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276

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This article is about the year 276. For the number, see 276 (number).
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Calendar year
Years
Millennium
1st millennium
Centuries
Decades
Years
276 by topic
Leaders
Categories
276 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar 276
CCLXXVI
Ab urbe condita 1029
Assyrian calendar 5026
Balinese saka calendar 197–198
Bengali calendar −318 – −317
Berber calendar 1226
Buddhist calendar 820
Burmese calendar −362
Byzantine calendar 5784–5785
Chinese calendar 乙未年 (Wood Goat)
2973 or 2766
    — to —
丙申年 (Fire Monkey)
2974 or 2767
Coptic calendar −8 – −7
Discordian calendar 1442
Ethiopian calendar 268–269
Hebrew calendar 4036–4037
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat 332–333
 - Shaka Samvat 197–198
 - Kali Yuga 3376–3377
Holocene calendar 10276
Iranian calendar 346 BP – 345 BP
Islamic calendar 357 BH – 356 BH
Javanese calendar 155–156
Julian calendar 276
CCLXXVI
Korean calendar 2609
Minguo calendar 1636 before ROC
民前1636年
Nanakshahi calendar −1192
Seleucid era 587/588 AG
Thai solar calendar 818–819
Tibetan calendar ཤིང་མོ་ལུག་ལོ་
(female Wood-Sheep)
402 or 21 or −751
    — to —
མེ་ཕོ་སྤྲེ་ལོ་
(male Fire-Monkey)
403 or 22 or −750
Emperor Probus (232–282)

Year 276 (CCLXXVI ) was a leap year starting on Saturday of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Tacitus and Aemilianus (or, less frequently, year 1029 Ab urbe condita ). The denomination 276 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

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By place

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Roman Empire

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  • Emperor Tacitus doubles the silver content of the aurelianianus, and halves its tariffing to 2.5 d.c. They carry the value marks X.I.
  • Tacitus campaigns successfully against the Goths who have invaded Asia Minor, and his half-brother, the praetorian prefect Marcus Annius Florianus, continues the campaign.
  • Tacitus' cousin Maximinus administers Syria in a harsh manner, and is assassinated by local men of power, who are joined in the conspiracy by the faction responsible for having assassinated Aurelian in the previous year.
  • Tacitus dies in Tyana, Cappadocia. He either dies of illness, or is murdered by the faction responsible for having assassinated Aurelian and Maximinus.
  • Florianus becomes Roman Emperor with the support of the Senate, but a general in the east, Marcus Aurelius Probus, usurps power against him. Florianus breaks off his campaign against the Goths and marches east from the Bosporus with support from the Roman legions in Britain, Gaul, Spain and Italy.
  • Florianus holds power for some weeks and fights indecisively against Probus in Cilicia, but his soldiers, many of whom are from the colder Rhine and Danube frontiers, suffer from heat and disease. He is overthrown and then assassinated by his own troops near Tarsus (Turkey), in collusion with Probus. Probus, age 44, is proclaimed new Emperor of Rome.
  • Probus returns the aurelianianus to the tariffing of Aurelian.
  • Probus invites the faction responsible for the murders of Aurelian and Tacitus to a banquet, only to massacre them. He then arrests a surviving conspirator and has him burned alive.

Sassanid Empire

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Asia

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Births

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Deaths

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References

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  1. ^ "Historia Augusta • Life of the Emperor Tacitus". penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved November 5, 2024.

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