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File:East-Hem 900ad.jpg
Eastern Hemisphere at the beginning of the 10th century

The 10th century was the period from 901 (represented by the Roman numerals CMI) through 1000 (M) in accordance with the Julian calendar, and the last century of the 1st millennium.

In China, the Song dynasty was established, with most of China reuniting after the fall of the Tang dynasty and the following Five Dynasties and Ten Kingdoms period. The Muslim World experienced a cultural zenith, especially in al-Andalus under the Caliphate of Córdoba and in the Samanid Empire under Ismail Samani. The Abbasid Caliphate continued to exist but with reduced central authority. Additionally, there was a cultural flourishing for the Byzantine Empire, which also reconquered some lost territories, and the First Bulgarian Empire, as well as the Holy Roman Empire during the Ottonian Renaissance. The historian Lynn White mentions of the period that "to the modern eye, it is very nearly the darkest of the Dark Ages ... if it was dark, it was the darkness of the womb".<ref>Quoted in The Tenth Century: How Dark the Dark Ages?, edited by Robert Sabatino Lopez. Holt, Rinehart and Winston: 1959.</ref> Caesar Baronius described it as the Iron Century, because it was 'iron in its harshness and in its sterility of goodness', while Lorenzo Valla gave it the similar name "Age of Lead and Iron".<ref>Barrow, Julia. "Authority and Reform. Historiographical Frameworks for Understanding Tenth and Eleventh-Century Bishops." The Medieval Low Countries 6 (2019): 9-25.</ref>Template:Rp

EventsEdit

AfricaEdit

AmericasEdit

AsiaEdit

File:Yogini Goddess from Tamil Nadu.jpg
This statue of a yogini goddess was created in Kaveripakkam in Tamil Nadu, India, during the 10th century.
  • Buddhist temple construction commences at Bagan, Burma
  • Seafarers and merchants from Champa had contacts with Brunei and Ma-i.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation

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EuropeEdit

OceaniaEdit

Inventions, discoveries, introductionsEdit

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File:FireLanceAndGrenade10thCenturyDunhuang.jpg
Earliest known representation of a gun (a fire lance) and a grenade (upper right), from the cave murals of Dunhuang, China, 10th century.

NotesEdit

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Further readingEdit

  • Raita Steyn. (2019). Gudit, a Jewish Queen of Aksum? Some Considerations on the Sources and Modern Scholarship, and the Use of Legends. Journal for Semitics. 28. 10.25159/2663-6573/6003.

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