Category
page 1750s births
Abu Nuwas
8th-century classical Arabic poet
Irene of Athens
empress of Byzantine Empire (752-803)

Leo V the Armenian
Byzantine emperor (lived 775–820)

Hildegard of Vinzgouw
Queen of the Franks and Blessed (c. 771 – 783)
William of Gellone
Count of Toulouse and saint
Bermudo I of Asturias
King of Asturias
Adalard of Corbie
Carolingian saint
Theodore Abu-Qurrah
Greek theologian and bishop
Wala of Corbie
Advisor to Charlemagne
Arno of Salzburg
Roman Catholic archbishop
ʻAlī ibn Muḥammad Madāʼinī
Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn Muhammad ibn Abd Allah ibn Abi Sayf al-Qurashi (; 752/753–843), commonly known by his '''al-Mada'ini''' (), was a scholar of Iranian descent who wrote in Arabic and was active under the early Abbasids in Iraq in the first half of the 9th century. A scholar of many interests, he wrote over 200 works, but is best known as a historian.
Nikephoros
Caesar of the Byzantine empire
Anthusa of Constantinople
Byzantine saint
Sico of Benevento
Prince of Benevento
Adrian, Count of Orléans
Frankish count
Allāḥqy
Iraqi poet
Al-Fadl ibn al-Rabi'
Abbasid vizier
Bello of Carcassonne
Count of Carcassonne
Ingerman of Hesbaye
740-775
Prince Sawara
son of emperor Kōnin; brother of emperor Kammu

Chūjō-hime
(also written Chūjō Hime or Hase-Hime) (c. 753?–781?) was by most accounts a daughter of the court noble Fujiwara no Toyonari who escaped persecution at the hands of her stepmother by becoming a nun at the Taima-dera in Nara. There she took on the name Zenshin-ni or the Dharma name Honyo (法如). She has become a folk heroine, the subject of numerous Japanese folktales which celebrate her filial piety. She is sometimes called the Japanese Cinderella.
Euthymius of Sardis
Bishop of Sardis
Li Na
general of the Chinese Tang Dynasty
Adam
East Syriac Christian monk