Bishop Ulrich of Augsburg, a leader of…
993 CE
Bishop Ulrich of Augsburg, a leader of the Roman Catholic Church in Germany, becomes only twenty years after his death one of the first saints to be officially canonized by Pope John XV on July 4, 993 (the first saint to be canonized "officially" by the Vatican, rather than solely by public accord).
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The Liao border with Korea had been pushed to the Yalu River when the Khitan conquered the kingdom of Balhae.
Korea itself is undergoing significant transformations at the same time.
Goryeo had been founded in 918, and eventually unified the entire Korean Peninsula.
The Silla kingdom, which had ruled the entire peninsula since the seventh century, had fallen in 935.
The Khitan invade Goryeo's northwest border with eight hundred thousand troops in 993.
The Khitan withdraw and cede territory to the east of the Yalu River when Goryeo agrees to end its alliance with Song Dynasty China.
However, Goryeo continues to communicate with Song China, having strengthened its position by building fortresses in the newly gained northern territories.
Londoners repulse a Danish assault in 993, taking many casualties.
Law in the Liao Dynasty is applied differently in the Northern and Southern Chancelleries.
The Northern Chancellery, governed by the Xiao consort clan, retains a distinctive Khitan-steppe character.
The Yelu clan, who govern the Southern Chancellery, are considerably more sinified in character.
Initially, justice had not been delivered in an evenhanded fashion to the Chinese inhabitants of the empire.
This is reported to having changed from 989.
Beginning in 994, Khitans having committed one of ten grave crimes will be punished according to Chinese law.
This is indicative of a transition from “ethnic law” to “territorial law.”
Poland’s Prince Boleslaw, from 992 to 994, incorporates lands inhabited by the Slavic Pomeranians along the Baltic Sea.
Henry of Schweinfurt is the son of Berthold and Eilika (Eiliswintha or Eila) of Walbeck.
His father's parentage is not known with certainty, but he may have been a son of Arnulf, Duke of Bavaria.
Henry is Bavarian, whoever his grandfather.
Henry has held a succession of countships after his father's death in 980.
He is appointed marchio, like his father, of the Bavarian Nordgau in 994.
The Fatimid governor of Damascus, the Turkish general Manjutakin, had besieged Apamea in 993/994.
Michael Bourtzes, the imperial doux of Antioch, comes forth to relieve the city.
The two armies meet across two fords on the Orontes River near Apamea on September 15, 994.
Manjutakin sends his forces to attack Bourtzes’s Hamdanid allies across one ford while pinning the main imperial force down on the other.
His men succeed in breaking through the Hamdanids, turn around and attack the imperial force in the rear.
The imperial army panics and flees, losing some five thousand men in the process.
This defeat leads to the direct intervention of emperor Basil II, and Bourtzes' dismissal from his post and his replacement by Damian Dalassenos as magistros.
This post is one of the most important military positions in the Empire, as its holder commands the forces arrayed against the Fatimid Caliphate and the semi-autonomous Muslim rulers of Syria.
The Chola Dynasty, a Tamil dynasty that rules primarily in southern India, had originated in the mid-ninth century in the fertile valley of the Kaveri River.
The Cholas are to remain at the height of their power continuously from the later half of the ninth century until the beginning of the thirteenth century.
Karikala Chola had been the most famous among the early Chola kings, followed by Aditya I, Parantaka I, and Rajaraja Chola I, under whom the dynasty becomes a military, economic and cultural power in Asia.
The southern kingdoms of the Pandyas, Cheras and the Sinhalas are often allied against the Cholas, and this had been the case when Rajaraja came to the throne in 985.
He has spent the past seven or eight years organizing and augmenting his army and in preparing for military expeditions, initially against the combined Pandya and Chera armies.
The first military achievement of Rajaraja’s reign is the campaign in the Kerala country in about 994, in which Rajaraja is said to have destroyed a fleet in the port of Kandalur, which appears to have been situated in the dominions of the Chera King Bhaskara Ravi Vallaman Thiruvadi.
Inscriptions found around Thanjavur show that frequent references are made to the conquest of the Chera king and the Pandyas in Malai-nadu (the west coast of South India).
Kandalur-Salai, which later inscriptions claim to have belonged to the Chera king, was probably held by the Pandyas when it was conquered by Rajaraja.
Some years' fighting apparently is to be necessary before the conquest can be completed and the conquered country sufficiently settled and its administration properly organized.
The Chola general Raja Raja, warring against the Pandyas, seizes their king Amarabhujanga and captures the port of Virinam.
To commemorate these conquests, Raja Raja assumes the title Mummudi-Chola, (the Chola king who wears three crowns—the Chera, Chola and Pandya).
Al-Mansur adopts the title of al-Malik al-Karim, or Noble King, in 994, while the ineffectual caliph continues as nominal chief of state.
Leopold I, Margrave of Austria, travels to Würzburg in 994 to mediate a dispute between his cousin Henry of Schweinfurt and Bishop Bernward von Rothenburg of Würzburg, one of whose knights Henry had seized and blinded.
At a tournament held on July 8, Leopold is hit in the eye by an arrow directed at his cousin.
Two days later, on July 10, Leopold dies from his injuries.
He is buried in Würzburg.