1004

Year 1004 (MIV) was a leap year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar.

Millennium: 2nd millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
1004 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar1004
MIV
Ab urbe condita1757
Armenian calendar453
ԹՎ ՆԾԳ
Assyrian calendar5754
Balinese saka calendar925–926
Bengali calendar411
Berber calendar1954
English Regnal yearN/A
Buddhist calendar1548
Burmese calendar366
Byzantine calendar6512–6513
Chinese calendar癸卯年 (Water Rabbit)
3700 or 3640
     to 
甲辰年 (Wood Dragon)
3701 or 3641
Coptic calendar720–721
Discordian calendar2170
Ethiopian calendar996–997
Hebrew calendar4764–4765
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat1060–1061
 - Shaka Samvat925–926
 - Kali Yuga4104–4105
Holocene calendar11004
Igbo calendar4–5
Iranian calendar382–383
Islamic calendar394–395
Japanese calendarChōhō 6 / Kankō 1
(寛弘元年)
Javanese calendar906–907
Julian calendar1004
MIV
Korean calendar3337
Minguo calendar908 before ROC
民前908年
Nanakshahi calendar−464
Seleucid era1315/1316 AG
Thai solar calendar1546–1547
Tibetan calendar阴水兔年
(female Water-Rabbit)
1130 or 749 or −23
     to 
阳木龙年
(male Wood-Dragon)
1131 or 750 or −22

Events

By place

Byzantine Empire

Europe

England

Africa

China

By topic

Religion

Births

Deaths

gollark: What does Microsoft actually *do* with all the problems which get reported to them?
gollark: Evil idea: find an exploit in a popular debugger, and make an obfuscated program which uses it to release BEES™ onto your computer when debugged.
gollark: It does still have bugs, though, but almost certainly not "arbitrary code execution (or other significant badness) through a bound query parameter".
gollark: They have 600 times more testing code than, well, library code, and cover *all* of the machine code code paths.
gollark: The only possible way you could SQL-inject it (technically it wouldn't be SQL injection but same principle) would be exploiting some kind of bug in SQLite itself. This is unlikely, as SQLite may literally be one of the most well-tested pieces of software in existence.

References

  1. John V.A. Fine, Jr. (1991). The Early Medieval Balkans: A Critical Survey from the Sixth to the Late Twelfth Century, p. 197. ISBN 978-0-472-08149-3.
  2. Norwich, John Julius (1991). Byzantium: The Apogee, pp. 259-260. ISBN 0-394-53779-3.
  3. Boissonade, B. "Les premières croisades françaises en Espagne. Normands, Gascons, Aquitains et Bourguignons (1018-1032)". Bulletin Hispanique. 36 (1): 5–28. doi:10.3406/hispa.1934.2607.
  4. Gilbert Meynier (2010). L'Algérie cœr du Maghreb classique. De l'ouverture islamo-arabe au repli (658-1518). Paris: La Découverte; p. 47.
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