Skip to content
Category

904 deaths

page 1
Christopher
illegitimate ruler of the Catholic Church from 903 to 904
Emperor Zhaozong of Tang
final emperor of the Tang dynasty of China (r. 888-904)
Harun ibn Khumarawayh
Tulunid Emir of Egypt from 896 to 904
Kurszán
Kurszán or Kusál (died 904), was a Hungarian (Magyar) chieftain at the turn of the 9th and 10th centuries, who had a crucial role in the Hungarian conquest of the Carpathian Basin. He was kende of the Magyars in the dual leadership with Árpád serving as a gyula - according to a mainstream theory. While kende probably corresponded roughly to the Khazar title khagan, Kurszán's role equated to the Khazar military title bek. In Latin sources he was referred to as rex and some scholars say he had a political status as a sacred king until he was massacred in a political plot of Western rulers and wa
Tannet of Pagan
King of Pagan dynasty of Burma
Al-Qasim ibn Ubayd Allah
abbasid Vizier and Official (901–904)
Du Xunhe
poet
Ímar ua Ímair
King of Dublin
Jaisingha Verman
Qunbul
Abu ‘Amr Muhammad Ibn ‘Abd ar-Rahman, al-Makhzumi, better known as Qunbul (195-291 AH / 808-904 CE), was one of the primary transmitters of one of the Qira'at, or the canonical methods of reading the Qur'an. Of the seven primary readings of the Qur'an, Qunbul was a transmitter of the method of Ibn Kathir al-Makki. Like Al-Buzzi, who was the other canonical transmitter of Ibn Kathir's method, Qunbul was an indirect student and lived later than the namesake of the recitation method.
Abu al-'Abbas Tha'lab
Arab poet and grammarian
Abu-l-Abbàs Àhmad ibn Muhàmmad ibn Mussa ibn al-Hàssan ibn al-Furat
Cui Yin
Chancellor during the reign of Emperor Zhaozong of Tang
Lady Zhang
wife of Emperor Taizu of Later Liang
Zhang Jun
Chinese chancellor
Al-Husayn ibn Zikrawayh
Qarmatian leader (died 904)