[Board Game]1 to 1337 and beyond

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    Yes, it is in there :)
    Good luck :thumbup:

  • 0316546447987674621354367360313670687674532134576038736804513124365476387604531235460356354635703543584736584736500350469846303203506868468480987998400704984056313213213154684980798463587069321546849804635213506545540655888998004621321121330654080954321321546543216698845632115643214899613215446899554132214569954132134651049944895432130500321548996554321448956022321458906543214560895321469854231045809632145832146509851325896453021458963214597789778976595040654869532165494621321654946565489546321321654654162136165416499884621321659588465132136584995321321654945632165416546546521


    Nice one :thumbup:

    766
    7
    67

    EDIT: oops it was 766 sorry :c

  • 782

    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia




    This article is about the year 782. For the number, see 782 (number).


    Millennium:
    1st millennium


    Centuries:
    7th century – 8th century – 9th century


    Decades:
    750s 760s 770s – 780s – 790s 800s 810s


    Years:
    779 780 781 – 782 – 783 784 785


    782 by topic


    Politics


    State leaders – Sovereign states


    Birth and death categories


    Births – Deaths


    Establishment and disestablishment categories


    Establishments – Disestablishments


    v
    t
    e


    782 in other calendars


    Gregorian calendar
    782


    DCCLXXXII


    Ab urbe condita
    1535


    Armenian calendar
    231


    ԹՎ ՄԼԱ


    Assyrian calendar
    5532


    Bengali calendar
    189


    Berber calendar
    1732


    Buddhist calendar
    1326


    Burmese calendar
    144


    Byzantine calendar
    6290–6291


    Chinese calendar
    辛酉年 (Metal Rooster)


    3478 or 3418


    — to —


    壬戌年 (Water Dog)


    3479 or 3419


    Coptic calendar
    498–499


    Discordian calendar
    1948


    Ethiopian calendar
    774–775


    Hebrew calendar
    4542–4543


    Hindu calendars


    - Vikram Samvat
    838–839


    - Shaka Samvat
    704–705


    - Kali Yuga
    3883–3884


    Holocene calendar
    10782


    Iranian calendar
    160–161


    Islamic calendar
    165–166


    Japanese calendar
    Ten'ō 2 / Enryaku 1


    (延暦元年)


    Julian calendar
    782


    DCCLXXXII


    Korean calendar
    3115


    Minguo calendar
    1130 before ROC


    民前1130年


    Seleucid era
    1093/1094 AG


    Thai solar calendar
    1324–1325


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    Wikimedia Commons has media related to 782.


    Rabanus Maurus (left), with Alcuin (middle), presents his work to archbishop Odgar (right)


    Year 782 (DCCLXXXII) was a common year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. The denomination 782 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.


    Events
    By place
    Byzantine Empire
    Arab–Byzantine War: Arab forces (95,000 men) under Harun al-Rashid, son of the Abbasid caliph Al-Mahdi, cross the Taurus Mountains and capture the Byzantine border fortress of Magida. Harun leaves his lieutenant Al-Rabi' ibn Yunus to besiege the city of Nakoleia (Phrygia), while another force (30,000 men) under probably Yahya ibn Khalid, is send to raid the western coastlands of Asia Minor. Harun himself, with the main army, advances to the Opsician Theme.
    Summer – Harun al-Rashid reaches as far as Chrysopolis, across the Bosporus Straits from the Byzantine capital, Constantinople. After the defection of the Armenian general Tatzates, empress Irene accepts a three-year truce, including the annual payment of an tribute of 70,000 or 90,000 gold dinars and the handing over of 10,000 silk garments. Harun releases all his captives (5,600 men), including chief minister Staurakios and other hostages.[1][2]
    Emperor Constantine VI is betrothed to the 6-year-old Rotrude, daughter of Charlemagne, Irene sends a scholar monk called Elisaeus to educate her in Greek language and manners.[3]


    Europe
    Summer – Saxon Wars: King Charlemagne sends an punitive expedition (an elite force of Eastern Frankish troops) under the command of Adalgis the Chamberlain, Gallo, and Worad, supported by Saxon forces, to deal with the Saxons and Sorb raiders in Thuringia.[4]
    Battle of Süntel: The Franks under Charlemagne are defeated by Saxon 'rebels' led by Widukind.
    He succeeds in wiping out more than half of the occupying Frankish
    forces and again raises the banner of revolt. Widukind flees and seeks
    refuge amongst the Danes.
    Autumn – Charlemagne returns from his campagne in Italy and musters an Frankish army of available troops in Bavaria. He then marches to Saxony, probably to Eresburg. Charlemagne marches north, down the Weser to the Aller River, making camp near Verden.[5]
    Massacre of Verden: Charlemagne executes 4,500 'rebel' Saxons at Verden for practicing paganism. He issues the Capitulatio de partibus Saxoniae and imposes Christianity on the Saxons, making Saxony a Frankish province.
    Charlemagne summons Alcuin, Anglo-Saxon missionary, to Aachen, and appoints him as chief adviser on religious and educational matters. He becomes the leading scholar and teacher at the Carolingian court.


    By topic
    Religion
    Nanchan Temple on Wutaishan, Shanxi, is built during the Tang Dynasty (China).


    Births
    Deaths
    Conall mac Fidhghal, king of Uí Maine (Ireland)
    January 11 – Kōnin, emperor of Japan (b. 709)
    September 28 – Leoba, Anglo-Saxon nun
    Thierry IV, Frankish nobleman (approximate date)


    References


    Garland 1999, pp. 76–77.


    Treadgold 1997, p. 418.


    Runciman,
    Steven. "The Empress Irene the Athenian." Medieval Woman. Ed. Derek
    Baker. Oxford: Ecclesiastical History Society, 1978.


    David Nicolle (2014). The Conquest of Saxony AD 782–785, p. 51. ISBN 978-1-78200-825-5


    David Nicolle (2014). The Conquest of Saxony AD 782–785, p. 65. ISBN 978-1-78200-825-5