902

Year 902 (CMII) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
902 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar902
CMII
Ab urbe condita1655
Armenian calendar351
ԹՎ ՅԾԱ
Assyrian calendar5652
Balinese saka calendar823–824
Bengali calendar309
Berber calendar1852
Buddhist calendar1446
Burmese calendar264
Byzantine calendar6410–6411
Chinese calendar辛酉年 (Metal Rooster)
3598 or 3538
     to 
壬戌年 (Water Dog)
3599 or 3539
Coptic calendar618–619
Discordian calendar2068
Ethiopian calendar894–895
Hebrew calendar4662–4663
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat958–959
 - Shaka Samvat823–824
 - Kali Yuga4002–4003
Holocene calendar10902
Iranian calendar280–281
Islamic calendar289–290
Japanese calendarEngi 2
(延喜2年)
Javanese calendar800–801
Julian calendar902
CMII
Korean calendar3235
Minguo calendar1010 before ROC
民前1010年
Nanakshahi calendar−566
Seleucid era1213/1214 AG
Thai solar calendar1444–1445
Tibetan calendar阴金鸡年
(female Iron-Rooster)
1028 or 647 or −125
     to 
阳水狗年
(male Water-Dog)
1029 or 648 or −124
View of Taormina with the Saracen castle.

Events

Europe

  • Spring Adalbert II, margrave of Tuscany, revolts against Emperor Louis III ("the Blind"). He helps the deposed King Berengar I to recover the Kingdom of Italy. Louis III is forced to abdicate the Lombard throne and flees to Provence, compelled to promise never to return to Italy.
  • FebruaryMarch Abu Abbas Abdallah, conqueror of Reggio Calabria, returns from Sicily and succeeds his father Ibrahim II as Aghlabid emir of Ifriqiya.
  • June Ibrahim II lands with an Aghlabid expeditionary force in Trapani, and proceeds to Palermo. He crushes the reinforced Byzantine army at Giardini.
  • August 1 Taormina, the last Byzantine stronghold in Sicily, is captured by the Aghlabid army. After nearly 75 years, all of Sicily is in Aghlabid hands.[1]
  • September Ibrahim II crosses the Strait of Messina into Calabria. He begins his march to conquer the rest of Italy, and lays siege at Cosenza.
  • October 23 Ibrahim II dies of dysentery in a chapel near Cosenza. His grandson, Ziyadat Allah, takes over the army, but lifts the siege.
  • Winter The Balearic Islands are conquered by the Emirate of Córdoba. The Moors improve agriculture with irrigation on the islands.

Britain

  • December 13 Battle of the Holme: The Anglo-Saxon army is defeated by the Danish Vikings under Æthelwold (a son of Æthelred I) at Holme. Æthelwold is killed, ending his revolt against King Edward the Elder.
  • Winter The Norsemen are expelled from Dublin. After a brief foray into Seisyllwg (Wales), a group, under the Viking lord Ingimundr, settle in the Wirral with the agreement of Lady Æthelflæd of the Mercians.

Arabian Empire

  • April 5 Caliph Al-Mu'tadid dies in Baghdad after a 10-year reign. Possibly poisoned in a palace intrigue, he is succeeded by his eldest son Al-Muktafi as ruler of the Abbasid Caliphate.
  • The Kutama tribe under Abu Abdallah al-Shi'i revolt against the Aghlabids. He begins a campaign and dispatches an invitation to the Fatimid spiritual leader Ubayd Allah al-Mahdi Billah to support him.
  • Moorish Andalusian merchants set up a trade settlement (so-called emporium) in Oran (modern Algeria).[2]

Asia

  • Spring Emperor Zhao Zong appoints Yang Xingmi as the overall commander of the Eastern circuits in China. He receives the title of Prince Wuzhong of Wu.
  • The Kingdom of Nanzhao in East Asia is overthrown, followed by three dynasties in quick succession, before the establishment of the Kingdom of Dali in 937.

Births

Deaths

  • February 16 Mary the Younger, Byzantine saint (b. 875)
  • April 5 Al-Mu'tadid, Abbasid caliph
  • August 14 Badr al-Mu'tadidi, Abbasid commander-in-chief
  • October 23 Ibrahim II, Aghlabid emir (b. 850)
  • December 5 Ealhswith, queen and wife of Alfred the Great
  • December 16 Wei Yifan, chancellor of the Tang Dynasty
  • Æthelwold, son of Æthelred of Wessex
  • Amr ibn al-Layth, Saffarid emir
  • Anscar I, margrave of Ivrea (Italy)
  • Li Cunxin, general of the Tang Dynasty (b. 862)
  • Wang Zongdi, Chinese official and governor
  • Yunju Daoying, Chinese Buddhist teacher (b. 830)

References

  1. Vasiliev, Alexander A. (1968). Byzance et les Arabes, Tome II: Les relations politiques de Byzance et des Arabes à l'époque de la dynastie macédonienne (les empereurs Basile I, Léon le Sage et Constantin VII Porphyrogénète) 867-959 (253-348). Première partie: Les relations politiques de Byzance et des Arabes à l'époque de la dynastie macédonienne. Première période, de 867 à 959. Corpus Bruxellense Historiae Byzantinae (in French). French ed.: Henri Grégoire, Marius Canard. Brussels: Fondation Byzantine. pp. 145–147. OCLC 1070617015.
  2. Gilbert Meynier (2010). L'Algérie cœur du Maghreb classique. De l'ouverture islamo-arabe au repli (658-1518). Paris: La Découverte; p. 26.
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