620s

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Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries:
  • 6th century
  • 7th century
  • 8th century
Decades:
Years:
  • 620
  • 621
  • 622
  • 623
  • 624
  • 625
  • 626
  • 627
  • 628
  • 629
Categories:
  • Births
  • Deaths
  • Establishments
  • Disestablishments

The 620s decade ran from January 1, 620, to December 31, 629.

Events

620

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • Byzantine–Sassanid War: King Khosrau II captures Ancyra, an important Byzantine military base in central Anatolia. After the conquest of Egypt and Palestine, he restores the Persian Empire as it existed in 490 BC under Darius I.
  • The Slavs invade the area around Thessaloniki, which is unsuccessfully besieged. The city becomes a Byzantine enclave surrounded by Slavic territory. Urban life disappears and many towns in the Balkan Peninsula become villages.[1]
Britain[]
  • The Angles under King Edwin of Northumbria invade Rheged ("Old North") in Northern England, and expel King Llywarch Hen. He flees to Powys, and becomes a famous bard. Edwin's armies fight against Gododdin and Strathclyde.
Asia[]
  • King Pulakeshin II defeats the Harsha army on the banks of the Narmada River. Harsha loses a major part of his elephant force and retreats. A truce establishes Narmada as the northern boundary of the Chalukya Kingdom (India).
America[]
  • The town of Cholula is founded in (later said to be the oldest continuously occupied town in all of North America).

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • Weltenburg Abbey in Bavaria (Germany) is founded by Benedictine monks.
  • Isra and Mi'raj (Muhammad's ascension to heaven to meet God).

621

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • Emperor Heraclius concludes a peace agreement (in exchange for an annual tribute) with the Avars on the Balkan Peninsula, giving him a free hand to assemble Byzantine forces in Asia Minor, for non-military expenditure against the Persian Empire.[2]
  • The city of Málaga, in southern Spain in the province of Spania, is conquered by the Visigoths.[citation needed]
Europe[]
  • King Sisebut dies after a 9-year reign and is succeeded by his son Reccared II (just a child).[3] Reccared is placed on the throne by the Visigothic nobility, but dies after two months. Suintila, his half-uncle and regent, becomes king of the Visigothic Kingdom.
Asia[]
  • Emperor Gaozu delegates control of his military and civil administration in the east to his second son, Li Shimin. He concentrates on reforming coinage and taxation.
  • May 28Battle of Hulao: Li Shimin defeats the numerically superior army of Dou Jiande near the Hulao Pass.
  • June 4Wang Shichong, self-declared emperor, surrenders to Li Shimin at Luoyang following Dou Jiande's defeat. Gaozu spares his life, but he is later assassinated.

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • According to tradition, Muhammad, Islamic prophet, is said to have visited heaven aboard the steed/unicorn with wings or Buraq, in the Isra wal-Miraj, (the Night Journey), from Mecca to Jerusalem and then to heaven from Jerusalem's Temple Mount, then back to Mecca.
Technology[]
  • The Chinese establish an imperial bureau for the manufacture of porcelain. Their technology will advance further under the Tang Dynasty (approximate date).

622


By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • Byzantine–Sasanian War: Emperor Heraclius sails from Constantinople with an expeditionary force (probably 50,000 men), and starts a counter-offensive against the Persian Empire (his young son, Constantine III, is left behind as regent under the charge of Sergius I, patriarch of Constantinople, and patrician Bonus). He lands a few days later at the junction of Cilicia and Syria, near Alexandretta and ancient Issus.
  • Battle of Issus: Heraclius defeats the Persian forces under Shahrbaraz in Cappadocia. He recaptures Anatolia, but returns to Constantinople to deal with the threat posed to his Balkan domains by the Avars, and puts the Byzantine army into winter quarters in Pontus.[4]
Asia[]
  • The Western Turks conquer the Oxus valley and cooperate with Heraclius against Persia, taking Khorasan (modern Afghanistan).

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • September 9[5] or June 17[6] – The Islamic prophet Muhammad, after being warned of a plot to assassinate him, secretly leaves his home in Mecca to make the Hegira (emigrate) to Yathrib (later renamed by him Medina), along with his companion Abu Bakr. They take refuge in the Cave of Thawr south of Mecca for three days, departing on September 13 or June 21.
  • September 20[5] or June 28[6] – Muhammad does not enter Yathrib directly, but stops at its outlying environs of Quba. He establishes the Quba Mosque here, the first mosque of Islam. On July 2 (or September 24) he makes his first visit to Yathrib for Friday prayers.
  • October 4[5] or July 13 – After a fourteen days' stay in Quba, Muhammad finally moves from Quba to Yathrib, and is greeted cordially by its people. Here he drafts the Constitution of Medina, an agreement between the various Muslim, Jewish, Christian and pagan tribal communities in the city, forming the basis of a multi-religious Islamic state, and begins construction of the Al-Masjid an-Nabawi Mosque. Later during the caliphate of Umar in 638, the lunar year during which the emigration to Medina occurred (Friday 16 July 622 – 4 July 623) is designated "Year One" of the new Hijri era (Anno Hegirae – AH).
  • Xuanzang is fully ordained as a Buddhist monk at the age of 20.[7]

623

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • Byzantine–Sassanid War: Emperor Heraclius invades Armenia, leaving his son Constantine (age 11) and co-regent Bonus to defend Constantinople against the Persians still at Chalcedon (modern Turkey). He sails with 5,000 reinforcements to join the Byzantine army at Trapezus. Raising additional forces in Pontus, Heraclius strikes through the mountains of Armenia and the northern sub-Caucasian principalities. He plunders Media (Azerbaijan), and avoids the Persian armies who attempt to trap him.[8]
Europe[]
  • King Clothar II gives Austrasia to his son Dagobert I, age 20, effectively granting the kingdom semi-autonomy in repayment for the support of its nobles, most notably Pepin of Landen (Mayor of the Palace), and in recognition of calls from the Austrasians for a king of their own. Arnulf, bishop of Metz, becomes advisor to Dagobert.
  • Samo, reputedly a Frankish merchant, is elected king of the Slavs in Moravia, Slovakia and Lower Austria. A string of victories over the Avars proves his utilitas (usefulness) to his subjects, and he secures the throne to establish his own kingdom, which stretches from the upper Elbe to the Danube.[9]
Asia[]

By topic[]

Art[]
  • Tori Busshi makes "Shaka Triad", in the kon-dō of Hōryū-ji, during the Asuka period (approximate date).
Religion[]
  • The Jewish community in Medina (Saudi Arabia) rejects the idea of Muhammad being a leader of Judaism. He and his followers stop bowing toward Jerusalem and start bowing toward Ka'ba. Muhammad abandons Saturday as the Sabbath.

624

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • Byzantine–Sasanian War: Emperor Heraclius advances with an expeditionary force (40,000 men) along the Araxes River, destroying the fortress city of Dvin, capital of Armenia, and Nakhchivan (modern Azerbaijan). At Ganzak, Heraclius defeats the Persian army and destroys the famous fire temple at Takht-e Soleymān, an important Zoroastrian shrine.[10] He winters his army in Caucasian Albania to gather forces for the next year.[11]
  • Winter – King Khosrow II withdraws most of his troops from Chalcedon (Anatolia); he assembles three armies to trap and destroy Heraclius' forces.[12] The Persians go into winter quarters nearby, but Heraclius attacks them at Tigranakert (Western Armenia), routing the forces of the generals Shahin Vahmanzadegan and Shahraplakan. The Byzantines destroy their baggage train.
Europe[]
  • The Visigoths under King Suintila recapture the Byzantine territories of Spania (Andalusia), after 70 years of occupation. Only the Balearic Islands stay a part of the Byzantine Empire.
Britain[]
  • Eorpwald succeeds his father Rædwald, as king (bretwalda) of the independent Kingdom of East Anglia (approximate date).
Arabia[]
  • March 13Battle of Badr: Muhammad and some 300 of his followers from Medina surprise a reinforced Meccan caravan at Badr (modern-day Saudi Arabia) returning from Syria, and defeat about 1,000 Quraysh from Mecca. After having heard that clan leader Abu Sufyan is escorting a rich trade caravan, Muhammad has the wells along its route (southwest of Medina) filled with sand in order to lure him into battle.
Asia[]
  • The Yiwen Leiju encyclopedia is completed during the Tang dynasty, by the Chinese calligrapher Ouyang Xun.

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • Justus becomes Archbishop of Canterbury,[13] receiving his pallium — symbol of the jurisdiction entrusted to archbishops. He oversees the dispatch of missionaries to Northumbria (northern England).

625

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • Byzantine–Sassanid War: Emperor Heraclius marches with his forces westward, through the mountains of Corduene. In less than seven days, he bypasses Mount Ararat and captures the strategic fortresses of Amida along the Arsanias River, and Martyropolis on the upper Tigris.[14] The Persian army in northern Mesopotamia withdraws westward across the Euphrates. Heraclius pursues into Cilicia, accompanied by a great train of booty.
  • Battle of Sarus: Heraclius is victorious in a Byzantine assault river crossing. The reinforced Persians under Shahrbaraz are defeated along the Sarus River, near Adana (modern Turkey). Heraclius recaptures Cappadocia and Pontus, and returns to Trapezus to spend the winter.[14] Shahrbaraz retreats in good order, and is able to continue his advance through Asia Minor towards Constantinople.
Britain[]
  • King Edwin of Northumbria marries Æthelburga of Kent. As a Christian, she brings her personal chaplain, Paulinus, and encourages her husband to convert to Christianity.
  • King Cadfan of Gwynedd dies and is buried at Llangadwaladr, where his memorial stone can still be seen. He is succeeded by his son Cadwallon (approximate date).
  • Judicaël becomes high king of Domnonée (northern Brittany).
Asia[]
  • King Pulakeshin II of Chalukya receives Persian envoys, who are sent by King Khosrau II at Badami (southern India).

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • March 19Battle of Uhud: Muhammad retreats against the inhabitants of Mecca (Saudi Arabia), which they consider a victory.
  • October 25Pope Boniface V dies at Rome after a 6-year reign. He is succeeded by Honorius I as the 70th pope.

626

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • Siege of Constantinople: A horde of Avars, consisting of about 80,000 men (including large contingents of Slavs, Bulgars, and other "barbarians"), attack the walls of Constantinople. A small Persian army arrives on the Bosphorus, on the Asiatic side. The Theodosian Walls are stormed with the most up-to-date siege equipment, in the form of traction trebuchets. The Avars have also mobile armoured shelters (medieval 'sows') and siege towers; the latter are covered in hides for fire protection.[15] The defense of the capital (12,000 well-trained Byzantine troops) is in the hands of Patriarch Sergius I and Bonus (magister militum).
  • July 31 – The Avars and Persian allies under Shahrbaraz launch an attack along the entire length of the Theodosian Walls (about 5.7 kilometre); the main effort is concentrated against the central section, particularly the low-lying mesoteichion. After a fierce infantry battle on the walls, the Byzantine army holds off many assaults on the city. Emperor Heraclius makes arrangements for a new army under his brother Theodore to operate against the Persians in western Anatolia, while he returns to his own army in Pontus.
  • August 7 – In the waters of the Golden Horn, the Persian fleet is destroyed while ferrying reinforcements. The Avars, having suffered terrible losses, running short of food and supplies, burn their siege engines. They abandon the siege and retreat to the Balkan Peninsula. The Byzantines achieve a decisive victory at Blachernae, under the protection of the Church of the Virgin Mary.
  • Byzantine–Persian War: Heraclius, his army reduced by campaigning to less than 30,000 men, is on the defensive in Pontus. Apparently he leaves a strong Byzantine garrison in Trapezus, and withdraws north-eastward along the Black Sea into Colchis, where he halts the Persians by aggressive defensive-offensive operations along the Phasis River. By attracting the Persian army under Shahin Vahmanzadegan in Anatolia, he provides Theodore with the opportunity to defeat them. By the end of the summer he threatens the communication of the Persians at Chalcedon (modern Turkey).
  • Heraclius invites the Croats, a Slavic tribe living in Galicia, Silesia, and Bohemia, to settle in Illyricum. They are given the land between the Drava River and the Adriatic Sea for ridding of Avars. The Serbs are allowed to move from their homeland north of the Carpathians to a territory east of the Croats. Heraclius asks Pope Honorius I to send missionaries to both groups.
  • Winter – Heraclius makes an alliance with Tong Yabghu Qaghan, ruler (khagan) of the Western Turkic Khaganate, for a joint invasion of the Persian Empire the following spring. He promises his daughter Eudoxia Epiphania, age 15, in marriage to Tong Yabghu and sends her under escort with wondrous gifts.
Europe[]
  • Arioald succeeds his brother-in-law Adaloald as king of the Lombards, after he goes insane. Arioald has his wife locked up in a monastery, accusing her of plotting against him with Grasulf II, duke of Friuli (northern Italy).
Britain[]
  • King Edwin of Northumbria defeats the West Saxons under Cynegils, who has tried to thwart the growing strength of Edwin by having him assassinated. Edwin obliges Cynegils to acknowledge Northumbria's supremacy.
  • April 19Eanflæd, daughter of Edwin of Northumbria, is born at a royal residence by the River Derwent. She is baptised by Paulinus, bishop of York.
  • Edwin of Northumbria invades the Isle of Man and then Anglesey. King Cadwallon is defeated in battle, and is besieged on Puffin Island.[16]
  • Edinburgh (Scotland) is founded by Edwin of Northumbria (approximate date).
  • Penda becomes king of Mercia (approximate date).[17]
Persia[]
  • Summer – King Khosrau II plans an all-out effort against Constantinople. He returns to Anatolia with two armies of unknown size, presumably more than 50,000 men each. One of these (possibly commanded by Khosrau himself) is to contain Heraclius in Pontus; another under Shahin Vahmanzadegan is defeated by Theodore.
Asia[]
  • July 2Li Shimin travels to the Tang capital Chang'an to bid farewell his younger brother Li Yuanji, who has been given command of a Chinese expedition against the Eastern Turkic Khaganate. Hearing of a plot to murder him, he and a few supporters seize the northern entrance to the emperor's palace. Li Shimin ambushes and eliminates his rival brothers Li Yuanji and Li Jiancheng, in the Xuanwu Gate Incident.
  • September 4 – Emperor Gao Zu abdicates in favor of his son Li Shimin after an 8-year reign. He passes the throne to him (as Emperor Tai Zong).

627

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • Spring – Byzantine–Sasanian War: Emperor Heraclius sweeps through southern Armenia with a 50,000-man expeditionary force, recapturing most of the Byzantine fortresses lost to the Persians ten and fifteen years earlier. The army of Shahrbaraz, still in Anatolia, is now cut off completely. Hearing from Byzantine agents (showing him letters) that King Khosrau II, dissatisfied with his failure to capture Constantinople, is planning to have him executed, he surrenders to Heraclius, refusing to join the Byzantine army against his ungrateful sovereign.
  • Third Perso-Turkic War: The Göktürks and their Khazar allies (40,000 men) approach the Caspian Gates, and capture the Persian fortress at Derbent (modern Dagestan). Heraclius marches to the upper Tigris and invades the Persian heartland, leaving the Khazars under Tong Yabghu Qaghan to continue the siege of Tblilisi.[18]
  • December 12Battle of Nineveh: Heraclius crosses the Great Zab river and defeats, in a feigned retreat, the Persian army (12,000 men) under Rhahzadh, near the ruins of Nineveh (Iraq). Although wounded, Heraclius refuses to leave the battlefield, and in a final cavalry charge personally kills the Persian general.[19]
  • Winter – Heraclius plunders the city palace of Dastgerd (Iran) and gains tremendous riches (also recovering 300 captured Byzantine flags).[20] He turns north-eastward to Caucasian Albania to rest his army. Khosrau II flees to the mountains of Susiana, to rally support for the defense of the Persian capital Ctesiphon.[21][22]
Britain[]
  • King Eorpwald of East Anglia is murdered, and succeeded by Ricberht. He is a member of the East Anglian elite; during his rule paganism is re-established.
  • April 12 – King Edwin of Northumbria is converted to Christianity by Bishop Paulinus of York, who previously save his life.
Arabia[]
  • March 31Battle of the Trench: Muhammad successfully withstands a siege for 27 days at Medina, by Meccan forces (10,000 men) under Abu Sufyan, whose allies, the Jewish tribe of Banu Qurayza, ultimately surrender to Muhammad.[23]

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • April 12Paulinus, last of the missionaries sent by Pope Gregory I, builds a wooden church in the old Roman legionary headquarters in York, and baptises Edwin of Northumbria as the first Christian king in northern England.[24]
  • Fourth Council of Mâcon: A council of Christian bishops approves in the city of Mâcon (Burgundy) the Monastic Rule of Saint Columbanus.[25]
  • Cunibert is elected bishop of Cologne. Throughout his episcopacy, monasticism flourishes in Austrasia (approximate date).
Education[]

628

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • Spring – Byzantine–Sassanid War: Emperor Heraclius issues an ultimatum for peace to King Khosrow II, but he refuses his generous terms. The war-weary Persians revolt against Khosrow's regime at Ctesiphon, and install his son Kavadh II on the throne on February 25. He puts his father to death and begins negotiations with Heraclius. Kavadh is forced to return all the territories conquered during the war. The Persians must give up all of the trophies they have captured, including the relic of the True Cross. Evidently there is also a large financial indemnity. Having accepted a peace agreement on his own terms, Heraclius returns in triumph to Constantinople.[26]
  • Third Perso-Turkic War: The Western Göktürks, under their leader Tong Yabghu Qaghan, plunder Tbilisi (modern Georgia). The Persian defenders are executed or mutilated; Tong Yabghu appoints governors (tuduns) to manage various tribes under his overlordship.[27]
Britain[]
Persia[]
  • February 25Khosrow II, the last great shah of the Sasanian Empire, is overthrown by his son Kavad II.
  • September 6Ardashir III, age 7, succeeds his father Kavad II as the twenty-fourth shah of the Sasanian Empire on the latter's death from the plague that is devastating western Persia.
Arabia[]
  • Muhammad, Islamic prophet, leads about 1,400 men on a pilgrimage to Mecca, where their passage is blocked. The Quraysh tribe and the Muslim community in Medina sign a 10-year truce (Treaty of Hudaybiyyah).

By topic[]

Arts and sciences[]
  • Indian astronomer Brahmagupta writes the Brāhmasphuṭasiddhānta, an early, yet very advanced, mathematics book, including rules for computing with zero.
Education[]
  • The Sharia enjoins women as well as men to obtain secular and religious educations. It forbids eating pork, domesticated donkey, and other flesh denied to Jews by Mosaic law (approximate date).
Religion[]
  • Muhammad's letters to world leaders explain the principles of the new monotheistic Muslim faith, as they will be contained in the Quran.
  • Marutha of Tikrit is consecrated Maphrian of the East in the Syriac Orthodox Church.

629

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • SeptemberJerusalem is reconquered by the Byzantines (after 15 years of occupation) from the Persian Empire.[30]
  • September 14 – Emperor Heraclius enters Constantinople in triumph. In a ceremonial parade, accompanied by the True Cross, he is welcomed by the citizens and his son Heraclius Constantine.
  • Heraclius styles himself as Basileus, Greek word for "sovereign", and takes the ancient title of "King of Kings", after his victory over Persia.
Europe[]
  • King Chlothar II dies after a 16-year reign and is succeeded by his son Dagobert I. Counseled by bishop Arnulf of Metz and Pepin of Landen (Mayor of the Palace) he moves the capital to Paris.
  • Charibert II, half-brother of Dagobert I, becomes king of Aquitaine (Southern France), and establishes his capital at Toulouse. Charibert's realm also includes Agen, Cahors, and Périgueux.
Britain[]
Arabia[]
  • Summer – Muhammad, Islamic prophet, succeeds in unifying all of the nomadic tribes of the Arabian Peninsula. He converts them to Islam and prepares an expedition against the Jews.
  • May - JuneBattle of Khaybar: Muhammad and his followers defeat the Jews living in the fortified oasis at Khaybar, located 150 kilometers from Medina.
  • SeptemberBattle of Mu'tah: Muhammad fails to take the lands east of the Jordan River, and is pushed back near Mu'tah by the Ghassanids.
Asia[]
  • April 27 – Shahrbaraz usurps the throne of the Sasanian Empire from Ardashir III, but is himself deposed forty days later by nobility in favour of Borandukht. Khosrow III briefly rules Khorasan in the confusion, until he is assassinated by the governor of the province.
  • Winter – Emperor Tai Zong of the Tang Dynasty launches a campaign against the Eastern Turkic Khaganate (Central Asia).
  • Emperor Jomei succeeds his great aunt, empress Suiko, and ascends to the throne of Japan.
Americas[]

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • Xuanzang, Chinese Buddhist monk, sets out for India from the Tang Dynasty capital Chang'an on a pilgrimage.
  • Muhammad meets Al-Khansa, Arabic poet, and converts her to Islam.

Significant people[]

Births[]

620

621

  • Ardashir III, king of the Persian Empire (d. 629)
  • Gertrude of Nivelles, Frankish abbess (d. 659)
  • Suraqah al-Bariqi, Arab poet (d. 698)

622

  • Al-Mukhtar, Islamic revolutionary (d. 687)[31]
  • Bavo, Frankish nobleman and saint (d. 659)
  • Mezezius, Byzantine usurper (d. 669)
  • Uqba ibn Nafi, Arab general (d. 683)
  • Xue Yuanchao, official of the Tang dynasty (d. 683)[32]

623

624

  • February 17Wu Zetian, Empress of the Zhou dynasty (d. 705)
  • MayAbd Allah ibn al-Zubayr, Arab sahabi (d. 692)
  • Hasan ibn Ali, second Shia Imam and grandson of Prophet Muhammad (d. 670)
  • Yazdegerd III, king of the Persian Empire (d. 651)
  • Approximate date – Adomnán, Irish abbot and hagiographer (d. 704)

625

  • Hasan ibn Ali, grandson of Muhammad (d. 670)
  • Œthelwald, king of Deira (approximate date)
  • Theodo II, duke of Bavaria (approximate date)
  • Zhang Jianzhi, official of the Tang Dynasty (d. 706)

626

  • April 19Eanflæd, queen of Northumbria
  • Balthild, queen of the Franks (approximate date)
  • Heraklonas, Byzantine emperor (d. 641)
  • Husayn ibn Ali, grandson of Muhammad and the third Shi'a Imam (d. 680)
  • Munmu, king of Silla (d. 681)
  • Tenji, emperor of Japan (d. 672)
  • Zaynab bint Ali, granddaughter of Muhammad and member of Ahl al-Bayt
  • Abdallah ibn Amir

627

628

  • July 21Gao Zong, emperor of the Tang dynasty (d. 683)
  • John Maron, Syriac monk and patriarch (d. 707)
  • Approximate date
    • Benedict Biscop, Anglo-Saxon abbot (d. 690)
    • Gertrude of Nivelles, Austrasian abbess (d. 659)

629

Deaths[]

620

  • Basolus, Frankish missionary (approximate date)
  • Chuluo Khan, ruler of the Eastern Turkic Khaganate
  • Dorotheus of Gaza, monk and abbot (approximate date)
  • Eleutherius, Byzantine exarch of Ravenna
  • Imerius of Immertal, Swiss monk (approximate date)
  • Khadija bint Khuwaylid, first wife of Muhammad
  • Mirin, Irish monk and missionary (approximate date)
  • Seanach Garbh, Irish abbot (approximate date)
  • Shen Faxing, official of the Sui Dynasty
  • Sisebut, king of the Visigoths (or 621)

621

  • November 15Malo, Welsh bishop
  • Dou Jiande, general of the Sui Dynasty (b. 573)
  • Dou Kang, general of the Sui Dynasty
  • Reccared II, king of the Visigoths
  • Sisebut, king of the Visigoths
  • Wang Shichong, general of the Sui Dynasty
  • Xiao Xian, prince of the Liang Dynasty (b. 583)
  • Zhu Can, rebel leader during the Sui Dynasty

622

623

  • Jizang, Chinese Buddhist monk (b. 549)
  • Liu Heita, rebel leader during the Tang Dynasty
  • Lupus of Sens, French bishop (approximate date)
  • Pingyang, princess of the Tang Dynasty (b. 598)
  • Su Wei, high official of the Sui Dynasty (b. 542)
  • Xu Yuanlang, rebel leader during the Sui Dynasty

624

625

626

627

628

  • January 22Anastasius of Persia, monk
  • February 28Khosrow II, king of the Persian Empire
  • April 15Empress Suiko of Japan
  • June 3Liang Shidu, rebel leader
  • Babai the Great, church father and theologian
  • Du Yan, chancellor of the Tang dynasty
  • Kavadh II, king of the Sasanian Empire
  • Li Dashi, Chinese official and historian (b. 570)
  • Shirin, wife of Khosrow II (approximate date)
  • Suibne Menn, High King of Ireland
  • Theodelinda, queen of the Lombards
  • Tong Yabghu Qaghan, ruler of the Göktürks

629

References[]

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  3. ^ Roger Collins, "Visigothic Spain 409–711", p. 76
  4. ^ Kaegi 2003, p. 116.
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  9. ^ Fine 1991, p. 43.
  10. ^ Kaegi 2003, p. 127.
  11. ^ Kaegi 2003, p. 128.
  12. ^ Kaegi 2003, p. 129.
  13. ^ Fryde, E.B. (1996), "Handbook of British Chronology" (Third revised ed.). Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, p. 213. ISBN 0-521-56350-X
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  15. ^ The Walls of Constantinople AD 324–1453, p. 47. Stephen Turnbull, 2004. ISBN 978-1-84176-759-8
  16. ^ Bede Book II, Chapter IX.
  17. ^ Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Manuscript A (ASC A), 626
  18. ^ Kaegi 2003, p. 144.
  19. ^ Kaegi 2003, p. 167.
  20. ^ Kaegi 2003, p. 173.
  21. ^ Oman, Charles (1893), Europe, 476–918, Volume 1 (p. 211)
  22. ^ Norwich, John Julius (1997), A Short History of Byzantium, Vintage Books, p. 93. ISBN 0-679-77269-3
  23. ^ Watt, Muhammad at Medina, p. 36
  24. ^ Bede Book II, Chapter XIV.
  25. ^ "St. Columbanus". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company (1913)
  26. ^ Kaegi 2003, pp. 178, 189–190.
  27. ^ Christian 1999, p. 283; Artamanov, p. 170–180.[full citation needed]
  28. ^ The Anglo-Saxon Chronicle[permanent dead link]
  29. ^ Palmer, Alan & Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 30–34. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2.
  30. ^ Rodney Aist, "The Christian Topography of Early Islamic Jerusalem", Brepols Publishers (2009), p. 59
  31. ^ Illustrated Dictionary of the Muslim World. Marshall Cavendish. 2010. pp. 122–123. ISBN 978-0-7614-7929-1.
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