AD 502
Year 502 was a common year starting on Tuesday of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Avienus and Probus. The denomination 502 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.
Events
By place
Byzantine Empire
- War with Sassanid Persia: Emperor Anastasius I refuses to pay a share of the cost of defending the Caucasian Gates, through which nomadic tribes have come for raids on Persia and the Byzantine Empire. King Kavadh I invades Armenia and captures Theodosiopolis.
- Winter - Kavadh I besieges the fortress-city of Amida. The defenders, although unsupported by Byzantine troops, repel the Persian assaults for three months before they are finally beaten.
Europe
- March 29 - King Gundobad issues a new legal code at Lyon, that makes Gallo-Romans and Burgundians subject to the same laws.
- The Bulgars ravage Thrace. A semi-nomadic people, they have absorbed the surviving Huns and meet no opposition from Byzantine forces.
China
- The Liang Dynasty is founded by Xiao Yan, who marches on Jiankang. Emperor He Di, age 14, is put to death. The Southern Qi Dynasty ends and Wu Di becomes ruler of the Liang Dynasty.
- December 24 - Xiao Yan names Xiao Tong his heir designate.
- The Nanhua Temple, located southeast of Shaoguan, is founded by the Indian monk Zhiyao Sanzang. The temple covers an area of and consists of a set of historical Buddhist buildings.
By topic
Arts and sciences
- The Persian philosopher Mazdak declares private property to be the source of all evil.
Literature
- The Chinese Book of Song is finished. The text is one of the Twenty-Four Histories, a traditional collection of historical records during the Southern and Northern Dynasties.
Religion
- Caesarius becomes bishop of Arles. His episcopal see, near the mouth of the Rhone River and close to Marseille, retains its ancient importance in the social and commercial life of Gaul for forty years.
- October 23 - The Synodus Palmaris, called by Gothic king Theodoric the Great, clears Pope Symmachus of all charges, thus ending the schism of Antipope Laurentius.
Births
- Amalaric, king of the Visigoths
Deaths
- Genevieve, patron saint of Paris
- He Di, Chinese emperor of Southern Qi
- Narsai, Syrian poet and theologian
- Vakhtang I of Iberia, Georgian king