1453
Appearance
Milley bleeaney: | 2oo milley bleeaney |
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Eashyn: | |
Jeihaghtyn: | |
Bleeantyn: |
1453 (MCDLIII), she blein chadjin v'ee, ghow toshiaght Jelhune rere feaillere Yool.
Dy mennick, ta'n vlein shoh enmyssit myr jerrey sheiltynagh ny Mean Eashyn liorish screeudeyryn shennaghys ta meenaghey ny h-eashyn shen myr y lhing eddyr tuittym Impiraght y Raue Heear as tuittym Impiraght y Raue Hiar as tuittym Constantinople.[1]
Taghyrtyn
[reagh | edit source]- 6 Averil–29 Boaldyn – Çhennid as Tuittym Constantinople: Chur y Sultan Ottomanagh Mehmed ny Barriaght jerrey reaghyssagh rish Impiraght y Raue, begnagh thousane bleeantyn dy lieh lurg e vunneeaght liorish Augustus, tra ghow eh greim er y phreeu-valley, Constantinople.[2]
Ruggyryn
[reagh | edit source]- 2 Mayrnt – Johannes Engel, lhee, rollageyder, as rollageydagh Germaanagh (b. 1512)
- 1 Mean Fouyir – Gonzalo Fernández de Córdoba, gineraal as steateyr Spaainagh (b. 1515)
Baaseyn
[reagh | edit source]- 1 Mean Souree – Giovanni Giustiniani, captan Iddaalagh
- 24 Nollick – John Dunstaple, cummeyder Sostynagh (r. 1390)
Imraaghyn
[reagh | edit source]- ↑ G. R. Potter, "The Fall of Constantinople? History Today (Jerrey Geuree 1953) 3#1 dgn 41-49.
- ↑ "What Happened In 1453". Hisdates. Feddynit magh er 2017-08-08.