920s

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Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries:
  • 9th century
  • 10th century
  • 11th century
Decades:
Years:
  • 920
  • 921
  • 922
  • 923
  • 924
  • 925
  • 926
  • 927
  • 928
  • 929
Categories:
  • Births
  • Deaths
  • Establishments
  • Disestablishments

The 920s decade ran from January 1, 920, to December 31, 929.

Events

920

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • December 17Romanos I has himself crowned co-emperor of the Byzantine Empire. He shares the throne with the 15-year-old Constantine VII (his son-in-law), and constructs an alternative palace at Constantinople with an adjoining monastery near the Great Palace. Though Constantine retains his formal position as first on the protocol list, Romanos becomes sole ruler.[1]
Europe[]
  • The nobles of Lotharingia under Gilbert, duke of Lorraine, revolt against King Charles III ("the Simple"). They recognize King Henry I ("the Fowler") as their sovereign. Charles invades Lotharingia as far as Pfeddersheim (near Worms), but retreats when he learns that Henry is mobilizing an army to attack the West Frankish Kingdom.[2]
  • Henry I conquers Utrecht (modern-day Netherlands), which has been in possession of the Vikings for 70 years. Balderic, bishop of Utrecht, moves his seat back from Deventer to Utrecht (approximate date).
Britain[]
  • High-Reeve Ealdred I, ruler of the former kingdom of Bernicia (Northumbria), and his brother Uhtred, submit to the overlordship of King Edward the Elder (approximate date).
  • The Welsh ruler Hywel Dda ("the Good") merges Dyfed and Seisyllwg, establishing a new kingdom known as Deheubarth.
Iberian Peninsula[]
  • July 26 — At the Battle of Valdejunquera, the Muslim forces of the Emir Abd-ar-Rahman III of Córdoba, defeat the Christian armies of King Ordoño II of León and King Sancho I of Pamplona. The decisive battle at the Val de Junquera takes place following the Emir's pre-emptive strike and his invasion of the upper Douro valley and the capture of Osma. The Arab army proceeds on to the upper Ebro, restoring and replenishing Umayyad garrisons in the region.[3]
Africa[]
  • The Golden Age of the Ghana Empire begins in Africa (approximate date).
Asia[]
  • Emperor Taizu of the Khitan Empire orders the adoption of a written script by the Khitan, resulting in the creation of Khitan "Large Script."

By topic[]

Climate[]
  • Muslim chroniclers in Baghdad record an unusually cold summer.[4]

921

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • MarchBattle of Pegae: Bulgarian forces under kavhan (first minister) Theodore Sigritsa defeat the Byzantine army at the outskirts of Constantinople. After the battle, the Bulgarians burn the palaces in Pegae ("the Spring"), and devastate the area north of the Golden Horn.
Europe[]
  • Summer – King Henry I (the Fowler) defeats his rival Arnulf I (the Bad), duke of Bavaria, in two campaigns. Arnulf is besieged at Regensburg and forced to accept peace negotiations, recognising Henry as sole sovereign of the East Frankish Kingdom (Germany).
  • Landulf I, prince of Benevento, supports an anti-Greek Apulian rebellion, ravaging several Byzantine strongpoints as far as Ascoli. The Apulian nobility, professing loyalty to the Byzantine Empire, appoints Landulf as stratego of the Theme of Longobardia.
  • September 15Ludmila, Bohemian duchess and widow of Bořivoj I, is murdered by her daughter-in-law Drahomíra at Tetín (modern Czech Republic). Ludmila will be canonised and become the patron saint of the Orthodox and the Catholic Church.
  • November 7Treaty of Bonn: King Charles III (the Simple) and Henry I sign a peace treaty or 'pact of friendship' (amicitia) at a ceremony aboard a ship in the middle of the Rhine, recognising the border between their two Frankish kingdoms.[5]
  • A Hungarian mercenary force led by Dursac and Bogát defeats an army of insurgents, who plans to overthrow their ally, Emperor Berengar I, at Brescia. He appoints Giselbert I as count palatine of Bergamo (Northern Italy).
Arabian Empire[]
  • June 21 – A diplomatic delegation is sent from Baghdad to establish trade routes between the Abbasid Caliphate towards Bukhara (modern Uzbekistan). Ahmad ibn Fadlan, an Arab diplomat and traveller, makes contact with Almış, the İltäbär (vassal-king under the Khazars) of Volga Bulgaria, on behalf of Caliph al-Muqtadir.[6]
  • Battle of Sevan: Sajid forces under Yusuf Beshir invade Armenia and besiege King Ashot II near Lake Sevan. After gathering a small force he attacks Beshir's camps and drives the enemy out of the country. Ashot starts a counter-offensive to rebuild the ruined cities and fortresses.
Africa[]
  • The Fatimid Caliphate crushes Idrisid forces in battle, capturing the cities of Tlemcen and Fez.[7]
  • The Fatimid Caliphate creates a new capital in Ifriqiya, al-Mahdiya on the Tunisian coast.[8]
China[]
  • The Later Liang Dynasty reports that all "barbarian" tribes have been pacified by the Khitan Empire.

922

By place[]

923

By place[]

Europe[]
  • June 15Battle of Soissons: King Robert I is killed; the Frankish army, led by Charles the Simple, is defeated and routed near Soissons. Charles is captured and imprisoned at Péronne. The nobles elect Robert's son-in-law Rudolph, duke of Burgundy, as king of the West Frankish Kingdom (until 936).[9]
  • July 29Battle of Fiorenzuola: Lombard forces led by King Rudolph II and Adalbert I, margrave of Ivrea, defeat the deposed Emperor Berengar I at Firenzuola (Tuscany). A pact is reached between Rudolph and Berengar, who abdicates the imperial throne and cedes sovereignty over the rest of Italy.[10]
Asia[]
  • May 13 – The Later Liang, one of the Five Dynasties in China, falls to Later Tang (founded by Li Cunxu). Li proclaims himself emperor and moves his residence back to the old Tang capital of Luoyang.

924

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • Byzantine–Bulgarian War: Forces led by Simeon I, ruler (knyaz) of the Bulgarian Empire, arrive before the walls of Constantinople, after they have pillaged the suburbs of the capital. Simeon meets Emperor Romanos I on the Golden Horn to arrange a truce, according to which he pays the Bulgarians an annual tax. Simeon in return cedes back some cities on the Black Sea coast.[11]
Europe[]
  • Spring – King Berengar I makes a new alliance with the Hungarians who, following his death, sack and burn the city of Pavia. They cross the Alps via the St. Bernard Pass, where Provence and Septimania (Southern France) are pillaged. Hungarian forces penetrate as far as the Pyrenees.[12]
  • Summer – King Ordoño II of Galicia dies after a 14-year reign. He is succeeded by his brother Fruela II, reuniting Asturias now known as the Kingdom of León. Fruela, who is not popular with the nobles, has assassinated the sons of Olmundo, possible descendants of the Visigothic king Wittiza.
  • Fall – Bulgarian–Serbian War: Tsar Simeon I sends a punitive expedition force against Serbia, led by Theodore Sigritsa and Marmais, but they are ambushed and defeated. Zaharija, prince of the Serbs, sends their heads and armour later to Constantinople (approximate date).
  • Winter – The Hungarians invade Saxony and force King Henry I (the Fowler) to retreat into the Castle of Werla. He makes a pact and agrees to pay them tribute for 9 years. They return to the Po Valley and sack the cities of Bergamo, Brescia and Mantua (Northern Italy).
Britain[]
  • July 17 – King Edward the Elder dies at Farndon after a 25-year reign in which he has gained direct control over Mercia, including the Danish-occupied areas. He is succeeded by his eldest son Æthelstan, who will reign as King of England (see 927). He continues his father's conquest of the Danelaw north of the Thames-Lea line from the Vikings.
Asia[]
  • Emperor Taizu of the Liao Dynasty leads a campaign to the West. He reaches the former capital of the Uyghur Kingdom on the Orkhon River. The Zubu begin to pay tribute to the Khitan Empire.
  • Emperor Zhuang Zong of Later Tang bestows the chancellor title on Gao Jixing (Prince of Nanping) and creates the Nanping State (Central China). The Qi State falls to Later Tang.

925

By place[]

Byzantine Empire[]
  • May 15Nicholas I Mystikos, twice the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople and having reigned a second time since 912, dies at the age of 73.
  • June 29Stephen II becomes the new Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople and head of the Eastern Orthodox Church, succeeding Nicholas I.
  • Fall – John Mystikos, chief minister (paradynasteuon), is deposed and sent into exile in a monastery. He is replaced by the chamberlain (protovestiarios) Theophanes, who becomes the closest adviser of Emperor Romanos I. At this time the Byzantine Empire has been embroiled in a protracted and disastrous war with Tsar Simeon I of Bulgaria.
Europe[]
  • Summer – King Fruela II dies after a reign of only 14 months. He is succeeded by his son Alfonso Fróilaz who ascends the throne. With the support of King Jimeno II of Pamplona (later Navarra), Sancho Ordóñez, Alfonso, and Ramiro (the sons of the late King Ordoño II) revolt and drive their cousin Alfonso to the eastern marches of Asturias, then divide the kingdom amongst themselves. Alfonso IV (the Monk) receives the crown of León, and Sancho I is acclaimed king of Galicia.[13]
  • Alberic I, duke of Spoleto, attempts to seize Rome on his own account. Pope John X organizes an uprising and expels him. Alberic flees to Orte, where he sends out messengers calling on the Magyars for assistance. But a mob in Orte, informed by papal agents, rises up and murders Alberic (approximate date).
  • King Rudolph II of Burgundy (who also rules Italy) and his father-in-law, Burchard II of Swabia, lead a Burgundian expeditionary force over the Great St. Bernard Pass to confront Hugh of Provence. They head to the city of Ivrea where Rudolph's forces begin a civil war against Lombard partisans.
  • Tomislav, duke of the Croatian duchies of Pannonia and Dalmatia, is crowned as king of Croatia. He forges an alliance with the Byzantines during the struggle with the Bulgarian Empire (approximate date).
Africa[]
  • A Fatimid expeditionary force led by Jafar ibn Obeid lands in Abruzzo (Southern Italy). They overrun Apulia all the way to the city of Otranto. After defeating the Byzantine garrisons, the Arabs lay siege to the castle of Oria (which shortly after is destroyed). The defenders are massacred and the remainder (mostly women and children) are taken as slaves back to North Africa.
Asia[]
  • Winter – Former Shu, one of the Ten Kingdoms in China, is invaded by Later Tang forces of Emperor Zhuang Zong, who incorporates the kingdom into his domains.
  • A visiting Uyghur delegation spurs the development of Khitan small script, based on alphabetic principles (approximate date).

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • Ha-Mim proclaims himself a prophet and a messenger of Islam, among the Ghomara Berbers near the city of Tétouan (modern Morocco).

926

By place[]

Europe[]
  • Spring – The Italian nobles turn against King Rudolph II of Burgundy and request that Hugh of Provence, the effective ruler of Lower Burgundy, be elected as king of Italy. Rudolph's father-in-law Duke Burchard II of Swabia is ambushed and killed near Novara, by the henchmen of Archbishop Lambert of Milan. Rudolph, disillusioned by the news, returns to Burgundy to protect himself. Hugh has himself crowned King of Italy.[14]
  • Battle of the Bosnian Highlands: Bulgarian forces under Duke Alogobotur, are ambushed and defeated by a Croatian army of King Tomislav in the mountainous area of Eastern Bosnia. Tsar Simeon I meets his first defeat against Croatia, but overruns the Western Balkans several times.[15]
  • The Hungarians besiege Augsburg in Bavaria, then conquer the monastery of St. Gallen (modern Switzerland). After an unsuccessful battle with the locals, they burn the suburbs of Konstanz, then they cross westwards and defeat a Frankish army led by Duke Liutfred of Alsace.
Britain[]
  • King Æthelstan of Wessex and Mercia annexes Northumbria, and forces Wales and Strathclyde to accept his sovereignty along with the Picts and the Scots (approximate date).
Asia[]
  • May 15 – Emperor Zhuang Zong is killed during an officer's rebellion led by Guo Congqian at the old Tang capital of Luoyang. He is succeeded by his adoptive brother Li Siyuan (Ming Zong) as ruler of Later Tang. Li sends Yao Kun, as an emissary, to create a friendly relationship with the Khitan Empire.
  • September 6 – Emperor Taizu dies after a 10-year reign. He is succeeded by his second son Tai Zong (Yaogu) as ruler of the Chinese Liao Dynasty. Taizu's eldest son Yelü Bei (designated heir apparent) becomes ruler of the Dongdan Kingdom (former Balhae), a puppet state of the Khitan Empire.

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • Pope John X allies himself with Hugh of Provence provoking the ire of Marozia, daughter of the Roman consul Theophylact I, who is married to Hugh's rival Guy of Tuscany.

927

By place[]

Europe[]
  • May 27Simeon I, emperor (tsar) of the Bulgarian Empire, dies of heart failure in his palace at Preslav after a 34-year reign. He is survived by four sons and succeeded by his second son Peter I, who signs a peace treaty with the Byzantine Empire. The peace is confirmed by Peter's marrying Maria Lekapene (the daughter of Christopher Lekapenos, son and co-emperor of Romanos I). The treaty restores the borders to those established by several treaties (thus recognizing Bulgaria's possession of Macedonia).[16]
  • July 12 – King Æthelstan of Wessex claims his kingdom and receives the submission of High-Reeve Ealdred I of Bamburgh and probably also of Owain ap Dyfnwal, King of Strathclyde, at Eamont Bridge. He unifies the various small kingdoms of the Anglo-Saxon Heptarchy, creating the Kingdom of England, and also secures a pledge from King Constantine II of Scotland, that he will not ally with the Viking kings.[17] This summer also Kings Hywel Dda of Deheubarth and Owain of Glywysing and Gwent submit to the overlordship of Æthelstan at Hereford. The borders between England and Wales are set at the River Wye.
  • Summer – The Hungarians fight in Rome, helping Margrave Peter against Pope John X. They then go to southern Italy, and conquer the cities of Taranto and Oria.
  • August 15 – Led by the Slavic Sabir, the Fatimids from Sicily, capture and destroy Taranto. They enslave much of the population.
Asia[]
  • Hubaekje, one of the Later Three Kingdoms of Korea, sacks the Silla capital at Gyeongju. King Gyeongae commits suicide and Gyeongsun is placed on the throne by the Hubaekje king Gyeon Hwon.

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • The Bulgarian Orthodox Church is recognised as autocephalous, by the Patriarchate of Constantinople.
  • September 14Cele Dabhaill mac Scannal, Irish preacher and abbot, dies on his pilgrimage at Rome.

928

By place[]

Europe[]
  • King Rudolph I loses the support of Herbert II, count of Vermandois, who controls the prison at Péronne in which former King Charles III (the Simple) is imprisoned. Herbert brings him before William I (Longsword), count of Rouen, for homage and then to Rheims as leverage to blackmail Rudolph to make him cede sovereignty over Laon (Northern France).
  • June 5Louis III (the Blind), former king of Provence (Lower Burgundy), dies at Arles after a 27-year reign (of which 23 are sightless). He is succeeded by his brother-in-law Hugh I who is King of Italy. With the approval of his kinsman Rudolph I, Hugh strips Louis's son and heir, Charles Constantine, of his inheritance and proclaims himself as ruler of Provence.
  • Winter – King Henry I (the Fowler) subdues the Polabian Slavs who live on the eastern borders. He then marches against the Slavic Hevelli tribes and seizes their capital, Brandenburg. Henry invades the Glomacze lands in the middle Elbe valley, where he besieges and destroys the main castle called Gana (the later Albrechtsburg) at Meissen (Saxony).[18]
Britain[]
  • King Hywel Dda (the Good) of Deheubarth makes a pilgrimage to Rome, he becomes the first Welsh ruler to undertake such a trip. Hywel begins the codification of medieval Welsh law and mints his own coinage.
Arabian Empire[]
  • Summer – An Arab expeditionary force led by the Slavic Sabir returns and seizes Otranto (Southern Italy). Although pressed by an epidemic, they withdraw their forces. After capturing some enclaves on the Tyrrhenian coast, Sabir sails into the harbors of Naples and Salerno, and forces the dukes (dux) to pay an enormous sum of tribute to go away.
Asia[]
  • Ishanavarman II dies after a 5-year reign and is succeeded by his uncle Jayavarman IV as king of the Khmer Empire (modern Cambodia). He moves the capital north from Angkor to Koh Ker.

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • Summer – Pope John X is deposed and imprisoned in Castel Sant'Angelo at Rome by order of the Roman senatrix Marozia after a 14-year reign. He is succeeded by Leo VI as the 123rd pope of the Catholic Church.
  • Leo VI abolishes the Nin Bishopric and transfers bishop Gregory (Croatian: Grgur Ninski) to Skradin. This ends the long running dispute between the Split and Nin Bishoprics in the Croatian kingdom.
  • July 18Tryphon succeeds Stephen II as patriarch of Constantinople (until 931).

929

By place[]

Europe[]
  • January 16 – Emir Abd-al-Rahman III of Córdoba proclaims himself caliph and creates the Caliphate of Córdoba. He breaks his allegiance to, and ties with, the Fatimid and Abbasid caliphs.[19]
  • February 3Guy (the Philosopher) of Tuscany, second husband (third lover) of the Roman noblewoman Marozia, dies. He is succeeded by his brother Lambert as margrave of Tuscany.
  • Early 929 – Siege of Gana: German king Henry I (the Fowler) besieges Gana with an East Frankish army and conquers the stronghold. He establishes the fort of Meissen nearby.
  • Early 929 –Henry the Fowler invades Bohemia from the north and marches on Prague. Duke Arnulf I of Bavaria invades Bohemia from the south. The Bohemians capitulate.
  • Summer – The Slavic-Arab leader Sabir defeats a small Byzantine fleet and seizes Termoli (in Molise, on the Adriatic coast). He returns to Africa laden with booty and slaves.
  • September 4Battle of Lenzen: Slavic forces (the Redarii and the Obotrites) are defeated by a Saxon army near the fortified stronghold of Lenzen (modern Germany).
  • October 7 – Former king Charles III (the Simple) dies in prison at Péronne, leaving Rudolph with no opposition except that of Herbert II, count of Vermandois.
Asia[]
  • Mpu Sindok, ruler of the Mataram Kingdom, moves his court from Central Java to East Java (modern Indonesia). Probably after the eruption of Mount Merapi and/or invasion from Srivijaya.[20]

By topic[]

Religion[]
  • Pope Leo VI dies at Rome after a 7-month reign. He is succeeded (probably handpicked–by Marozia from the Tusculani family) by Stephen VII as the 124th pope of the Catholic Church.

Significant people[]

Births[]

920

  • Adso of Montier-en-Der, Frankish Benedictine abbot (d. 992)
  • Athanasius the Athonite, Byzantine monk (approximate date)
  • Dunash ben Labrat, Spanish Jewish commentator (d. 990)
  • Fujiwara no Morotada, Japanese statesman (d. 969)
  • Gao Baorong, king of Nanping (Ten Kingdoms) (d. 960)
  • Goltregoda, Frankish countess and regent (d. 963)
  • Guntram the Rich, founder of the House of Habsburg (d. 973)
  • Haakon I, king of Norway (approximate date)
  • Hugh of Vermandois, Frankish archbishop (d. 962)
  • Li Jingsui, prince of Southern Tang (d. 958)
  • Liu Bin, emperor of Southern Han (d. 943)
  • Liu Sheng, emperor of Southern Han (d. 958)
  • Liutprand of Cremona, Lombard bishop (d. 972)
  • Louis IV, king of the West Frankish Kingdom (or 921)
  • Megingoz, count of Guelders (approximate date)
  • Menahem ben Saruq, Spanish Jewish philologist (d. 970)
  • Minamoto no Masanobu, Japanese nobleman (d. 993)
  • Miró III, count of Cerdanya and Besalú (d. 984)
  • Oliba Cabreta, Frankish nobleman (approximate date)
  • Ratna Pala, king of Kamarupa (India) (d. 960)
  • Reginar III, Frankish nobleman (approximate date)
  • Rogvolod, prince of Polotsk (approximate date)

921

  • February 21Abe no Seimei, Japanese astrologer (d. 1005)
  • October 9Li Chun'an, Chinese merchant (d. 999)
  • October 27Chai Rong, emperor of Later Zhou (d. 959)
  • Edmund I (the Magnificent), king of England (d. 946)
  • Ja'far ibn al-Furat, Ikhshidid and Fatimid vizier (d. 1001)
  • Louis IV, king of the West Frankish Kingdom (or 920)
  • Ōnakatomi no Yoshinobu, Japanese nobleman (d. 991)

922

  • Hedwig of Nordgau, countess of Luxemburg (approximate date)
  • Ibn Abi Zayd, Muslim imam and scholar (d. 996)
  • Ki no Tokibumi, Japanese nobleman and waka poet (d. 996)
  • Sigfried, founder of Luxemburg (approximate date)
  • Wang Pu, Chinese chancellor and writer (d. 982)

923

  • September 7Suzaku, emperor of Japan (d. 952)
  • Abū Hayyān al-Tawhīdī, Muslim intellectual (d. 1023)
  • Al-Shaykh al-Saduq, Muslim scholar (approximate date)
  • Eadred (or Edred), king of England (d. 955)
  • Fujiwara no Nakafumi, Japanese waka poet (d. 992)
  • Jeongjong, king of Goryeo (Korea) (d. 949)
  • Liu Honggao, Chinese chancellor (d. 943)

924

925

  • Basil Lekapenos, Byzantine chief minister (d. 985)
  • Bruno I, archbishop and duke of Lotharingia (d. 965)
  • Conrad I, king of Burgundy (approximate date)
  • Conrad (the Red), duke of Lotharingia (approximate date)
  • Fujiwara no Kanemichi, Japanese statesman (d. 977)
  • Gerberga, Frankish noblewoman (approximate date)
  • Gwangjong (Wang So), king of Goryeo (d. 975)
  • John I Tzimiskes, Byzantine emperor (approximate date)
  • Judith, duchess regent of Bavaria (d. 985)
  • Li Fang, Chinese scholar and official (d. 996)
  • Pan Mei, general of the Song Dynasty (d. 991)
  • Qian Hongzun, heir apparent of Wuyue (d. 940)
  • Thietmar, German nobleman (approximate date)
  • Widukind of Corvey, Saxon chronicler (approximate date)

926

927

  • March 21Taizu, emperor of the Song Dynasty (d. 976)
  • Amlaíb Cuarán, Viking king of Scandinavian York (d. 981)
  • Choe Seungno, Korean politician and poet (d. 989)
  • Fantinus, Italian hermit and abbot (approximate date)
  • Fujiwara no Anshi, empress consort of Japan (d. 964)

928

929

Deaths[]

920

921

922

923

  • June 15Robert I, king of the West Frankish Kingdom (b. 860)
  • August 2Plegmund, archbishop of Canterbury (or 914)
  • August 27Ageltrude, queen of Italy and Holy Roman Empress
  • October 8Pilgrim I, archbishop of Salzburg
  • November 20
  • Abu Bakr al-Khallal, Muslim scholar and jurist (b. 848)
  • Adarnase IV, prince of Iberia/Kartli (Georgia)
  • Badr al-Hammami (the Elder), Abbasid general
  • Gurgen I, prince of Tao-Klarjeti (Georgia)
  • Harshavarman I, king of Angkor (Cambodia)
  • Ibn Khuzaymah, Muslim hadith and scholar (b. 837)
  • Ma Chuo, general and official of Wuyue (or 922)
  • Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari, Persian scholar (b. 839)
  • Reccared, Galician clergyman (b. 885)
  • Ricwin (or Ricuin), Frankish nobleman
  • Walter (or Vaulter), archbishop of Sens
  • Wang Yanzhang, general of Later Liang (b. 863)
  • Zhao Yan, military prefect and official of Later Liang
  • Zhu Youzhen, emperor of Later Liang (b. 888)

924

925

  • May 15Nicholas I Mystikos, Byzantine patriarch (b. 852)
  • August 3Cao, Chinese empress dowager
  • December 10Sancho I, king of Pamplona
  • December 28Wang Zongbi, general of Former Shu
  • December 30Wang Shenzhi, founder of Min (b. 862)
  • Alberic I, duke of Spoleto (approximate date)
  • Bertha, duchess regent of Lucca and Tuscany (b. 863)
  • Cathal mac Conchobair, king of Connacht
  • Fruela II, king of Asturias and León
  • Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi, Persian philosopher
  • Sueiro Belfaguer, Portuguese nobleman (b. 875)
  • Tadg mac Cathail, king of Connacht
  • Zhao Guangyin, chancellor of Later Tang

926

  • January 8Athelm, archbishop of Canterbury
  • March 9Zhu Youqian, Chinese warlord
  • April 29Burchard II, duke of Swabia
  • May 15Zhuang Zong, emperor of Later Tang (b. 885)
  • May 26Yuan Xingqin, Chinese general
  • May 28
    • Kong Qian, official of Later Tang
    • Li Jiji, prince of Later Tang
  • September 6Abaoji (Taizu), emperor of the Khitan Empire
  • December 12, William II, duke of Aquitaine
  • Abdallah ibn Muhammad al-Khaqani, Abbasid vizier (or 927)
  • Alogobotur, Bulgarian nobleman (approximate date)
  • Ero Fernández, Galician magnate (approximate date)
  • Guo Chongtao, general of Later Tang
  • Jin Feishan, empress of Former Shu
  • Kang Yanxiao, Chinese general
  • Liu, empress and wife of Zhuang Zong
  • Pelagius of Córdoba, Christian martyr
  • Wang Zongyan, emperor of Former Shu (b. 899)
  • Wiborada, Swabian anchoress and martyr
  • Xu, empress dowager of Former Shu
  • Zhang Quanyi, Chinese warlord (b. 852)

927

928

929

  • January 28Gao Jixing, founder of Chinese Jingnan (b. 858)
  • February 3Guy (the Philosopher), margrave of Tuscany (Italy)
  • March 26Wang Du, Chinese warlord and governor (jiedushi)
  • June 7Ælthryth, English princess and countess of Flanders (b. 877)
  • October 7Charles III (the Simple), Frankish king (b. 879)
  • Abu Ali al-Husayn ibn Ahmad al-Madhara'i, Abbasid fiscal director
  • Abu'l-Musafir al-Fath, Sajid emir of Azerbaijan (Iran)
  • Al-Batani, Muslim astronomer and mathematician
  • Ashot II, king of Armenia (approximate date)
  • Cui Xie, Chinese official and chancellor
  • Gao Yu, Chinese chief strategist
  • Indra III, ruler of Rashtrakuta (India)
  • Leo VI, pope of the Catholic Church
  • Lothar I, Frankish nobleman (b. 902)
  • Lothar II, Frankish nobleman (b. 874)
  • Padla II, prince of Kakheti (Georgia)
  • Sancho Ordóñez, king of Galicia (Spain)
  • Thumal the Qahraman, Abbasid female judge
  • Zhao Jingyi, Chinese general and governor

References[]

  1. ^ Timothy Reuter (1999). The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume III, p. 563. ISBN 978-0-521-36447-8.
  2. ^ Timothy Reuter (1999). The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume III, p. 314. ISBN 978-0-521-36447-8.
  3. ^ Timothy Reuter (1999). The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume III, p. 675. ISBN 978-0-521-36447-8.
  4. ^ Domínguez-Castro, Fernando; Vaquero, José Manuel; Marín, Manuela; Gallego, María Cruz; García-Herrera, Ricardo. "How useful could Arabic documentary sources be for reconstructing past climate?" Weather 67(3): 76-82 doi:10.1002/wea.835 march 2012.
  5. ^ Timothy Reuter (1999). The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume III, p. 241. ISBN 978-0-521-36447-8.
  6. ^ Knight, Judson. Ahmad ibn Fadlan: An Arab Among the Vikings of Russia. Science and Its Times. Ed. Neil Schlager and Josh Lauer. Vol. 2: 700 to 1449. Detroit: Gale, 2001, pp. 32–34. Gale Virtual Reference Library.
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