764

Year 764 (DCCLXIV) was a leap year starting on Sunday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. The denomination 764 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.

Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
  • 761
  • 762
  • 763
  • 764
  • 765
  • 766
  • 767
764 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar764
DCCLXIV
Ab urbe condita1517
Armenian calendar213
ԹՎ ՄԺԳ
Assyrian calendar5514
Balinese saka calendar685–686
Bengali calendar171
Berber calendar1714
Buddhist calendar1308
Burmese calendar126
Byzantine calendar6272–6273
Chinese calendar癸卯年 (Water Rabbit)
3460 or 3400
     to 
甲辰年 (Wood Dragon)
3461 or 3401
Coptic calendar480–481
Discordian calendar1930
Ethiopian calendar756–757
Hebrew calendar4524–4525
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat820–821
 - Shaka Samvat685–686
 - Kali Yuga3864–3865
Holocene calendar10764
Iranian calendar142–143
Islamic calendar146–147
Japanese calendarTenpyō-hōji 8
(天平宝字8年)
Javanese calendar658–659
Julian calendar764
DCCLXIV
Korean calendar3097
Minguo calendar1148 before ROC
民前1148年
Nanakshahi calendar−704
Seleucid era1075/1076 AG
Thai solar calendar1306–1307
Tibetan calendar阴水兔年
(female Water-Rabbit)
890 or 509 or −263
     to 
阳木龙年
(male Wood-Dragon)
891 or 510 or −262

Events

By place

Europe

Britain

Asia

By topic

Geography

Religion

Births

Deaths

gollark: We're stuck on concepts like memory being a giant linear array, programs having one thread of control, and probably other things I can't think of now.
gollark: CPUs are basically just "execute C-like-code really fast" machines instead of, well, something else, like GPUs.
gollark: Kind of a shame stuff is generally just forced to map onto really outdated machines from ye olden C era.
gollark: Though this is perhaps more of an issue of programmers, languages and tooling more than hardware issues.
gollark: The thing is that the GPU isn't really integrated into normal compute use very much, even when it could probably be used effectively.

References

  1. Sansom, p. 90; excerpt, "... Nakamaro, better known by his later title as the prime minister Oshikatsu, was in high favour with the emperor Junnin but not with the ex-empress Kōken. In a civil disturbance that took place in 764–765, Oshikatsu was captured and killed, while the young emperor was deposed and exiled in 765 and presumably strangled. Kōken reascended the throne as the empress Shōtoku, and her priest Dōkyō was all powerful until she died withous issue in 770."
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