936

Year 936 (CMXXXVI) was a leap year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
936 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar936
CMXXXVI
Ab urbe condita1689
Armenian calendar385
ԹՎ ՅՁԵ
Assyrian calendar5686
Balinese saka calendar857–858
Bengali calendar343
Berber calendar1886
Buddhist calendar1480
Burmese calendar298
Byzantine calendar6444–6445
Chinese calendar乙未年 (Wood Goat)
3632 or 3572
     to 
丙申年 (Fire Monkey)
3633 or 3573
Coptic calendar652–653
Discordian calendar2102
Ethiopian calendar928–929
Hebrew calendar4696–4697
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat992–993
 - Shaka Samvat857–858
 - Kali Yuga4036–4037
Holocene calendar10936
Iranian calendar314–315
Islamic calendar324–325
Japanese calendarJōhei 6
(承平6年)
Javanese calendar835–837
Julian calendar936
CMXXXVI
Korean calendar3269
Minguo calendar976 before ROC
民前976年
Nanakshahi calendar−532
Seleucid era1247/1248 AG
Thai solar calendar1478–1479
Tibetan calendar阴木羊年
(female Wood-Goat)
1062 or 681 or −91
     to 
阳火猴年
(male Fire-Monkey)
1063 or 682 or −90
Otto I is crowned king at Aachen Cathedral

Events

Europe

  • June 19 At Laon, Louis IV, the 14-year old son of the late King Charles the Simple, is crowned as the King of France after being recalled from Wessex by Hugh the Great, count of Paris. Hugh, whose father, King Robert I, was killed in battle near Soissons in 923, is given the title Duke of the Franks and becomes the second most powerful man in the West Frankish Kingdom. The crowning of Louis IV follows the death of King Rudolph I at Auxerre earlier in the year.
  • Summer Hugh of Provence, king of Italy, dispatches his son and co-ruler Lothair II with a third expedition to Rome to dislodge Alberic II. Assault after assault is repulsed by the Roman civic militia. At length, weakened by an epidemic, the Lombard nobles press on Hugh to accept a peace treaty mediated by Odo of Cluny.
  • July 2 King Henry I ("the Fowler") dies at his royal palace in Memleben, Thuringia, after a 17-year reign. He is succeeded by his 23-year-old son Otto I, who is married to Eadgyth, a daughter of the late King Edward the Elder. Otto is the first German king to be crowned in Charlemagne's former capital of Aachen.
  • A Hungarian army invades Franconia and occupies Fulda. They are attacked by East Frankish forces and forced to go westwards. Otto I moves against the rebellious Elbe Slavs.[1]
  • Archbishop Unni of Hamburg-Bremen visits the king of Denmark Gorm and the king of the Swedes Ring before he dies in Birka.

England

Africa

  • Spring Muhammad ibn Tughj al-Ikhshid, ruler of Egypt and Syria, defeats the Fatimid forces near Alexandria. He drives them out of the city, forcing the Fatimids to retreat from Egypt to their base at Cyrenaica.

Arabian Empire

  • Summer Ibn Muqla, an Abbasid official and vizier, is disgraced after his failed campaign against Muhammad ibn Ra'iq, the rebellious governor of Wasit. He is arrested and imprisoned in Baghdad.

China

  • November 28 Shi Jingtang is enthroned as the first emperor of the Later Jin by Tai Zong, ruler of the Khitan-led Liao Dynasty, following a revolt against his rival, emperor Fei of Later Tang.

Religion

Births

Deaths

  • February 13 Xiao Wen, empress of the Liao Dynasty
  • July 2 Henry the Fowler, king of the East Frankish Kingdom
  • July 5 Xu Ji, official and chancellor of Former Shu
  • September 17 Unni, archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen
  • September 27 Gyeon Hwon, king of Hubaekje (b. 867)
  • December 25 Zhang Jingda, general of Later Tang
  • Abu Bakr ibn Mujāhid, Muslim canonical reader and scholar
  • Abu al-Hasan al-Ash'ari, Muslim Shafi'i scholar (b. 874)
  • Al-Muntakhab al-Hasan, ruler of the Rassid Dynasty
  • Andrew of Constantinople, Byzantine saint
  • Gagik I of Vaspurakan, Armenian king (or 943)
  • Ibn al-Mughallis, Muslim theologian and jurist
  • Murchadh mac Sochlachan, king of Uí Maine (Ireland)
  • Rudolph I, king of the West Frankish Kingdom
  • Dandi Mahadevi, Indian queen regnant

References

  1. Timothy Reuter (1999). The New Cambridge Medieval History, Volume III, p. 244. ISBN 978-0-521-36447-8.
  2. "Cornwall timeline 936". Cornwall Council. Archived from the original on September 30, 2008.
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