1008
Battle of Waihind crushes Hindu Shahis
Mahmud of Ghazni shattered a grand Hindu confederacy assembled by Anandapala at Waihind near Peshawar. When Anandapala's war elephant bolted, panic spread through the Indian ranks and the coalition dissolved. The defeat ended organized Hindu Shahi resistance in the northwest and opened the road to Mahmud's devastating raids deeper into the subcontinent.
Suryavarman I consolidates power at Angkor
After years of civil war against rival claimants, the Khmer usurper secured his grip on the throne of Angkor. He compelled court officials to swear binding oaths of loyalty inscribed on stone, a practice unprecedented in Khmer statecraft. His reign would double the empire's territory and launch the construction of the vast West Baray reservoir.
Murasaki Shikibu's diary at court
The author of Genji recorded brilliant snatches of Heian palace life: the birth of a prince, snow falling on courtyards, the cattiness of rival ladies-in-waiting. Her diary survives as one of the most intimate windows into any pre-modern court anywhere on earth, a small literary miracle. She also offered a sharp assessment of her rival Sei Shonagon, calling her writings pretentious and destined to age badly.
Kanem kingdom embraces Islam at Lake Chad
Rulers of the Kanem kingdom on the shores of Lake Chad began adopting Islam through contact with trans-Saharan traders from North Africa. The conversion, gradual and syncretic, positioned Kanem as a crucial link between the Mediterranean commercial world and the gold and slave networks of the central African interior. The royal dynasty, the Sayfawa, would rule continuously for over seven hundred years, one of the longest reigns in world history.