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tenthcentury

The tenth century refers to the years 901 through 1000 CE. It was a transitional period in many regions, bridging late antique and medieval developments, marked by political realignments, religious reform movements, and expanding networks of trade and culture.

In Europe, power tended to be regional rather than centralized. East Francia, under the Ottonian dynasty, consolidated

Across the Islamic world, centralized caliphal power waned and regional dynasties gained strength, including the Fatimids

In Eastern Europe and the Near East, the Christianization of Kievan Rus' began in the late 980s

authority
and
laid
the
groundwork
for
the
Holy
Roman
Empire
with
Otto
I’s
coronation
in
962.
The
period
also
saw
the
beginnings
of
the
Cluniac
reform
movement
in
monastic
life
and
a
revival
of
learning
known
as
the
Ottonian
Renaissance.
Urban
growth
and
intensified
long-distance
trade
shaped
medieval
economies.
in
North
Africa
and
Egypt
and
the
Ghaznavids
in
the
eastern
Iranian
world.
Trade
connected
the
Mediterranean,
the
Middle
East,
and
India,
contributing
to
cultural
and
scientific
exchange.
In
China,
the
Song
Dynasty
(established
960)
reunified
most
of
the
country,
fostering
urbanization,
bureaucratic
administration,
and
technological
innovations
such
as
woodblock
printing
and
early
navigational
tools;
the
era
also
featured
Song
coastal
and
inland
trade
networks
and
cultural
flowering.
under
Vladimir
I,
linking
Rus'
with
Byzantium.
In
Africa
and
the
Americas,
long-distance
trade
linked
West
African
empires
with
trans-Saharan
routes,
while
in
the
Americas,
regional
civilizations
continued
to
develop
with
urban
and
trade
networks.