954 (original) (raw)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Calendar year

954 in various calendars

Gregorian calendar 954_CMLIV_
Ab urbe condita 1707
Armenian calendar 403ԹՎ ՆԳ
Assyrian calendar 5704
Balinese saka calendar 875–876
Bengali calendar 360–361
Berber calendar 1904
Buddhist calendar 1498
Burmese calendar 316
Byzantine calendar 6462–6463
Chinese calendar 癸丑年 (Water Ox)3651 or 3444 _— to —_甲寅年 (Wood Tiger)3652 or 3445
Coptic calendar 670–671
Discordian calendar 2120
Ethiopian calendar 946–947
Hebrew calendar 4714–4715
Hindu calendars
- Vikram Samvat 1010–1011
- Shaka Samvat 875–876
- Kali Yuga 4054–4055
Holocene calendar 10954
Iranian calendar 332–333
Islamic calendar 342–343
Japanese calendar Tenryaku 8(天暦8年)
Javanese calendar 854–855
Julian calendar 954_CMLIV_
Korean calendar 3287
Minguo calendar 958 before ROC民前958年
Nanakshahi calendar −514
Seleucid era 1265/1266 AG
Thai solar calendar 1496–1497
Tibetan calendar ཆུ་མོ་གླང་ལོ་(female Water-Ox)1080 or 699 or −73 _— to —_ཤིང་ཕོ་སྟག་ལོ་(male Wood-Tiger)1081 or 700 or −72

Chieftain Bulcsú as depicted in 1654.

Year 954 (CMLIV) was a common year starting on Sunday of the Julian calendar.

  1. ^ Bóna, István (2000). The Hungarians and Europe in the 9th-10th centuries. Budapest: Historia - MTA Történettudományi Intézete, pp. 51-52. ISBN 963-8312-67-X.
  2. ^ Ballan, Mohammad (2010). Fraxinetum: An Islamic Frontier State in Tenth-Century Provence. Comitatus: A journal of Medieval and Renaissance Studies, Volume 41, 2010, p. 31.
  3. ^ The Annals of Flodoard of Reims, 916–966, eds & trans. Steven Fanning: Bernard S. Bachrach (New York; Ontario, Can: University of Toronto Press, 2011), p. 60.
  4. ^ Timothy Reuter (1999). The New Cambridge Medieval History, Volume III, p. 247. ISBN 978-0-521-36447-8.
  5. ^ Williams, Hywel (2005). Cassell's Chronology of World History. London: Weidenfeld & Nicolson. pp. 95–104. ISBN 978-0-304-35730-7.