- male
- Mahavira was a 9th century Indian mathematician from Gulbarga who asserted that the square root of a negative number did not exist. He gave the sum...
- The Brethren of Purity were an obscure and mysterious organization of Arab philosophers in Basra, Iraq - which was then the seat of the Abbasid...
- male, deceased (939)
- Athelstan or "Æþelstān" ("c". 895 - October 27, 939), called the Glorious, was the King of England from 924 to 939. He was the son of King Edw...
- male, 1109 years old
- Ahmad ibn Fadlān ibn al-Abbās ibn Rašīd ibn Hammād was a 10th century Muslim writer and traveler who wrote an account of his travels as a membe...
- male
- Ibn al-Faqih al-Hamadhani was a 10th century Persian historian and geographer, famous for his "Mukhtasar Kitab al-Buldan" ("Concise Book of Lands").
- male, deceased (972)
- Liutprand (also Liudprand, Luitprand; c. 922 - 972) was a Lombard historian and author, and bishop of Cremona. He was born towards the beginning of...
- male, deceased (966)
- Flodoard was a French chronicler. He was born at Épernay, and educated at Reims in the cathedral school which had been established by Archbishop F...
- male, deceased (991)
- Byrhtnoth ("Byrhtnoþ", also spelled "Byrhtnoð", "Byrihtnoð", "Brihtnoþ", "Beorhtnoþ", "Beorhtnoð", "Baeorhtnoð") was a 10th century Ealdorm...
- female, deceased (999)
- Saint Adelaide (931 - 16 December 999) was perhaps the most prominent European woman of the 10th century. She was the daughter of Rudolf II of...
- male, deceased (1004)
- Abbo of Fleury, also known as Abbon or Saint Abbo' (c. 945-13 November,1004) was a monk, and later abbot, of the Benedictine monastery of Fleury...
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