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440s
Decade From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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The 440s decade ran from January 1, 440, to December 31, 449.
440
By place
Europe
- Flavius Aetius, Roman general (magister militum), returns as triumphator back to Rome, after several years' fighting the Burgundians and Visigoths in Gaul. He is honoured by a statue erected by the Senate, and by order of Emperor Valentinian III.[citation needed]
- The Huns under Attila reappear in force, along the frontier of the Western Roman Empire. They attack merchants on the north bank of the Danube and cities in Illyricum, including (according to Priscus) Viminacium, city of Moesia.[citation needed]
Africa
- A Vandal fleet and their allies (Alans, Goths and Moors) set out from Carthage for Sicily, the principal supplier of oil and grain to Italy after the loss of North Africa. They loot all the coastal towns and besiege Palermo. Heavily laden ships return to the court of King Genseric.
Asia
- Northern and Southern dynasties: Northern China is unified by the Northern Wei dynasty. The South is still under the control of the Song (or Liu Song) dynasty.
- A center of Buddhist studies is established at Nalanda in Bihar on the plains of the Ganges River (India).
Persia
- The Hephthalites (White Huns) move south from the Altai Mountains region into Transoxiana, Bactria, Khorasan and eastern Persia.
By topic
Art
- The Parting of Lot and Abraham, mosaic in the nave arcade, Church of Santa Maria Maggiore (Rome), is made.
Ancient Games
- Chaturanga, Indian war game and an ancestor of chess through the Persian game of Shatranj (or Chatrang), evolves in the Indus Valley on the Indian subcontinent (approximate date).
Religion
- August 18 – Pope Sixtus III dies after an 8-year reign in which he has resisted heresy and sponsored major construction programs in Rome. He is succeeded by Leo I as the 45th pope.
- September 29 – Leo I begins to formulate Orthodoxy and condemns Eutychianism, an extreme form of monophysitism which holds that the human nature of Christ is absorbed by His divine nature.
- Winter – Leo I sends a letter to Valentinian III stating, "by the Holy Spirit's inspiration the emperor needs no human instruction and is incapable of doctrinal error".
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Significant people
- Attila the Hun, King of the Huns
Births
440
- Bodhidharma, semi-legendary Buddhist monk (approximate date)
- Euric, Visigothic king and son of Theodoric I (d. 484)
- Gaudentius, son of Flavius Aetius (approximate date)
- Qi Wudi, Chinese emperor of the Southern Qi dynasty (d. 493)
- Tonantius Ferreolus, Gallo-Roman senator and prefect of Gaul
- Vakhtang I, king of Iberia (modern Georgia) (approximate date)
- Wen Cheng Di, emperor of the Northern Wei dynasty (d. 465)
441
442
- Feng, Chinese empress and regent of the Northern Wei dynasty (d. 490)[11]
- Isidore of Miletus, Byzantine architect and mathematician (d. 537)[citation needed]
- Placidia, Roman empress and daughter of Valentinian III (approximate date)
444
- Xiao Ni, prince of Southern Qi (d. 492)
448
- Cyriacus of Athens, Greek anchorite and saint (d. 557)
449
- February 25 – Liu Ziye, emperor of the Liu Song dynasty (d. 466)
- Eugendus, abbot of Condat Abbey (approximate date)
- Kavadh I, king of the Persian Empire (d. 531)
Deaths
440
- February 17 – Mesrob, Armenian monk and linguist (b. 362)
- August 18 – Pope Sixtus III[12] (b. 390)
- Amalgaid mac Fiachrae, king of Connacht (Ireland)
- Yuan Qigui, empress and wife of Wen of Liu Song (b. 405)[13]
441
- Hermeric, king of the Suebi
- John, Patriarch of Antioch
442
- Veh Mihr Shapur, Sasanian military officer and Marzban of Armenia[14]
443
444
- Bricius, bishop of Tours
- Cyril of Alexandria, patriarch and theologian[16]
- Juqu Wuhui, prince of Northern Liang
445
- Arsenius the Great, Desert Father
- King Bleda of the Huns (approximate date)
- Fan Ye, Chinese historian (b. 398)
- Nath Í mac Fiachrach, High King of Ireland
446
- February 19 – Leontius of Trier, Bishop of Trier
- Mac Cairthinn mac Coelboth, king of Leinster (Ireland)
- Proclus, patriarch of Constantinople (approximate date)
447
- Areobindus, Roman general (magister militum)
- Juqu Mujian, prince of the Chinese state Northern Liang
- Secundinus (or Seachnaill), patron saint
448
- Kou Qianzhi, Chinese high official and Daoist (b. 365)
- Rechila, king of the Suebi (approximate date)
- Saint Germanus, bishop of Auxerre (approximate date)
449
- August 11 – Flavian, patriarch of Constantinople
- Eucherius, bishop of Lyon (approximate date)
- Hilary, bishop of Arles (b. 403)
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References
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