651

651
Das Gebiet Chorasan aus dem Historischen Atlas von W. R. Shepherd.
Die muslimischen Araber erobern die Provinz Chorasan.
651 in anderen Kalendern
Armenischer Kalender99/100 (Jahreswechsel Juli)
Äthiopischer Kalender643/644
Buddhistische Zeitrechnung1194/95 (südlicher Buddhismus); 1193/94 (Alternativberechnung nach Buddhas Parinirvana)
Chinesischer Kalender55. (56.) Zyklus

Jahr des Metall-Schweins 辛亥 (am Beginn des Jahres Metall-Hund 庚戌)

Chula Sakarat (Siam, Myanmar) / Dai-Kalender (Vietnam)13/14 (Jahreswechsel April)
Iranischer Kalender29/30 (Jahreswechsel März)
Islamischer Kalender30/31 (Jahreswechsel 23./24. August)
Jüdischer Kalender4411/12 (21./22. September)
Koptischer Kalender367/368
Römischer Kalenderab urbe condita MCDIV (1404)

Ära Diokletians: 367/368 (Jahreswechsel November)

Seleukidische ÄraBabylon: 961/962 (April)

Syrien: 962/963 (Oktober)

Spanische Ära689
Vikram Sambat (Nepalesischer Kalender)707/708 (Jahreswechsel April)

Ereignisse

Politik und Weltgeschehen

Asien

  • Die muslimischen Araber erobern die persische Provinz Chorasan und nehmen die Städte Herat und Merw ein.
  • Nachdem die Araber ihre Angriffe auf Armenien laufend intensiviert haben, vereinbart der byzantinische General Theodoros Rštuni einen Waffenstillstand mit dem Statthalter von Syrien, dem späteren Kalifen Muʿāwiya, woraufhin die Araber sich der vollständigen Unterwerfung des Sassanidenreichs widmen können.
Münze Yazdegerds III.

Europa

Kultur und Religion

Gestorben

Todesdatum gesichert

  • 20. August: Oswine, König von Deira
  • 31. August: Aidan, erster Bischof von Lindisfarne

Genaues Todesdatum unbekannt

Gestorben um 651

  • Ferchar I., König von Dalriada (Schottland) (* vor 636)

Auf dieser Seite verwendete Medien

Yazdgardiii.jpg
Autor/Urheber: [1], Lizenz: CC BY-SA 3.0
Coin of Yazdgard iii, Sasanian king (632-651)
Ancient Khorasan highlighted.jpg

Map showing Ancient Persia in light yellowish and the the land called Sind (most of today's Afghanistan and part of Pakistan) in pinkish.

A number of ancient references are made to the names shown in this map. Ibn Batutta writes in 1333 AD: [1]

We travelled from there to Naysabur, one of the four capitals of Khurasan.... We travelled thence to Parwan, where I met the amir Buruntayh. He treated me well and wrote to his representatives at Ghazna enjoining them to show me honour. We went on to the village of Charkh [Charikar], it being now summer, and from there to the town of Ghazna. This is the town of the famous warrior-sultan Mahmud ibn Sabuktagin, one of the greatest of rulers, who made frequent raids into India and captured cities and fortresses there. His grave is in this city and is surmounted by a hospice. The greater part of the town is in ruins and nothing but a fraction of it remains, though it was once a large city. It has an exceedingly cold climate, and the inhabitants move from it in the cold season to Qandahar, a large and prosperous town three nights journey from Ghazna, but I did not visit it. We travelled on to Kabul, formerly a vast town, the site of which is now occupied by a village inhabited by a tribe of Persians called Afghans. They hold mountains and defiles and possess considerable strength, and are mostly highwaymen. Their principle mountain is called Kuh Sulayman... From Kabul we rode to Karmash, which is a fortress belonging to the Afghans... On reaching Sind I followed this practice and bought horses, camels, white slaves and other goods from the merchants. I had already bought from an Iraqi merchant in Ghazna about thirty horses and a camel with a load of arrows, for this is one of the things presented to the sultan. This merchant went off to Khurasan and on returning to India received his money from me. After crossing the river of Sind called Panj Ab, our way led through a forrest of reeds, in which I saw a rhinoceros for the first time. After two days' march we reached Janani, a large and fine town on the bank of the river Sind. Its people are a people called the Samira, whose ancestors established themselves there on the conquest of Sind in the time of al-Hajjaj [712 A.D.]