1014
Battle of Kleidion
Emperor Basil II trapped the Bulgarian army in a mountain pass and captured fifteen thousand men. He blinded ninety-nine of every hundred and sent them home in pathetic columns led by the hundredth, who had one eye spared. Tsar Samuel collapsed and died at the sight before him. The victory earned Basil the epithet Boulgaroktonos, the Bulgar-slayer, a title he carried for eternity.
Rajendra Chola begins northern campaign
The Tamil emperor, already master of Sri Lanka and the southern peninsula, dispatched his generals northward through Kalinga toward the Ganges. His armies defeated the rulers of Orissa and Bengal in succession, carrying water from the sacred river back to the Chola capital. Rajendra took the title Gangaikonda, Bringer of the Ganges, and built a new city to celebrate.
Battle of Clontarf
The aging Irish high king Brian Boru, said to have prayed for victory under a linen awning, watched his army crush a Viking-Leinster coalition on a Dublin beach on Good Friday. Brian was killed in his tent by a fleeing Norseman. Ireland's unity died with him that morning. The Norse of Dublin, though defeated, remained in the city as merchants and gradually assimilated into Irish society.
Death of Sweyn Forkbeard
The conqueror-king died suddenly at Gainsborough only weeks after his acclamation, reportedly struck down by the avenging ghost of St. Edmund. Ethelred the Unready returned from Normandy; the Danish army proclaimed Sweyn's young son Cnut. England's throne was up for grabs all over again. The brevity of Sweyn's reign made his conquest seem almost spectral, a warning that crowns taken by force can vanish overnight.