533

Year 533 (DXXXIII) was a common year starting on Saturday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Iustinianus without colleague (or, less frequently, year 1286 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 533 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.

Millennium: 1st millennium
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
533 in various calendars
Gregorian calendar533
DXXXIII
Ab urbe condita1286
Assyrian calendar5283
Balinese saka calendar454–455
Bengali calendar−60
Berber calendar1483
Buddhist calendar1077
Burmese calendar−105
Byzantine calendar6041–6042
Chinese calendar壬子(Water Rat)
3229 or 3169
     to 
癸丑年 (Water Ox)
3230 or 3170
Coptic calendar249–250
Discordian calendar1699
Ethiopian calendar525–526
Hebrew calendar4293–4294
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat589–590
 - Shaka Samvat454–455
 - Kali Yuga3633–3634
Holocene calendar10533
Iranian calendar89 BP – 88 BP
Islamic calendar92 BH – 91 BH
Javanese calendar420–421
Julian calendar533
DXXXIII
Korean calendar2866
Minguo calendar1379 before ROC
民前1379年
Nanakshahi calendar−935
Seleucid era844/845 AG
Thai solar calendar1075–1076
Tibetan calendar阳水鼠年
(male Water-Rat)
659 or 278 or −494
     to 
阴水牛年
(female Water-Ox)
660 or 279 or −493
The Vandalic War campaign (533–534)

Events

Byzantine Empire

  • Spring Vandalic War: Anti-Vandal revolt in Tripolitania and Sardinia; Gelimer, king of the Vandals, dispatches the bulk of the Vandal fleet (120 ships and 5,000 men) under his brother Tzazo to Sardinia. Byzantine forces from Cyrenaica occupy Leptis Magna and Tripolis.
  • Summer Emperor Justinian I holds a war council in Constantinople. His advisers warn him against launching an expedition to North Africa, because of the supply-lines (1,000 miles into Vandal waters) and the huge drain on the imperial treasury. Justinian appoints Belisarius to command the Byzantine army.
  • June 21 A Byzantine expeditionary fleet under Belisarius sails in 500 transports, escorted by 92 war vessels (dromons), manned by 20,000 seamen from Constantinople, to attack the Vandals in Africa, via Greece and Sicily. The fleet carries 10,000 infantry, about half Byzantine and half foederati, and 5,000 cavalry, consisting of 3,000 Byzantine horsemen, 1,000 foreign allies (Huns and Heruli) and 1,500 of Belisarius' retainers (bucellarii).[1] On the flagship Belisarius is accompanied by his military secretary Procopius and his wife Antonina.
  • September Belisarius arrives at Sicily, which he uses as a staging area, with the permission of the Ostrogoth queen Amalasuntha, daughter of Theodoric the Great and regent of Italy. The Ostrogoths help him with supplies and the fleet is prepared for the final attack.
  • September 9 The Byzantine army lands at Caput Vada (modern Tunisia). Belisarius marches his army northwards, towards Carthage (over 140 miles), following the coast, accompanied by the fleet and shadowed by Gelimer. During the march, the Vandal towns fall without a fight.[2]
  • September 13 Battle of Ad Decimum: Gelimer attempts to ambush the Byzantines in a defile at the "10th milestone" from Carthage; due to inadequate coordination and the alertness of Belisarius, the attack is repulsed and the Vandals are scattered into the desert. Belisarius enters the capital and orders his soldiers not to kill or enslave the population. The fleet is stationed in the Lake of Tunis.
  • December 15 Battle of Tricamarum: Gelimer assembles an army of about 50,000 men at Bulla Regia (Numidia), and advances towards Carthage. Belisarius moves out to meet the Vandals; he leads the Byzantine cavalry (5,000 men) into battle. Without waiting for his infantry to come up, he charges, despite odds of almost 10-to-1, and throws Gelimer in confusion. Belisarius captures the Vandal camp by storm. Tzazo is killed in an all-cavalry fight, and Gelimer is forced to seek refuge in the mountains of Tunis with the Berbers.
  • December 16 The Digesta or Pandectae, a collection of jurist writings and other sources, is completed (see Corpus Juris Civilis).

Europe

Religion

Deaths

References

  1. Procopius, BV, Vol. I, XI. 7–16
  2. Bury (1923), Vol. II, p. 130–131
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