563
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Year 563 (DLXIII) was a common year starting on Monday of the Julian calendar. The denomination 563 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.
EventsEdit
By placeEdit
Byzantine EmpireEdit
- Emperor Justinian I pardons Belisarius; he orders his release from prison, and restores his properties and honours. He permits the general to live in obscurity, and gives him a veterans' pension.
- The new Hagia Sophia (cost: 20,000 pounds of gold<ref>P. Heather, The Fall of the Roman Empire: "A New History of Rome and the Barbarians", p. 283</ref>), with its numerous chapels and shrines, octagonal dome and mosaics, becomes the centre and most visible monument of Eastern Orthodoxy.
EuropeEdit
- Tauredunum event:<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> A mountain landslide into the Rhone river destroys a fort and two villages, and creates a tsunami in Lake Geneva. The wave which reaches Lausanne is thirteen metres high, and eight metres high by the time it hits Geneva. Describing the event, Marius Aventicensis writes that the tsunami "devastated very old villages with their men and cattle, it even destroyed many sacred places", and swept away "the bridge in Geneva, windmills and men".<ref>"Des chercheurs reconstituent le tsunami du lac Léman de l’an 563" Template:Webarchive, Le Monde, 28 October 2012</ref>
By topicEdit
ReligionEdit
- Columba, Irish missionary monk, travels to Scotland with twelve companions. He lands on the Kintyre Peninsula, near Southend, and begins his evangelising mission to the Picts. On the island of Iona, he founds a monastery (Iona Abbey) on the west coast in the Inner Hebrides.
BirthsEdit
- Andreas of Caesarea, bishop and writer (d. 637)
- Chindasuinth, king of the Visigoths (d. 653)
DeathsEdit
- January –Cutzinas, Berber chieftain
- Hou Andu, general of the Chen dynasty (b. 520)
- Wang, empress of the Liang dynasty