Wikipedia

440s

Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
  • 440
  • 441
  • 442
  • 443
  • 444
  • 445
  • 446
  • 447
  • 448
  • 449
Categories:

The 440s decade ran from January 1, 440, to December 31, 449.

Events

440

By place

Roman Empire
Europe
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.
China
Asia

By topic

Art
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 18Pope 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".

441

By place

Roman Empire
  • Chrysaphius, chief minister, persuades Emperor Theodosius II at Constantinople to dismiss his sister Pulcheria, for her policy of exiling the Jews, and destroying their synagogues.[1]
  • Theodosius II sends the Eastern imperial fleet, under the command of the Romano-Goth Areobindus, into Sicilian waters, taking the Vandals by surprise.
  • Pulcheria leaves for the seaport Hebdomon (Turkey), and becomes a nun to support Nestorianism in the Holy Land (Palestine).
Europe
Balkans
  • The Huns, led by Attila, attack Constanţa (modern Romania), one of the few remaining Roman forts on the northern bank of the Danube, and designated as a secure trading post. On a crowded market day, the Huns take the town by surprise and slaughter the garrison.[2]
Persia

By topic

Religion

442

By place

Roman Empire
  • Emperor Valentinian III signs a peace treaty with King Genseric, and recognises the Vandal Kingdom. He grants him sovereignty over most of Africa. Genseric gives back Sicily and Mauretania (Algeria and Morocco). This marks the end of the Vandal migrations; they settle in North Africa, with Carthage as their capital.
  • Valentinian III forms a marriage proposal for his eldest daughter Eudocia and Genseric's son Huneric. He is already married to a Visigoth princess, and Genseric decides to free him of his obligations by accusing her of trying to poison him. He leaves her mutilated - her ears and nose are cut off - and sends her back to her father Theodoric I, in Toulouse (Gaul).
Europe
Ireland

By topic

Religion

443

By place

Roman Empire
Britannia
  • Period of civil war and famine in Britain, caused by rival kingdoms and Pictish invasions; the situation aggravates tensions between Pelagian and Roman factions. Pro-Roman citizens migrate towards Gaul.

By topic

Religion

444


By place

Roman Empire
Europe
Ireland
  • The Irish city of Armagh is founded by Saint Patrick the Great.

By topic

Religion

445

By place

Roman Empire
Europe
  • Bleda, co-ruler of the Huns, dies in a hunting accident. He is possibly murdered at the instigation of his younger brother Attila, with whom he has ruled since 434. Now about 39, Attila takes the throne for himself, and becomes king of the Hunnic Empire.

By topic

Religion

446

By place

Roman Empire
Britannia
China

By topic

Religion

447

By place

Roman Empire
Britannia
Europe

By topic

Arts and Sciences
Religion

448

By place

Roman Empire
Europe
China

By topic

Religion

449

By place

Roman Empire
  • Emperor Valentinian III sends an embassy to Attila the Hun. The purpose of the meeting is a long-running dispute over spoils of war during the Danube offensive (441–442). Attila claims his lost property, but Valentinian and Flavius Aetius (magister militum) refuse this request.[8]
  • Flavius Orestes, Roman aristocrat, is sent to Attila's court and becomes a high-ranking secretary (notarius). He is the father of the future emperor Romulus Augustulus.
Britannia

By topic

Religion

Significant people

Births

440

441

442

444

448

449

Deaths

440

441

442

  • Veh Mihr Shapur, Sasanian military officer and Marzban of Armenia

443

  • Zong Bing, Chinese artist and musician

444

445

446

447

448

449


References

  1. ^ H, Elton (2018). "A Political and Military History". In The Roman Empire in Late Antiquity: A Political and Military History (pp. 151-194): 151 - 194.
  2. ^ The End of Empire. Christopher Kelly, 2009. ISBN 978-0-393-33849-2
  3. ^ "Pandemics That Changed History". HISTORY. Retrieved 2020-01-12.
  4. ^ "CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Eutyches". www.newadvent.org. Retrieved 2020-01-12.
  5. ^ The End of Empire (p. 227). Christopher Kelly, 2009. ISBN 978-0-393-33849-2
  6. ^ The End of Empire (p. 144). Christopher Kelly, 2009. ISBN 978-0-393-33849-2
  7. ^ The End of Empire. Christopher Kelly, 2009. ISBN 978-0-393-33849-2
  8. ^ The End of Empire. Christopher Kelly, 2009. ISBN 978-0-393-33849-2
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