AD 666: Difference between revisions

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imported>My Pants Metal
Reverted 1 edit by Mohammed Ahmed Majeed (talk): This is covered in the 666 and 666 (number) articles. Not appropriate for the article about the year
 
imported>TheBoxThinker
m Asia: Added missing parenthesis, uncapitalized "differential"
 
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==== Asia ====
==== Asia ====
* [[China|Chinese]] [[Buddhist]] monks Zhi Yu and Zhi Yuo craft more [[south-pointing chariot]] vehicles (a non-magnetic, mechanical-driven directional-[[compass]] vehicle that incorporates the use of a [[Differential (mechanical device)|Differential]].
* [[China|Chinese]] [[Buddhist]] monks Zhi Yu and Zhi Yuo craft more [[south-pointing chariot]] vehicles (a non-magnetic, mechanical-driven directional-[[compass]] vehicle that incorporates the use of a [[Differential (mechanical device)|differential]]).


====Religion====
====Religion====
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* [[Liu Xiangdao]], Chancellor of the Tang dynasty
* [[Liu Xiangdao]], Chancellor of the Tang dynasty
* [[Linghu Defen]], official of the Tang dynasty
* [[Linghu Defen]], official of the Tang dynasty
* [[Yeon Gaesomun]], military dictator of [[Goguryeo]]
* [[Yŏn Kaesomun]], military dictator of [[Goguryeo]]
* [[Umm Habiba]], a wife of [[Muhammad]]
* [[Umm Habiba]], a wife of [[Muhammad]]



Latest revision as of 12:16, 24 July 2025

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File:Barking abbey curfew tower london.jpg
Barking Abbey: curfew tower (east London)

Year 666 (DCLXVI) was a common year starting on Thursday of the Julian calendar. The denomination 666 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

Europe

Asia

Religion


manuscript image of a Saxon saint
St Erkenwald, Saxon Prince, bishop and saint known as the "Light of London": founds two religious houses near London in this year

Births

Deaths

References

Template:Reflist

  1. John "Reassessing Anglo-Saxon England" pp. 34-35
  2. Kirby "Earliest English Kings" p. 83
  3. Yorke "Adaptation of the Anglo-Saxon Royal Courts" Cross Goes North pp. 250-251