1400

Calendar year in the 2nd millenium

Calendar year
Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
  • 13th century
  • 14th century
  • 15th century
Decades:
  • 1380s
  • 1390s
  • 1400s
  • 1410s
  • 1420s
Years:
  • 1397
  • 1398
  • 1399
  • 1400
  • 1401
  • 1402
  • 1403
1400 by topic
Leaders
Birth and death categories
Births – Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments – Disestablishments
Art and literature
1400 in poetry
  • v
  • t
  • e
1400 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1400
MCD
Ab urbe condita2153
Armenian calendar849
ԹՎ ՊԽԹ
Assyrian calendar6150
Balinese saka calendar1321–1322
Bengali calendar807
Berber calendar2350
English Regnal yearHen. 4 – 2 Hen. 4
Buddhist calendar1944
Burmese calendar762
Byzantine calendar6908–6909
Chinese calendar己卯年 (Earth Rabbit)
4097 or 3890
    — to —
庚辰年 (Metal Dragon)
4098 or 3891
Coptic calendar1116–1117
Discordian calendar2566
Ethiopian calendar1392–1393
Hebrew calendar5160–5161
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1456–1457
 - Shaka Samvat1321–1322
 - Kali Yuga4500–4501
Holocene calendar11400
Igbo calendar400–401
Iranian calendar778–779
Islamic calendar802–803
Japanese calendarŌei 7
(応永7年)
Javanese calendar1314–1315
Julian calendar1400
MCD
Korean calendar3733
Minguo calendar512 before ROC
民前512年
Nanakshahi calendar−68
Thai solar calendar1942–1943
Tibetan calendar阴土兔年
(female Earth-Rabbit)
1526 or 1145 or 373
    — to —
阳金龙年
(male Iron-Dragon)
1527 or 1146 or 374

Year 1400 (MCD) was a leap year starting on Thursday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. The year 1400 was not a leap year in the Proleptic Gregorian calendar.

Events

January–March

April–June

July–September

October–December

  • October 7Tamerlane, the Mongol conqueror, stops between Malatya and Aleppo at the Turkish garrison in Behesna. According to author Peter Purton, the garrison "had the temerity to shoot a catapult ball at Timur which rolled into his tent. Setting up his own battery of 20 machines, it is said that the first shot hit and destroyed the offending weapon. Treating this as a good omen, the attack was launched, the towers mined... and the place surrendered."[3]
  • October 29Jingnan campaign: In China, Prince Zhu Di of Yan expands his conquests with the capture of Cangzhou in Heibei province.
  • October 30 – (11 Rabi' I 803 AH) Tamerlane begins the destruction of the Syrian city of Aleppo[4] overwhelming the Mamluk Sultanate defenders.
  • November 2 – The Mamluk Sultanate surrenders the city of Aleppo and Tamerlane's Army massacres many of the inhabitants.[5]
  • November 25 – (9th waxing of Nadaw, 730 ME) Minkhaung I becomes the new King of Ava, the largest kingdom in what is now northern Myanmar, after a battle for power that follows the assassination of the erratic King Tarabya.
  • December 21Manuel II Palaiologos becomes the only Byzantine Emperor ever to visit England, and is greeted at Blackheath by King Henry IV, who hosts the Emperor at Eltham Palace during the Christmas holiday.[6]
  • December 25 – In China, the Jingnan campaign of Prince Zhu Di of Yan suffers a serious reversal at the Battle of Dongchang as Imperial General Sheng Yong, replacement of Li Jinglong, encircles the Yan forces. Yan Army General Zhang Yu is killed, but Zhu Di is able to escape to the northern capital at Beijing and regroups his forces for a second attack to take place in February.

Date unknown

Births

Deaths

Richard II of England
Geoffrey Chaucer

References

  1. ^ a b Jessie H. Flemming, England Under the Lancastrians (Longman's, Green and Co., 1921) pp.5-6
  2. ^ James Hamilton Wylie, History of England Under Henry the Fourth (Longmans, Green and Co., 1884) p.138
  3. ^ Peter Purton, A History of the Late Medieval Siege, 1200-1500 (Boydell & Brewer, 2009) p.186
  4. ^ Alphonse de Lamartine, History of Turkey (translated from the French) (D. Appleton and Company, 1855) p.320
  5. ^ Rebecca Joyce Frey, Genocide and International Justice (Facts On File, 2009) p.188
  6. ^ "Henry IV", by T. F. Tout, in Dictionary of National Biography, ed. by Leslie Stephen and Sidney Lee (The Macmillan Company, 1908) p.488
  7. ^ Childress, Diana (2008). Johannes Gutenberg and the Printing Press. Minneapolis: Twenty-First Century Books. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-7613-4024-9.
  8. ^ "Geoffrey Chaucer | Biography, Poems, Canterbury Tales, & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved January 12, 2021.