840 Explained
Year 840 (DCCCXL) was a leap year starting on Thursday in the Julian calendar, the 840th year of the Common Era (CE) and Anno Domini (AD) designations, the 840th year of the 1st millennium, the 40th year of the 9th century, and the 1st year of the 840s decade.
Events
By place
Europe
Britain
- King Wigstan of Mercia, grandson of former ruler Wiglaf (see 839), declines his kingship in preference of the religious life. He asks his widowed mother, Princess Ælfflæd, to act as regent. A nobleman of the line of the late king Beornred, named Berhtric, wishes to marry her but he is a relative. Wigstan refuses the match, and is murdered by followers of Berhtric at Wistow. He is buried at Repton Abbey, and later revered as a saint. The Mercian throne is seized by Berhtric's father, Beorhtwulf.[1]
- Vikings make permanent settlements with their first 'wintering over', located at Lough Neagh in Northern Ireland (approximate date).
Asia
By topic
Religion
Births
- January - Michael III, Byzantine emperor (867) This date of birth is generally held as uncertain; though January 840 is the most probable, 839 is also possible.
- October 25 - Ya'qub ibn al-Layth al-Saffar, founder of the Saffarid dynasty (879)
- Abu al-Hassan al-Nuri, Muslim Sufi (approximate date)
- Adalhard II, Frankish nobleman (approximate date)
- Berengaudus, Benedictine monk (892)
- Clement of Ohrid, Bulgarian scholar (approximate date)
- Eudokia Ingerina, Byzantine empress (approximate date)
- Hucbald, Frankish music theorist (or 850)
- Lothar I, Frankish nobleman (880)
- Notker the Stammerer, Benedictine monk (approximate date)
- Richardis, Frankish empress (approximate date)
- Sunyer II, Frankish nobleman (approximate date)
- Theodard, archbishop of Narbonne (approximate date)
- Theodore II, pope of the Catholic Church (897)
- Unruoch III, margrave of Friuli (approximate date)
Deaths
- March 14 - Einhard, Frankish scholar
- June 11 - Junna, emperor of Japan (785)
- June 16 or 839 - Rorgon I, Frankish nobleman
- June 20 - Louis the Pious, ruler of the Carolingian Empire (778)
- Agobard, archbishop of Lyon (779)
- Andrew II, duke of Naples
- Ansovinus, archbishop of Camerino
- Czimislav, king of the Sorbs (approximate date)
- He Jintao, general of the Tang dynasty
- Hilduin, archbishop of Paris (775)
- Li Chengmei, prince of the Tang dynasty
- Li Rong, prince of the Tang dynasty
- Muhammad at-Taqi, Muslim ninth Ismā'īlī imam (or 839)
- Salmawaih ibn Bunan, Muslim physician
- Wen Zong, emperor of the Tang dynasty (809)
- Wigstan, king of Mercia (approximate date)
- Yang, consort and concubine of Wen Zong
Notes and References
- Zaluckyj & Zaluckyj, "Decline"
- http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/102315/history-of-Central-Asia/73536/Reunification#73538 History of Central Asia
- Guidoboni, Traina, 1995, p. 121