730

Last updated

730 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar 730
DCCXXX
Ab urbe condita 1483
Armenian calendar 179
ԹՎ ՃՀԹ
Assyrian calendar 5480
Balinese saka calendar 651–652
Bengali calendar 136–137
Berber calendar 1680
Buddhist calendar 1274
Burmese calendar 92
Byzantine calendar 6238–6239
Chinese calendar 己巳年 (Earth  Snake)
3427 or 3220
     to 
庚午年 (Metal  Horse)
3428 or 3221
Coptic calendar 446–447
Discordian calendar 1896
Ethiopian calendar 722–723
Hebrew calendar 4490–4491
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat 786–787
 - Shaka Samvat 651–652
 - Kali Yuga 3830–3831
Holocene calendar 10730
Iranian calendar 108–109
Islamic calendar 111–112
Japanese calendar Tenpyō 2
(天平2年)
Javanese calendar 623–624
Julian calendar 730
DCCXXX
Korean calendar 3063
Minguo calendar 1182 before ROC
民前1182年
Nanakshahi calendar −738
Seleucid era 1041/1042 AG
Thai solar calendar 1272–1273
Tibetan calendar ས་མོ་སྦྲུལ་ལོ་
(female Earth-Snake)
856 or 475 or −297
     to 
ལྕགས་ཕོ་རྟ་ལོ་
(male Iron-Horse)
857 or 476 or −296
Emperor Xuan Zong (Li Longji) (685-762) Tang XianZong.jpg
Emperor Xuan Zong (Li Longji) (685–762)

Year 730 ( DCCXXX ) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Julian calendar. The denomination 730 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.

Contents

Events

By place

Europe

Arabian Empire

China

By topic

Religion

  • Leo III of the Byzantine Empire orders the destruction of all icons, beginning the First Iconoclastic Period. Many monks flee to Greece and Italy (taking smaller icons with them, hidden in their clothing); others flee to the caves of the Cappadocian desert.

Births

Deaths

References

  1. "History of the Byzantine Empire, SECTION II REIGN OF LEO III (THE ISAURIAN) A.D. 717-741, George Finlay, 1906". Archived from the original on July 15, 2018. Retrieved April 5, 2020.
  2. Kazhdan 1991, p. 415
  3. "Three Millennia of German Brewing". Archived from the original on November 30, 2016.