Neha Patil (Editor)

398

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
398

Year 398 (CCCXCVIII) was a common year starting on Friday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Augustus and Eutychianus (or, less frequently, year 1151 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 398 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.

Contents

Roman Empire

  • Gildonic Revolt: Gildo, Moorish prince, revolts against Roman rule in Mauretania, taking much of North Africa and cutting off the corn supply to Rome. Flavius Stilicho returns to Italy to raise troops against the rebels. After a short campaign in the desert, he defeats Gildo who flees and commits suicide by hanging.
  • Eutropius, Roman general (magister militum), celebrates his victory over the Huns ("the wolves of the North") in a parade through Constantinople (see 395).
  • An imperial edict obliges Roman landowners with plantations to yield 1/3 of their fields to the "barbarians" who have been settled in the Roman Empire.
  • Emperor Honorius marries Stilicho's daughter Maria.
  • Possible date for the Second Pictish War.
  • Religion

  • John Chrysostom, Archbishop of Constantinople, receives a delegation of clergy who want to close the pagan temples at Gaza (Palestine) where worshipers are openly defying the law. John works through the eunuch Eutropius, who has great power over emperor Arcadius, and within a week an imperial Constitution is issued closing the Roman temples, but the official appointed to execute this order is bribed.
  • Augustine of Hippo completes his Confessions, an autobiography that recounts his intellectual and spiritual development.
  • Births

  • Fan Ye, Chinese historian (d. 445)
  • Deaths

  • May 27Murong Bao, emperor of the Xianbei state Later Yan (b. 355)
  • August 15Lan Han, official of the Xianbei state Lan Yan
  • Didymus the Blind, Alexandrian theologian
  • Gildo, Moorish prince and comes Africae (governor)
  • Murong Lin, Chinese prince of the Xianbei state Later Yan
  • Murong Nong, Chinese prince of the Xianbei state Later Yan
  • Nectarius, archbishop of Constantinople
  • References

    398 Wikipedia


    Similar Topics