Timeline of the Middle Ages

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This is a timeline of the Middle Ages. The list is not exhaustive or complete, and requires expansion, particularly of the significance column.

Note: All dates are Common Era.

Centuries: 5th - 6th - 7th - 8th - 9th - 10th - 11th - 12th - 13th - 14th - 15th

the medival times were from 400-1400
Year Date Event Significance
406 Visigoths, Suevi and Burgundians cross the Rhine and invade roman Gaul. Beginning of the collapse of the Western Roman Empire.
410 Rome is captured by the Visigoths under Alaric I.
416 Visigothic conquest of Spain.[1]
418 Roman Empire recognises the Visigothic kingdom of Toulouse.[1]
428 Vandals begin North African conquest.[1]
430 Saint Patrick's Irish mission begins.[1]
444 The "Groans of the Britons", a last appeal to Roman government. This event is "traditional." [1]
451 Attila the Hun is repelled from Gaul by Roman-Barbarian forces at the Battle of Châlons.
452 Attila the Hun raids Italy, destroying Aquileia and causing the foundation of Venice by refugees.
455 The Vandals pillage Rome.[1]
476 The last Roman Emperor, Romulus Augustus, is deposed by Odovacar, conventionally ending the Roman Empire.[1]


481 Clovis becomes King of the Franks.[1]
493 Ostrogothic Kingdom founded in Italy by Theodoric. [1]
496 Clovis converted to the Catholic faith.

[edit] Early Middle Ages

Further information: Early Middle Ages

[edit] 6th century

Year Date Event Significance
507 The Franks under Clovis defeat the Visigoths in the Battle of Vouillé, forcing them to retreat into Spain.
c. 515[1] Battle of Mons Badonicus.[1] The West Saxon advance is halted by Britons.
527 August 1 Justinian I becomes Eastern Roman Emperor.[1] Justinian is best remembered for his Code of Civil Law (529), and expansion of imperial territory retaking Rome from the Ostrogoths.
529534 Justinian I publishes the Code of Civil Law.[1] This compiled centuries of legal writings and imperial pronouncements into three parts of one body of law.
c. 529 Benedict of Nursia founds monastery at Monte Cassino.[1] The first of twelve monasteries founded by Saint Benedict, beginning the Order of Saint Benedict.
534 Byzantines, under Belisarius, retake North Africa from the Vandals.[1]
542 Bubonic plague reaches Constantinople. At least 230,000 people die in the city and perhaps two million in the empire. This Justinian plague undermines emperor's attempts to renew Roman glory through conquests. This plague becomes pandemic and continues to castigate Europe, the Middle East, and northern Africa for the next 200 years, until 750.
552 The Byzantine conquest of Italy completes.[1]
563 Saint Columba founds mission in Iona.[1]
568 The Kingdom of the Lombards is founded in Italy.[1]
571 Mohammed is born.[1] Professed receiving revelations from God, which were recorded in the Qur'an, the basis of Islamic theology, in which he is regarded as the most important prophet.
577 The West Saxons continue their advance at the Battle of Deorham.[1]
581618 Sui Dynasty in China.[1]
590 Gregory the Great becomes Pope.[1]
597 Augustine arrives in Kent.[1]

[edit] 7th century

Year Date Event
605 Grand Canal of China constructed.[2]
602-629 Last great Roman-Persian War [1] Long conflict leaves both empires exhausted and unable to cope with the newly united Arab armies under Islam in the 630s
618907 T'ang Dynasty in China.[1] The essential administrative system of this dynasty lasts for 1,300 years.[1]
622 Mohammed flees Mecca for Medina.[1]
626 Joint Persian-Avar-Slav Seige of Constantinople [1] Constantinople saved, Avar power broken and Persians henceforth on the defensive
627 Battle of Nineveh. The Byzantines, under Heraclius, crush the Persians.[1]
631 Death of Mohammed.[1] By this point, all of Arabia is Muslim.[1]
632 Accession of Abu Bakr as first Caliph.[1]
633/634 Battle of Heavenfield. Northumbrian army under Oswald defeat Welsh army.[1]
638 Jerusalem captured by Muslims.[1]
641 Battle of Nehawand. Muslims conquer Persia.[1]
643 Muslims take Alexandria.[1]
645 In Japan, the Soga clan falls.[1] This initiates a period of imitation of Chinese culture.[1]
650 Slav occupation of Balkans complete.[1]
663 Synod of Whitby.[1] Roman Christianity triumphs over Celtic Christianity in England.[1]
674-678 First Arab seige Constantinople.[1] First time Islamic armies stopped, saving Europe from Islamic conquest.[1]
681 Establishment of the Bulgarian Empire. A country with great influence in the European history in the Middle Ages.
685 Battle of Nechtansmere.[1] Picts defeat Northumbrians, whose dominance ends.
687 [[Battle of Tertry
698 Muslims take Carthage.[1]

[edit] 8th century

Year Date Event Significance
711 Musilims under Tarik invade Spain.[1]
718 Second Muslim attack on Constantinople, ending in failure.[1] The combined Byzantine-Bulgarian forces stop the Arab threat in Eastern Europe.
726 Iconoclast movement begun in the Byzantine Empire under Leo III.[1] This was opposed by Pope Gregory II, and an important difference between the Roman and Byzantine churches.[1]
732 Battle of Tours. Charles Martel halts Muslim advance.[1]
735 Death of Bede.[1]
750 Beginning of Abbasid Caliphate.[1]
751 Pepin founds the Carolingian dynasty.[1]
754 Pepin promises the Pope central Italy.[1] This is arguably the beginning of the temporal power of the Papacy.[1]
768 Beginning of Charlemagne's reign.
778 Battle of Roncevaux Pass. [1]
786 Accession of Haroun-al-Rashid in Baghdad.[1]
793 Sack of Lindisfarne.[1] Viking attacks on Britain begin.[1]
795 Death of Offa.[1] Marks the end of Mercian dominance in England.

[edit] 9th century

Year Date Event Significance
800 Charlemagne is crowned Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire by Pope Leo III.
814 Death of Charlemagne.[1]
825 Battle of Ellandun. Egbert defeats Mercians.[1] Wessex becomes the leading kingdom of England.[1]
827 Muslims invade Sicily.[1]
840 Muslims capture Bari and much of southern Italy.[1]
843 Division of Charlemagne's Empire between his grandsons with the Treaty of Verdun. Sets the stage for the founding of the Holy Roman Empire and France as separate states.[1]
840 Kenneth McAlpin becomes king of the Picts and Scots, creating the Kingdom of Alba.[1]
862 Viking state in Russia founded under Rurik, first at Novgorod, then Kiev.[1]
864 Christianization of Bulgaria.
866 Fujiwara period in Japan.[1]
866 Viking "Great Army" in England.[1] Northumbria, East Anglia, and Mercia were overwhelmed.[1]
868 Earliest known printed book in China with a date.[1]
871 Alfred the Great assumes the throne, the first king of a united England. He defended England from Viking invaders, formed new laws and fostered a rebirth of religious and scholarly activities.
872 Harold Fairhair becomes King of Norway.[1]
874 Iceland is settled by Norsemen.[1]
885 Arrival of the disciples of Saints Cyril and Methodius in Bulgaria Creation of the Cyrillic alphabet; in the following decades the country became the cultural and spiritual centre of the whole Eastern Orthodox Slavic World.
885886 Vikings attack Paris.[1]
893 Simeon I becomes ruler of the First Bulgarian Empire in the Balkans.[1]
896 Arpad and the Magyars are present in Norway.[1]
897 Death of Alfred the Great.[1]

[edit] 10th century

Year Date Event Significance
911 The Viking Rollo and his tribe settle in what is now Normandy by the terms of the Treaty of Saint-Clair-sur-Epte, founding the Duchy of Normandy.
917 Battle of Anchialus. Simeon I the Great defeats the Byzantines. Recognition of the Imperial Title of the Bulgarian rulers.
927 Death of Simeon I the Great. Recognition of the Bulgarian Patriarchate, the first independent National Church in Europe.
955 Battle of Lechfeld. Otto the Great defeats the Magyars. This is the defining event that prevents them from entering Central Europe.
956 Otto the Great crowned the first Holy Roman Emperor.

[edit] High Middle Ages

Further information: High Middle Ages

[edit] 11th century

Year Date Event Significance
1010 Malcolm II defeats the Danes in five battles, including Mortlach and Camuston. Scotland remains free from the empire of Cnut
1018 The Byzantines under Basil II conquer Bulgaria after a bitter 50-years struggle.
1049 Pope Leo IX ascends to the papal throne.
1050 The astrolabe, an ancient tool of navigation, is first used in Europe.
1054 The East-West Schism which divided the church into Western Catholicism and Eastern Orthodoxy.
1066 William the Conqueror, Duke of Normandy, invades England and becomes King after the Battle of Hastings. End of Anglosaxon rule in England and start of Norman lineage
1067 Pope Gregory VII elevated to the papal throne. This begins a period of church reform.
1071 The Seljuks under Alp Arslan defeat the Byzantine army at Manzikert. The Normans capture Bari, the last Byzantine possession in southern Italy. Beginning of the end of Byzantine rule in Asia Minor.
1077 Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV walks to Canossa where he stands barefoot in the snow to beg forgiveness of the Pope for his offences, and admitting defeat in the Investiture Controversy. This helps establish Papal rule over European heads of state for another 450 years.
1077 The Construction of the Tower of London begins. The tower of London was the ultimate keep of the British Empire.
1086 The compilation of the Domesday Book, a great land and property survey commissioned by William the Conqueror to assess his new possessions. This is the first such undertaking since Roman times.
1098 The Cistercian Order is founded.
1099 First Crusade. Jerusalem is re-taken from the Muslims on the urging of Pope Urban II.

[edit] 12th century

Year Date Event Significance
1117 The University of Oxford is founded.[citation needed]
1118 The Knights Templar founded to protect Jerusalem and European pilgrims on their journey to the city.
1123 First Lateran Council. Followed and confirmed the Concordat of Worms.
1139 Second Lateran Council. Declared clerical marriages invalid, regulated clerical dress, and punished attacks on clerics by excommunication.
1147 Second Crusade. The Second Crusade was in retaliation to the fall of Edessa, one of the first Crusader States founded in the First Crusade. It was an overall failure. This was the first Crusade to have been led by European Kings.
1158 The Hanseatic League is founded. This marks a new period of trade and economic development for North and Western Europe.
1163 The first cornerstone is laid for construction of Notre Dame de Paris.
1179 Third Lateran Council. Limited papal electees to the cardinals alone, condemned simony, forbade the promotion of anyone to the episcopate before the age of thirty.
1184 The first of many Inquisitions begins.
1185 Reestablishment of the Bulgaria Empire.
1187 Saladin recaptures Jerusalem.
1188 Richard I ascends to the throne of England.
1189 Third Crusade. This follows Saladin uniting the Muslim world and recapturing Jerusalem. Despite managing to win several major battles, the Crusaders did not capture Jerusalem.

[edit] 13th century

Year Date Event Significance
1204 Sack of Constantinople during the Fourth Crusade.
1205 Battle of Adrianople. The Bulgarians under Emperor Kaloyan defeat Baldwin I. Beginning of the decline of the Latin Empire.
1208 Pope Innocent III calls for the Albigensian Crusade which seeks to destroy a rival form of Christianity practiced by the Cathars.
1209 The University of Cambridge is founded.
1212 Children's Crusade.
1212 Spanish Christians succeed in defeating the Moors in the long Reconquista campaigns. By 1248, only the small southern kingdom of Granada remained under Muslim control.
1215 The Magna Carta is signed by John of England. This marks one of the first times a medieval ruler is forced to accept limits on his power.
1215 Fourth Lateran Council. Dealt with transubstantiation, papal primacy and conduct of clergy. Proclaimed that Jews and Muslims should wear identification marks to distinguish them from Christians.
1216 Papal recognition of the Dominican Order.
1223 Founding of the Franciscan Order.
1257 Founding of the University of Paris.
1257 Provisions of Oxford forced upon Henry III of England. This establishes a new form of government-limited regal authority.
1273 Rudolph I of Germany is elected Holy Roman Emperor. This begins the Habsburg de facto domination of the crown that lasted until is dissolution in 1806.
1274 Thomas Aquinas' work, Summa Theologica is published.
1295 Marco Polo publishes his tales of China. A key step to the bridging of East and West
1296 Edward I of England invades Scotland, starting the First War of Scottish Independence.
1297 William Wallace emerges as the leader of the Scottish resistance to England.

[edit] Late Middle Ages

Further information: Late Middle Ages

[edit] 14th century

Year Date Event Significance
1307 Friday, October 13th The Knights Templar are rounded up and murdered by Philip the Fair of France, with the backing of the Pope.
1309 Beginning of the Babylonian Captivity of the Papacy during which the Popes moved to Avignon.
1310 Dante publishes his Divine Comedy.
1314 Robert the Bruce restores Scotland's de facto independence at the Battle of Bannockburn.
1328 The First War of Scottish Independence ends in Scottish victory with the Treaty of Edinburgh-Northampton and de jure independence.
1337 The Hundred Years' War begins. England and France struggle for dominance of Western Europe.
1347 The Black Death ravages Europe for the first of many times. An estimated 20% - 40% of the population is thought to have perished within the first year.
1347 The University of Prague is founded.
1378 The Western Schism during which three claimant popes were elected simultaneously. The Avignon Papacy ends.
1380 Prince Dmitry Donskoy of Moscow led a united Russian army to a victory over the Mongols in the Battle of Kulikovo.
1380 Chaucer begins to write The Canterbury Tales.
1381 Peasants' Revolt in England.
1381 The Bible is translated into English by John Wycliffe.
1386 The University of Heidelberg is founded.
1396 The Battle of Nicopolis the last great crusade fails.

[edit] 15th century

Year Date Event Significance
1415 Battle of Agincourt. Henry V and his army defeat a numerically superior French army, partially because of the newly-introduced English longbow.
1417 The Council of Constance ends the Western Schism at last, and elects Pope Martin V as the sole pope.
1429 Joan of Arc lifts the siege of Orleans for the Dauphin of France, enabling him to eventually be crowned at Reims. The battle at Orleans is the first of many which ultimately drive the English from continental Europe.
1430 Capture, trial, and execution of Joan of Arc.
1434 The Medici family rises to prominence in Florence.
1439 Strassburg Cathedral is completed, making it the highest building in the world.
1440 Leonardo da Vinci is born. Leonardo developed many plans and paintings, including the helicopter and the famous Mona Lisa.
1453 The Hundred Years' War ends. Calais is the only English possession on Continental Europe.
1453 Constantinople falls to the Ottoman Turks.
1454 Johann Gutenberg prints the first of his Bibles on his new printing press. This innovation helped ignite the Protestant Reformation in Europe.
1455 Pope Callixtus III, born Alfonse Borgia, ascends to the papal throne. This begins a period of papal scandal and debauchery on an unprecedented scale.
1455 The Wars of the Roses begins in England.
1492 Reconquista

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh bi bj bk bl bm bn bo bp bq br bs bt bu bv bw bx by bz Cook, Chris (ed.). Pears cyclopaedia 2003-4. pp. A4 - A7.
  2. ^ Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named pears_2009

Most historians believe Leonardo da Vinci was born in 1452 AD, not 1440 AD as listed.

[edit] See also

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