470s

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Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries: 4th century5th century6th century
Decades: 440s 450s 460s470s480s 490s 500s
Years: 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479
470s-related
categories:
BirthsDeathsBy country
EstablishmentsDisestablishments

Events[edit]

Contents: 470 471 472 473 474 475 476 477 478 479

470

By place[edit]

Roman Empire[edit]
Europe[edit]

By topic[edit]

Religion[edit]

471

By place[edit]

Roman Empire[edit]
Britannia[edit]
Europe[edit]
Asia[edit]

By topic[edit]

Religion[edit]

472

By place[edit]

Roman Empire[edit]


473

By place[edit]

Roman Empire[edit]
Balkans[edit]
Europe[edit]

474

By place[edit]

Roman Empire[edit]

By topic[edit]

Art[edit]


475

By place[edit]

Roman Empire[edit]
Asia[edit]

By topic[edit]

Art[edit]
Religion[edit]


476

By place[edit]

Roman Empire[edit]
  • Summer – Odoacer, chieftain of the Germanic tribes (Herulic - Scirian foederati), visits the imperial palace at Ravenna. He petitions Orestes (magister militum) to reward his mercenaries for their services and their support of his rebellion a year earlier, by making good on his promise to grant them lands to settle permanently in Italy. Orestes refuses this proposal and Odoacer leads his tribesmen in a revolt.
  • August – Basiliscus, Roman usurper, is deposed and Zeno is restored as emperor of the Eastern Roman Empire. With the support of his adviser Illus, he besieges Constantinople, but the Senate opens the gates, allowing him to resume the throne. Basiliscus flees to sanctuary in a church, but surrenders himself and his family after extracting a solemn promise from Zeno not to shed their blood. Basiliscus is sent to a fortress in Cappadocia, where he later dies from starvation.
  • August 23 – Odoacer, age 43, is proclaimed rex Italiae ("king of Italy") by his troops. He leads his Ostrogoth army into the Po Valley, and advances to Ravenna while plundering the countryside.
  • September 4Romulus Augustulus, Roman usurper of the Western Roman Empire, is deposed by Odoacer at Ravenna. Odoacer spares the boy's life and gives him a pension of 6,000 solidii, but exiles him to the "Castellum Lucullanum" (Castel dell'Ovo), on the island of Megaride in the Gulf of Naples. His father Orestes had been arrested a week earlier near Piacenza, and swiftly executed. This event will later be romanticized in Western literature and history as the Fall of Rome, and is traditionally used by historians to mark the beginning of the European Middle Ages.[1][2]
  • Julius Nepos, de jure ruler, becomes legally the last "Western Roman Emperor." He governs Dalmatia (Balkans), Morocco, and Northwest Gaul until his death 480, but has no effective power on the Italian Peninsula.
  • Odoacer crosses the Maritime Alps with a Gothic army and invades Provence (Southern Gaul). He conquers the cities of Arles and Marseilles, after a victorious battle against the Burgundians.
  • The Visigoths under King Euric march into Italy, and suffer defeat against the forces of Odoacer. Emperor Zeno concludes a peace treaty between the Goths and Odoacer surrenders the newly conquered territory in Gaul. Euric pledges himself to undertake no further hostilities.
  • The Roman Senate petitions Zeno to recognize Nepos as deposed and take the sole emperorship himself, abolishing the 91 year east/west division of the empire and recognizing Odoacer's authority in Italy. Zeno declines the first request, but names Odoacer Patricius, investing his rule with Imperial legitimacy.
  • Winter – Zeno recognizes the full extent of the Vandal Kingdom, including all of western Africa, the Balearic Islands, Corsica, Sardinia and Sicily. King Genseric gives Sicily, with exception of the city of Lilybaeum, to Odoacer in return for tribute.
India[edit]
China[edit]

By topic[edit]

Religion[edit]

477

By place[edit]

Europe[edit]
Byzantine Empire[edit]
China[edit]


478

By place[edit]

Byzantine Empire[edit]
Asia[edit]


479

By place[edit]

Britannia[edit]
Europe[edit]
Asia[edit]


Significant people[edit]

Births[edit]

Deaths[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Middle Ages". Dictionary.com. 
  2. ^ Bruni, Leonardo (2001) [1442]. Hankins, James, ed. History of the Florentine People. 1. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. p. xvii. ISBN 978-0-674-00506-8.