| 12 April: | Jews celebrate Pesach for the next seven or eight days. | |
| 12 April: | The resurrection of Jesus Christ is celebrated on Easter Sunday after the first full moon after the spring equinox since the Council of Nicaea in 325. | |
| 30 April: | Ummayad troops led by Tariq ibn Ziyad land at Gibraltar, beginning the Islamic conquest of the Iberian peninsula and giving the “rock of Tariq” its name Gebel-al-Tariq. | |
| 31 May: | Seven weeks after Easter Christians celebrate Pentecost, possibly since 68 AD. | |
| 22 June: | The thirty days of Ramadan in the Islamic year 92 begin at the first sighting of the lunar crescent. | |
| 19 July: | The Moorish invasion army defeats the Visigoths at the Battle of Guadalete, possibly killing their king Rodrigo, certainly opening the way to their capital Toledo. | |
| 22 July: | Muslims celebrate the Conclusion of the Fast on the first day of the month Shawwal. | |
| 28 September: | Muslims celebrate the Festival of Sacrifice on the tenth day of the month Dhu al-Hijjah. | |
| 30 September: | Jews celebrate Yom Kippur since sunset last night. |
Hubertus celebrated their birthday this year.
The year 711 was a common year starting on a Thursday, just like 621, 627, 638, 649, 655, 666, 677, 683, 694, 700 and 705 in the century before it and 722, 733, 739, 750, 761, 767, 778, 789, 795 and 806 in the next.
The coloured days highlight
births
,
deaths
,
political
,
scientific
,
artistic
and
other
historical milestones, and recurring events such as anniversaries and
holidays
.
The new
,
waxing
,
full
and
waning
icons indicate the phases of the moon and appear only for dates in the Gregorian calendar, i.e. after 14 October 1582. The Chinese calendar is available only from 1645 to 2644, the first millenium since the last reform. The coloured columns mark the Sundays, the last day of the week per standard ISO-8601.
The normal calendar page for the current /year?2013 contains an introduction to the intriguing history of the year as we know it. The Calendar Converter has more detail. The so called Perpetual Calendar uses a trick from before the age of computers to find the weekday for any Gregorian date. Also see an overview of all historical events in the last six thousand years.