upright=1.35|thumb|[[Michael V Kalaphates (c. 1015–1042)]]

Year 1041 (MXLI) was a common year starting on Thursday of the Julian calendar.

Events

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By place

Byzantine Empire

  • December 10 &ndash; Emperor Michael IV the Paphlagonian dies after a 6-year reign. His wife, Empress Zoë, elevates (on the advice of her lover John the Orphanotrophos) her adoptive son to the throne of the Byzantine Empire, as Michael V Kalaphates. Shortly after, Michael comes into conflict with his uncle John, and banishes him to a monastery.

Europe

  • March 17 &ndash; Battle of Olivento: Norman troops and their Lombard allies, led by William Iron Arm, are victorious against the Byzantines at the feet of the Monte Vulture, near the River Olivento in Apulia.
  • May 4 &ndash; Battle of Montemaggiore: Lombard-Norman rebel forces, led by William, are again victorious, and defeat a Byzantine army (18,000 men) on the hill of Montemaggiore, near the River Ofanto.
  • September 3 &ndash; Battle of Montepeloso: Lombard-Norman rebel forces, led by William, defeat the Byzantines at Montepeloso. During the battle, Boioannes, governor of the Catepanate of Italy, is captured.
  • September &ndash; Peter, King of Hungary is deposed by a palace coup. The Hungarian magnates elect Samuel Aba as their king.
  • Winter &ndash; Battle of Ostrovo: The Byzantines, with the help of the Varangian Guard, led by Harald Hardrada (future king of Norway), defeat the Bulgarian troops, near Lake Ostrovo in Greece.

England

  • King Harthacnut invites his half-brother Edward the Confessor to return to England from exile in Normandy as his heir as king of England, with the support of Godwin, Earl of Wessex.
  • The city of Worcester rebels against the naval taxes of Harthacnut. He reduces the navy from 60 to 32 ships.

Africa

  • The Zirid dynasty rejects Shi'ite obedience and Fatimid domination, and recognizes the Abbasids as their overlords.

Asia

  • At about this time, the number of enlisted soldiers in the Song dynasty Chinese military reaches well over 1,250,000 troops, an increase since 1022, when there were a million soldiers.</onlyinclude>

Births

  • Ōe no Masafusa, Japanese poet (d. 1111)
  • Raymond IV, Count of Toulouse (Raymond of Saint-Gilles), French nobleman (d. 1105) (approximate date)

Deaths

  • February 4 &ndash; Fujiwara no Kintō, Japanese poet (b. 966)
  • September &ndash; Budo, Hungarian courtier
  • December 10 &ndash; Michael IV the Paphlagonian, Byzantine emperor (b. 1010)
  • Adolf II of Lotharingia, German nobleman (b. 1002)
  • Akazome Emon, Japanese waka poet (approximate date)
  • Eadwulf IV of Bamburgh, Northumbrian ruler
  • Edmund of Durham (or Eadmund), English bishop
  • Gangeyadeva, Indian ruler of the Kalachuris of Tripuri
  • Mac Beathaidh mac Ainmire, Irish poet and Chief Ollam
  • Muhammad of Ghazni, sultan of the Ghaznavids (b. 998)
  • Muhammad ibn Rustam Dushmanziyar, Buyid emir
  • Peter Delyan, Bulgarian rebel leader and ruler (tsar)
  • Sampiro, Spanish bishop, politician and intellectual
  • Tancred of Hauteville, Norman nobleman (b. 980)
  • Vikramabahu, Prince of Ruhuna (or Kassapa), ruler of Sri Lanka (b. 1017)

References