714

Year 714 (DCCXIV) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. The denomination 714 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.

Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
714 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar714
DCCXIV
Ab urbe condita1467
Armenian calendar163
ԹՎ ՃԿԳ
Assyrian calendar5464
Balinese saka calendar635–636
Bengali calendar121
Berber calendar1664
Buddhist calendar1258
Burmese calendar76
Byzantine calendar6222–6223
Chinese calendar癸丑年 (Water Ox)
3410 or 3350
     to 
甲寅年 (Wood Tiger)
3411 or 3351
Coptic calendar430–431
Discordian calendar1880
Ethiopian calendar706–707
Hebrew calendar4474–4475
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat770–771
 - Shaka Samvat635–636
 - Kali Yuga3814–3815
Holocene calendar10714
Iranian calendar92–93
Islamic calendar95–96
Japanese calendarWadō 7
(和銅7年)
Javanese calendar607–608
Julian calendar714
DCCXIV
Korean calendar3047
Minguo calendar1198 before ROC
民前1198年
Nanakshahi calendar−754
Seleucid era1025/1026 AG
Thai solar calendar1256–1257
Tibetan calendar阴水牛年
(female Water-Ox)
840 or 459 or −313
     to 
阳木虎年
(male Wood-Tiger)
841 or 460 or −312
Francia at the death of Pepin II (of Herstal)

Events

Europe

  • In Septimania, local Visigothic nobles of the anti-Roderick party are offered peace terms similar to those of Prince Theodemir (see 713), and accept Muslim overlordship. Other Visigoths revolt and proclaim Ardo as king. Visigothic refugees gather in the Picos de Europa in the mountains of Asturias.
  • December 16 Pepin II (of Herstal), mayor of the Merovingian palace, dies at Jupille (modern Belgium). His grandson Theudoald (who at age eight was still well into early childhood) becomes the nominal mayor of the palace, while his wife Plectrude holds actual power and imprisons Pepin's illegitimate son Charles Martel.[1]
  • Civil War within the Pepinid clan: A revolt erupts between the Neustrian Franks and Frisians. King Radbod forces bishop Willibrord and his Benedictine monks to flee, and advances as far as Cologne (Germany). Frisia (modern-day Netherlands) once again becomes independent.[2]
  • Duke Eudes proclaims himself the independent prince of Aquitaine (located north-east of the Garonne River), thereby asserting legal as well as practical independence from the Frankish Kingdom.[3]
  • Grimoald the Younger, mayor of the palace of Neustria, is assassinated while on pilgrimage to visit the tomb of Saint Lambert at Liège, on orders of his father-in-law King Radbod.

Arabian Empire

China

  • Emperor Xuan Zong forbids all commercial vendors and shops in the Chinese capital city of Chang'an to copy and sell Buddhist sutras, so that the emperor can give the clergy of the Buddhist monasteries the sole right to distribute written sutras to the laity.
  • Summer Xuan Zong makes his general Xue Ne de facto chancellor and commissions him, with a Chinese army (60,000 men), to attack the Khitans (Mongolia). Xue falls into a Khitan trap and the Tang forces are crushed, at an 80-90% casualty rate.
  • Fall Xue Ne repels a Tibetan invasion of the Lan Prefecture (modern Lanzhou). Xuan Zong creates Li Ying, his second son, crown prince of the Tang Dynasty.

Religion

Births

Deaths

  • September 5 Shang, emperor of the Tang Dynasty
  • December 16 Pepin of Herstal, Mayor of the Palace
  • Achila II, king of the Visigoths (approximate date)
  • Al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf, Arab governor (b. 661)
  • Grimoald the Younger, Mayor of the Palace
  • Guthlac of Crowland, Anglo-Saxon hermit
  • Sa'id ibn Jubayr, Muslim scholar (b. 665)

References

  1. David Nicolle (2008). Poitiers AD 732, Charles Martel turns the Islamic tide (p. 17). ISBN 978-184603-230-1
  2. "Geschiedenis van het volk der Friezen". Boudicca.de. Archived from the original on June 8, 2009. Retrieved 2009-01-22.
  3. David Nicolle (2008). Poitiers AD 732, Charles Martel turns the Islamic tide (p. 21). ISBN 978-184603-230-1
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