827
Year 827 was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Julian calendar.Events
By place
Byzantine Empire
- June 14 - Euphemius, exiled Byzantine admiral, asks for the help of North African Arabs, to retake Sicily and Malta from the Byzantines. Emir Ziyadat Allah I of Ifriqiya promises to return the islands to Euphemius, in exchange for a yearly tribute, and sends an Arab Muslim expeditionary force of 10,000 men under the 70-year-old Asad ibn al-Furat, which lands at Mazara del Vallo in Sicily.
- Fall - Siege of Syracuse: Muslim forces under Asad ibn al-Furat, in support of the rebel Byzantine army, besiege Syracuse, Sicily.
Europe
- Summer - Omurtag, ruler of the Bulgarian Empire, launches an attack to the West, and penetrates into Pannonia. He expels the local chiefs, and installs Bulgar governors over the Slavic tribes to control them. Omurtag conquers the cities of Beograd, Braničevo, Sirmium, and most of eastern Slavonia.
- Giustiniano Participazio deposes his younger brother Giovanni I, and is appointed doge of Venice. Giovanni, who is part of a pro-Frankish faction, is exiled to Zara.
Britain
- Æthelstan establishes himself as king of East Anglia, after killing King Ludeca of Mercia in battle. Ludeca is succeeded by Wiglaf, father-in-law of the late king Ceolwulf I's daughter.
China
- Emperor Jing Zong is assassinated by a group of conspirators. He is succeeded by his brother Wen Zong, as ruler of the Tang Dynasty.
By topic
Religion
Births
- Ali ibn Muhammad, Muslim sultan
- Cyril, Byzantine missionary and bishop
- Ibn al-Rawandi, Muslim scholar and writer
- Maura of Troyes, Frankish noblewoman and saint
Deaths
- January 1 - Adalard of Corbie, Frankish abbot
- August 27 - Eugene II, pope of the Catholic Church
- October 10 - Valentine, pope of the Catholic Church
- Agnello Participazio, doge of Venice
- Claudius, archbishop of Turin
- Grigol of Kakheti, Georgian prince
- Guillemundus, Frankish nobleman
- Hildegrim, bishop of Châlons
- Jing Zong, emperor of the Tang Dynasty
- Li Yi, Chinese poet
- Ludeca, king of Mercia
- Wu Chongyin, Chinese general
- Yaoshan Weiyan, Chinese Buddhist monk