300s (decade)

Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries: 3rd century4th century5th century
Decades: 270s 280s 290s300s310s 320s 330s
Years: 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309
300s-related
categories:
Births – Deaths – By country
Establishments

Events

Contents: 300 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309

300


By place

Roman Empire
Asia
Africa
America

By topic

Arts and sciences
Religion

301


By place

Roman Empire
Armenia
Europe
Asia


302


By place

Roman Empire
Persia

By topic

Arts and sciences
Religion

303


By place

Roman Empire
Armenia
Asia
America

By topic

Religion


304


By place

Roman Empire
China

By topic

Religion

305


By place

Roman Empire
Asia

By topic

Commerce
Religion

306


By place

Roman Empire
Asia

By topic

Religion


307


By place

Roman Empire
China


308


By place

Roman Empire
Asia

By topic

Religion


309


By place

Roman Empire
Persia
North America

By topic

Religion

East Asia

In Yamato (Japan), the Kofun period doinated during this decade. It was an animistic culture which existed prior the introduction of Buddhism. A legend of the 4th century Prince Yamato Takeru alludes to the borders of the Yamato and battlegrounds in the area. A frontier was obviously somewhere close to the later Izumo province (the eastern part of today's Shimane prefecture). Another frontier, in Kyūshū, was apparently somewhere north of today's Kumamoto prefecture. The legend specifically states that there was an eastern land in Honshū "whose people disobeyed the imperial court", against whom Yamato Takeru was sent to fight. That rivalling country may have been located rather close to the Yamato nucleus area itself, or relatively far away. The today Kai province is mentioned as one of the locations where prince Yamato Takeru sojourned in his said military expedition.

Northern frontier of this age was also explained in Kojiki as the legend of Shido Shogun's (四道将軍: Shoguns to four ways) expedition. Out of four shoguns, Ōbiko set northward to Koshi and his son Take Nunakawawake set to eastern states. The father moved east from northern Koshi while the son moved north on his way, and they finally met at Aizu (current western Fukushima). Although the legend itself is not likely to be a historical fact, Aizu is rather close to southern Tōhoku, where the north end of keyhole kofun culture as of late 4th century is located.

Deaths

References

  1. It was the first nation to adopt Christianity as its official religion. The Journal of Ecclesiastical History – Page 268 by Cambridge University Press, Gale Group, C.W. Dugmore
  2. CNEWA.org
  3. The Armenian Massacres, 1894–1896: 1894–1896 : U.S. media testimony – Page 131 by A. Dzh. (Arman Dzhonovich) Kirakosian
  4. OrientalOrthodox.org
  5. The Antiquities of the Christian Church – Page 466 by Johann Christian Wilhelm Augusti, Georg Friedrich Heinrich Rheinwald, Carl Christian Friedrich Siegel
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