This article is about the year 451. For Ray Bradbury's dystopian novel, see
Fahrenheit 451 .
Calendar year
Invasion of Attila the Hun in Gaul (451)
Year 451 (CDLI ) was a common year starting on Monday of the Julian calendar . At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Marcianus and Adelfius (or, less frequently, year 1204 Ab urbe condita ). The denomination 451 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.
Events
By place
Europe
Spring – Attila gathers his vassals —Bastarnae , Gepids , Heruls , Ostrogoths , Rugians , Scirians and Thuringians (among others), and smashes through Germany , causing widespread panic and destruction. He arrives in Belgica with an army (50,000 men) and crosses the Rhine .[citation needed ]
April 7 – Attila's forces invade Gaul and sack Metz . The major cities of Strasbourg , Worms , Mainz , Trier , Cologne , Reims , Tournai , Cambrai , Amiens and Beauvais are destroyed by the Huns .[citation needed ]
Eudocia , daughter of Emperor Valentinian III , marries Huneric in Ravenna . The engagement serves to strengthen the alliance between the Western Roman Empire and the Vandal Kingdom .[citation needed ]
June – Attila approaches Aurelianum (modern Orléans ) and the city's inhabitants close the gates, forcing him to lay siege . After learning of the Hun invasion, Flavius Aetius (magister militum ) moves quickly from Italy into Gaul, and joins forces with Visigoth king Theodoric I .[citation needed ]
June 20 – Battle of the Catalaunian Plains (Châlons): Attila avoids a pitched battle near Orléans, and withdraws to the Catalaunian Plains (Champagne-Ardenne ). The Roman coalition defeats the Huns, but Theodoric I is killed in the encounter. This is one of the last military victories of the Western Roman Empire, before the victories of Emperor Majorian against the Alemanni, Visigoths, Suebi and Burgundians, between 457 and 461.[citation needed ]
Thorismund succeeds his father Theodoric I as king of the Visigoths. He is crowned in the capital at Toulouse , and extends the Visigothic Kingdom in Hispania .[citation needed ]
Persia
By topic
Religion
Births
Deaths
References