1001
Mahmud of Ghazni's first Indian raid
At Peshawar the Turkic sultan crushed the Hindu Shahi king Jayapala, opening the gates of the Punjab to two decades of lucrative Ghaznavid plunder. The defeated raja, humiliated, built his own pyre and climbed onto it, unwilling to live as a captive of a Muslim lord. Mahmud's campaigns would eventually strip the subcontinent's temple treasuries of gold on a scale not seen before.
Leif Erikson establishes Vinland camp
At a grassy headland near modern L'Anse aux Meadows in Newfoundland, Leif's crew raised long-houses of sod and timber to winter in. They collected butternuts from farther south, suggesting exploration well beyond the initial landing, before sailing back to Greenland with timber the next spring. The settlement, though short-lived, left archaeological traces that would not be rediscovered until 1960.
Sei Shonagon circulates The Pillow Book
At the Heian court, a rival of Murasaki Shikibu released her Makura no Soshi, a miscellany of lists, observations, and aesthetic judgments that captured the texture of aristocratic Japanese life with caustic wit. Her inventory of 'hateful things' and 'elegant things' became a founding text of the Japanese essay tradition, still read for its luminous precision a thousand years later.
Stephen I founds Hungarian bishoprics
The newly crowned Magyar king established the archdiocese of Esztergom and began carving his realm into ten dioceses. Benedictine monks from Germany were imported by the wagon-load to teach Latin letters. A people who had raided Europe for a century became one of Latin Christendom's permanent frontiers. Esztergom's archbishop would hold primacy over Hungarian church affairs for the next thousand years.