460s

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Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
  • 460
  • 461
  • 462
  • 463
  • 464
  • 465
  • 466
  • 467
  • 468
  • 469
Categories:
  • Births
  • Deaths
  • Establishments
  • Disestablishments

The 460s decade ran from January 1, 460, to December 31, 469.

Events

460

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • Emperor Majorian gathers an expeditionary force (Alans and other barbarians) in Liguria, and enters Aquitaine after a long march, where he visits King Theodoric II at Toulouse.
  • Majorian invades Hispania; his generals Nepotianus and Sunieric lead a Visigoth army into Gallaecia. The Suebi are defeated and Lusitania (modern Portugal) is conquered.
  • King Genseric, fearing a Roman invasion, tries to negotiate a peace with Majorian, who refuses. The Vandals devastate Mauretania and Moorish warriors poison the wells.
  • Majorian assembles a large fleet in Nova Carthago (Cartagena) in preparation for an invasion of the Vandal Kingdom in Africa. However, King Genseric organizes an attack on the fleet, using individuals sympathetic to the Vandals to conduct the raid. The fleet is destroyed and the expedition is abandoned.[1]
  • Emperor Leo I founds the Excubitors (imperial guard) at Constantinople; this elite tagmatic unit (300 men) is recruited from among the warlike Isaurians (approximate date).
Europe[]
Asia[]
  • The Hepthalites (White Huns) conquer the remnants of the Kushan Empire and enter India.
  • A famine that will last for several years begins in the Persian Empire (approximate date).

By topic[]

Art[]
  • The remodeling of the dome of Baptistry of Neon at Ravenna (Italy) is finished.
  • The Ajanta Caves (India) are completed (cut into the volcanic rock and elaborately painted).
  • The seated Buddha in the Yungang Grottoes, Datong (Shanxi), is made (approximate date).
Religion[]

461

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
Europe[]
Anatolia[]

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • November 10Pope Leo I dies at Rome, age 61 (approximate), after a 21-year reign in which he has resisted Manichaeism and defended the Church against Nestorianism. He is succeeded by Hilarius as the 46th pope.
  • Mamertus is elected bishop of Vienne (Gaul).

462

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • September 1 – Possible start of the first Byzantine indiction cycle.
  • Emperor Leo I pays a large ransom for Licinia Eudoxia and Placidia. They return after seven years of captivity in Carthage.
  • The Monastery of Stoudios is founded in Constantinople.
Asia[]
  • The Daming calendar is introduced in China by mathematician Zu Chongzhi (approximate date).

463

By place[]

Europe[]
Asia[]

464


By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • Olybrius is elected Roman consul by the Eastern court in Constantinople.
Europe[]
  • The Suevic nation in Galicia (Northern Spain) is unified under King Remismund.
  • King Theodoric II sends Remismund gifts (for recognizing his kingship), including weapons, and a Gothic princess for a wife.
  • Aegidius dies (possibly poisoned) and is succeeded by his son Syagrius, who becomes ruler of the Domain of Soissons (Gaul).

465

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • Basiliscus, with the help of his sister Verina (wife of emperor Leo I), becomes a consul in the Eastern Roman Empire.
  • August 15Libius Severus, puppet emperor of the Western Roman Empire, dies after a 4-year reign.
  • September 2 – A fire begins in Constantinople and, over the next six days, destroys the buildings in eight of the 14 sections into which the Eastern Roman Imperial capital had been divided.[3]
  • Ricimer, de facto ruler, establishes political control for 2 years from his residence in Rome.
Britannia[]
Europe[]
China[]
  • Qian Fei Di, then Ming Di, becomes ruler of the Liu Song Dynasty after his nephew is assassinated.

By topic[]

Religion[]

466

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • Emperor Leo I repels the Hun invasion of Dacia (modern Romania). They ravage the Balkans but are unable to take Constantinople thanks to the city walls, which are rebuilt and reinforced.
  • Tarasicodissa, an Isaurian officer, comes with evidence that Ardabur (magister militum) is forming a conspiracy against Leo I. Ardabur is arrested for treason.
  • Tarasicodissa adopts the Greek name of Zeno and marries Ariadne, eldest daughter of Leo I (approximate date).
Europe[]
  • King Theodoric II is killed by his younger brother Euric, who succeeds him on the throne. He conquers Hispania and the harbor city of Marseille (Southern Gaul), adding them to the existing Visigothic Kingdom.
  • Euric sends an embassy to the Eastern Roman Empire for recognition of the Visigoth sovereignty. He forms an alliance with the Suebi and the Vandals.
  • A council of twelve townships emerges on the islands in the Venetian lagoon, to form a basic system of governance (approximate date).

By topic[]

Religion[]

467

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • April 12 – Emperor Leo I has his general Anthemius elected emperor of the Western Roman Empire. He allies himself with Ricimer, de facto ruler of Rome, and marries his daughter Alypia to him, to strengthen the relationship and end the hostilities between the Eastern and Western Empire.
  • Summer – King Genseric extends his pirate raids in the Mediterranean Sea; the Vandals sack and enslave the people living in Illyricum, the Peloponnese and other parts of Greece. Leo I joins forces with the Western Empire.
Britannia[]
Asia[]
  • Emperor Skandagupta dies after a 12-year reign, as Huns consolidate their conquests in western India. He is succeeded by his half-brother Purugupta.

468

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • Emperor Leo I assembles a massive naval expedition at Constantinople, which costs 64,000 pounds of gold (more than a year's revenue) and consists of over 1,100 ships carrying 100,000 men. It is the greatest fleet ever sent against the Vandals and brings Leo near to bankruptcy.
  • Emperor Anthemius sends a Roman expedition under command of Marcellinus. He expels the Vandals from Sicily and retakes Sardinia. The Eastern general Heraclius of Edessa lands with a force on the Libyan coast, east of Carthage, and advances from Tripolitania.
  • Battle of Cape Bon: The Vandals defeat the Roman navy under Basiliscus, anchored at Promontorium Mercurii, 45 miles from Carthage (Tunisia). During peace negotiations Genseric uses fire ships, filling them with brushwood and pots of oil, destroying 700 imperial galleys. Basiliscus escapes with his surviving fleet to Sicily, harassed all the way by Moorish pirates.
  • August – Marcellinus is murdered in Sicily, probably at the instigation of his political rival, Ricimer. Heraclius is left to fight alone against the Vandals; after a 2-year campaign in the desert he returns to Constantinople.
  • Basiliscus returns to Constantinople after a disastrous expedition against the Vandals. He is forced to seek sanctuary in the church of Hagia Sophia to escape the wrath of the people. Leo I gives him imperial pardon, but banishes him for 3 years to Heraclea Sintica (Thrace).
  • Dengizich, son of Attila the Hun, sends an embassy to Constantinople to demand money. Leo I offers the Huns settlement in Thrace in exchange for recognition of his authority. Dengizich refuses and crosses the Danube.
  • Roman forces under Anagast defeat the Huns at the Utus River (Bulgaria). Dengizich is killed and his head is paraded through the streets of Constantinople. Stuck on the end of a wooden pole, it is displayed above the Xylokerkos Gate.[4]
  • The Vandals reconquer Sicily, administering a decisive defeat to the Western forces.

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • February 29Pope Hilarius dies at Rome after a 6½-year reign, and is succeeded by Simplicius as the 47th pope.

469

By place[]

Roman Empire[]
  • Ostrogoth prince Theodoric, age 15, returns to Pannonia, after living as a child hostage at the court of Emperor Leo I in Constantinople (see 459).
Europe[]
Copy of the signet ring of King Childeric I
  • The Vandals invade Epirus (modern Greece). They are expelled from the Peloponnese (Greece) and in retaliation, the Vandals take 500 hostages at Zakynthos. On the way back to Carthage they are slaughtered.
  • King Euric declares himself independent from the Western Roman Empire. He extends the Visigothic power in Hispania; conquering the cities of Pamplona, Zaragoza and Mérida.

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • The Vatican makes a pact with the Salian Frankish king Childeric I, agreeing to call him "the new Constantine" on condition that he accept conversion to Christianity.

Significant people[]

Births[]

460

  • Budic II, king of Brittany (approximate date)
  • Hilderic, king of the Vandals and Alans (approximate date)
  • Romulus Augustulus, last emperor of the Western Roman Empire (approximate date)

461

  • Hilderic, king of the Vandals (approximate date)
  • Romulus Augustulus, emperor of the Western Roman Empire

462

  • Anicia Juliana, daughter of Olybrius
  • Muryeong, king of Baekje (Korea)

463

  • Houfei Di, emperor of the Liu Song Dynasty (d. 477)

464

  • Hashim ibn 'Abd Manaf, great-grandfather of Mohammed (approximate date)
  • Wu Di, Chinese emperor of the Liang Dynasty (d. 549)

465

466

  • Arthur, king of the Britons (approximate date)
  • Clovis I, first king of the Franks (approximate date)
  • Xu Mian, high official of the Liang Dynasty (d. 535)

467

  • October 13Emperor Xiaowen of Northern Wei, emperor of Northern Wei (d. 499)
  • Cerdic, first king of Anglo-Saxon Wessex (approximate date)
  • Leo II, Byzantine emperor (d. 474)
  • Emperor Shun of Liu Song, Chinese emperor of Liu Song (d. 479)

468

469

Deaths[]

460

461

  • August 7Majorian, emperor of the Western Roman Empire
  • November 10Pope Leo I
  • Palladius, first bishop of Ireland (approximate date)

462

463

464

465

466

467

468

469

References[]

  1. ^ Merrills, Andy (2017-02-17), Buchet, Christian; Arnaud, Pascal; de Souza, Philip (eds.), "Rome and the Vandals", The Sea in History - The Ancient World (1 ed.), Boydell and Brewer Limited, p. 506, doi:10.1017/9781782049081.041, ISBN 978-1-78204-908-1, retrieved 2020-08-03
  2. ^ Guidoboni, Traina, 1995, p. 114-115
  3. ^ "Fires, Great", in The Insurance Cyclopeadia: Being an Historical Treasury of Events and Circumstances Connected with the Origin and Progress of Insurance, Cornelius Walford, ed. (C. and E. Layton, 1876) pp24
  4. ^ The End of Empire (p. 269). Christopher Kelly, 2009. ISBN 978-0-393-33849-2
  5. ^ Wanton Women in Late-Imperial Chinese Literature: Models, Genres, Subversions and Traditions. BRILL. 2017. p. 36. ISBN 9789004340626.
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