713

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Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries: 7th century8th century9th century
Decades: 680s  690s  700s  – 710s –  720s  730s  740s
Years: 710 711 712713714 715 716
713 by topic
Politics
State leadersSovereign states
Birth and death categories
BirthsDeaths
Establishment and disestablishment categories
EstablishmentsDisestablishments
713 in other calendars
Gregorian calendar 713
DCCXIII
Ab urbe condita 1466
Armenian calendar 162
ԹՎ ՃԿԲ
Assyrian calendar 5463
Bengali calendar 120
Berber calendar 1663
Buddhist calendar 1257
Burmese calendar 75
Byzantine calendar 6221–6222
Chinese calendar 壬子(Water Rat)
3409 or 3349
    — to —
癸丑年 (Water Ox)
3410 or 3350
Coptic calendar 429–430
Discordian calendar 1879
Ethiopian calendar 705–706
Hebrew calendar 4473–4474
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat 769–770
 - Shaka Samvat 635–636
 - Kali Yuga 3814–3815
Holocene calendar 10713
Iranian calendar 91–92
Islamic calendar 94–95
Japanese calendar Wadō 6
(和銅6年)
Julian calendar 713
DCCXIII
Korean calendar 3046
Minguo calendar 1199 before ROC
民前1199年
Seleucid era 1024/1025 AG
Thai solar calendar 1255–1256
Emperor Anastasios II (713–715)

Year 713 (DCCXIII) was a common year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. The denomination 713 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

Britain

Arabian Empire

China

  • Emperor Xuan Zong liquidates the highly lucrative "Inexhaustible Treasury", which is run by a prominent Buddhist monastery in Chang'an. This monastery collects vast amounts of money, silk, and treasures through multitudes of rich people's repentances, left on the premises anonymously. Although the monastery is generous in donations, Xuan Zong issues a decree abolishing their treasury on the grounds that their banking practices were fraudulent, collects their riches, and distributes the wealth to various other Buddhist monasteries, Daoist abbeys, and to repair statues, halls, and bridges in the city.
  • In Chang'an, for the annual Lantern Festival of this year, recently abdicated emperor Rui Zong erects an enormous lantern wheel at a city gate, with a recorded height of 200 ft. The frame is draped in brocades and silk gauze, adorned with gold and jade jewelry, and when its total of some 50,000 oil cups is lit the radiance of it can be seen for miles.
  • Xuan Zong allots the money of 20 million copper coins and assigns about 1,000 craftsmen to construct a hall at a Buddhist monastery with tons of painted portraits of himself, and of deities, ghosts, etc.
  • Xuan Zong wins a power struggle with his sister, princess Taiping. He executes a large number of her allies and forcing her to commit suicide.

By topic

Literature

Religion

Births

Deaths

References

  1. David Nicolle (2008). Poitiers AD 732, Charles Martel turns the Islamic tide (p. 17). ISBN 978-184603-230-1