konstantin Bal i, Konoe Fusatsugu, Magister Wigbold, Gottfried Michaelsen, Pino I Ordelaffi, Fang Xiaoru, Jeanne de Bretagne, Giovanni I Bentivoglio, Joao Anes, Sultan Mahmud, Gaspare Sommaripa, Lord of Paros, Penal Laws against Wales 1402, Hennig Wichmann, Benefit of Clergy Act 1402. Excerpt: Zeta (Serbian: ) was a Province of Medieval Serbia, whose territory encompassed parts of present-day Montenegro and Northernwestern Albania. The region and province is named after the Zeta River. Zeta was first noted, with its name, as an administrative unit of the Principality and Kingdom of Serbia (Rascia), ruled by heirs to the Serbian throne from the Nemanji dynasty. When the principal heir ...