597

597 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar597
DXCVII
Ab urbe condita1350
Armenian calendar46
ԹՎ ԽԶ
Assyrian calendar5347
Balinese saka calendar518–519
Bengali calendar3–4
Berber calendar1547
Buddhist calendar1141
Burmese calendar−41
Byzantine calendar6105–6106
Chinese calendar丙辰年 (Fire Dragon)
3294 or 3087
    — to —
丁巳年 (Fire Snake)
3295 or 3088
Coptic calendar313–314
Discordian calendar1763
Ethiopian calendar589–590
Hebrew calendar4357–4358
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat653–654
 - Shaka Samvat518–519
 - Kali Yuga3697–3698
Holocene calendar10597
Iranian calendar25 BP – 24 BP
Islamic calendar26 BH – 25 BH
Javanese calendar486–487
Julian calendar597
DXCVII
Korean calendar2930
Minguo calendar1315 before ROC
民前1315年
Nanakshahi calendar−871
Seleucid era908/909 AG
Thai solar calendar1139–1140
Tibetan calendarམེ་ཕོ་འབྲུག་ལོ་
(male Fire-Dragon)
723 or 342 or −430
    — to —
མེ་མོ་སྦྲུལ་ལོ་
(female Fire-Snake)
724 or 343 or −429
The King's School, Canterbury (England)

Year 597 (DXCVII) was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Julian calendar. The denomination 597 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

Byzantine Empire

  • Emperor Maurice writes his last will, in which he describes his ideas for governing the Byzantine Empire (his eldest son, Theodosius, will rule the East from Constantinople, and his second son, Tiberius, the West from Rome).
  • Autumn – Balkan Campaign: The Avars, strengthened by the tribute of the Franks, resume their campaign along the Danube River, and besiege the Byzantine fortress city of Tomis (modern Romania) on the Black Sea coast.

Europe

Britain

  • Ceolwulf succeeds his brother Ceol as king of Wessex. He becomes regent of Ceol's son Cynegils who is too young to inherit the throne.

Asia

  • Mangalesha becomes king of the Chalukya dynasty, after his brother Kirtivarman I dies. He rules as regent of Kirtivarman's son Pulakeshin II, and invades the territory of Khandesh and Gujarat (northwestern India).

By topic

Religion

  • Gregorian Mission: Augustine of Canterbury lands with a group of missionaries on the Isle of Thanet (South East England). He is welcomed by King Æthelberht of Kent, who accepts baptism (along with the rest of his court) at the behest of his Christian Frankish wife, Bertha. Æthelbert assigns Augustine and his 40 monks a residence at Canterbury, where they found a Benedictine monastery that will make the town a centre of Christianity (or 596).
  • June 9 – Columba, Irish missionary, dies in Iona (Inner Hebrides) and is buried by his monks in the abbey he has created. He works successfully towards the conversion of northern Britain.
  • December 25 – At Christmas, Christianity spreads rapidly in Kent; Augustine and his fellow-labourers baptise more than 10,000 Anglo-Saxons.[1]

Law

  • England gets her first written code of laws from Æthelbert. The code is concerned with preserving social order, through compensation and punishment for personal injury (approximate date).

Education

  • The King's School is founded by Augustine in Canterbury. He builds an abbey where the Benedictine teaching takes place.


Births

  • Chu Suiliang, chancellor of the Tang dynasty (d. 658)
  • Fursey, Irish missionary saint (approximate date)

Deaths

References

  1. ^ A Chronicle of England (1864), James Edmund Doyle, p. 26