Tuesday, November 5, 2019
Attila the Hun Timeline and History
Attila the Hun Timeline and History          This timeline shows the significant events in the history of the Huns, with emphasis on the reign of Attila the Hun, in a simple one-page format. For a more-detailed recounting, please see the in-depth timeline of Attila and the Huns.          The Huns Before Attila       220-200 B.C. - Hunnic tribes raid China, inspire the building of the Great Wall of China          209 B.C. - Modun Shanyu unites the Huns (called Xiongnu by Chinese-speakers) in Central Asia          176 B.C. - Xiongnu attack the Tocharians in western China          140 B.C. - Han Dynasty Emperor Wu-ti attacks the Xiongnu          121 B.C. - Xiongnu defeated by Chinese; split into Eastern and Western groups          50 B.C. - Western Huns move west to the Volga River          350 A.D. - Huns appear in Eastern Europe          The Huns under Attila's Uncle Rua       c. 406 A.D. - Attila born to father Mundzuk and unknown mother          425 - Roman general Aetius hires Huns as mercenaries          late 420s - Rua, Attilas uncle, seizes power and eliminates other kings          430 - Rua signs the peace treaty with Eastern Roman Empire, gets a tribute of 350 pounds of gold          433 - Western Roman Empire gives Pannonia (western Hungary) to the Huns as payment for military aid          433 - Aetius takes de facto power over Western Roman Empire          434 - Rua dies; Attila and older brother Bleda take Hunnic throne          The Huns under Bleda and Attila       435 - Aetius hires the Huns to fight against the Vandals and Franks          435 - Treaty of Margus; Eastern Roman tribute increased from 350 to 700 pounds of gold          c. 435-438 - Huns attack Sassanid Persia, but are defeated in Armenia          436 - Aetius and the Huns destroy the Burgundians          438 - First Eastern Roman embassy to Attila and Bleda          439 - Huns join the Western Roman army in a siege of the Goths at Toulouse          Winter 440/441 - Huns sack a fortified Eastern Roman market town          441 - Constantinople sends its military forces to Sicily, en route to Carthage          441 - Huns besiege and capture the Eastern Roman cities of Viminacium and Naissus          442 - Eastern Roman tribute increased from 700 to 1400 pounds of gold          September 12, 443 - Constantinople orders military readiness and vigilance against Huns          444 - Eastern Roman Empire stops paying tribute to Huns          445 - Death of Bleda; Attila becomes sole king          Attila, King of the Huns       446 - Huns demand for tribute and fugitives denied by Constantinople          446 - Huns capture Roman forts at Ratiaria and Marcianople          January 27, 447 - Major earthquake hits Constantinople; frantic repairs as Huns approach          Spring 447 - Eastern Roman army defeated at Chersonesus, Greece          447 - Attila controls all of the Balkans, from the Black Sea to the Dardanelles          447 - Eastern Romans give 6,000 pounds of gold in back-tribute, yearly cost increased to 2,100 pounds of gold, and fugitive Huns handed over for impaling          449 - Maximinus and Priscus embassy to the Huns; attempted assassination of Attila          450 - Marcian becomes Emperor of Eastern Romans, ends payments to Huns          450 - Roman princess Honoria sends ring to Attila          451 - Huns overrun Germany and France; defeated at Battle of Catalaunian Fields          451-452 - Famine in Italy          452 - Attila leads an army of 100,000 into Italy, sacks Padua, Milan, etc.          453 - Attila suddenly dies on wedding night          The Huns After Attila       453 - Three of Attilas sons divide the empire          454 - The Huns are driven from Pannonia by the Goths          469 - Hunnic king Dengizik (Attilas second son) dies; Huns disappear from history    
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