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AD 643: Taizong commissions artist Yan Liben to paint the life-size portraits of 24 government officials in the Lingyan Pavilion, to commemorate their service and contributions to the founding of the Tang dynasty.
AD 645: Alexandria revolts against Arab rule, at the appearance of a Byzantine fleet of 300 ships, and Byzantine forces recapture the city. Abdullah ibn Sa'ad, Arab governor of Egypt, mounts an assault and retakes it. He begins building a Muslim fleet.
AD 646: Xuanzang completes his book Great Tang Records on the Western Regions, which later becomes one of the primary sources for the study of medieval Central Asia and India.
AD 648: Emperor Constans II issues an imperial edict forbidding Monothelitism to be discussed, to quiet the intense controversy caused by the Monothelete doctrine. This edict, distributed by patriarch Paul II in Constans' name, is known as the Typos.
AD 650: The first Chinese paper money is issued, yet these banknotes will not become government-issued until the Song dynasty era Sichuan province issues them in the year 1024, with the central government of China following suit in the 12th century.
AD 657: Clovis II dies and is succeeded by his eldest son Chlothar III, age 5, who becomes king of Neustria and Burgundy, under the regency of his mother Balthild.
AD 658: A revolt led by three Mercian noblemen (Immin, Eata, and Eadberht) installs Wulfhere (son of king Penda) as ruler of Mercia, and drives out the supporters of King Oswiu of Northumbria.
AD 659: A Japanese embassy is sent to the Chinese Empire, and received in an audience by Emperor Gao Zong. The Tang dynasty is determined in the next year to take administrative measures in regard to Japan. The envoys are detained.
AD 660: Emperor Constans II is paranoid about the ambitions of his younger brother, Theodosius, and has him murdered. Having attracted the hatred of the citizens of Constantinople, Constans decides to leave the Byzantine capital and moves to Syracuse (Sicily).
AD 664: The Kingdom of Gwynedd is also devastated by the plague; King Cadafael Cadomedd dies and is succeeded by Cadwaladr, who reasserts himself in his kingdom by sending his son Ivor from Brittany to be regent.
AD 666: Turkish tribes proclaimed Ashina Nishufu as Khagan, demonstrating that Turkic state tradition and sovereign will remained alive even under Tang Chinese domination.
AD 671: Ashina Funian of the Göktürk royal clan rises against Tang rule in an attempt to restore Turkic independence. Though the rebellion fails, it foreshadows the rebirth of the Göktürk Khaganate a decade later.
AD 672: January 7 – Emperor Tenji dies after a 10-year reign, in which he has given the Fujiwara clan its name. Following his death, there ensues a succession dispute between Tenji's 14 children (many by different mothers). He is succeeded by his favorite son Kōbun, age 23, who was the first accorded with the title Daijō-daijin.
AD 673: Burgundian nobles, under the leadership of bishop Leodegar and Adalrich, invite Childeric II to become king in Neustria and Burgundy. He invades Theuderic's kingdom and displaces his brother, becoming sole king of the Frankish Kingdom.
AD 674 - Khazar Turkish forces hold the Caucasian passes against Umayyad expansion, preventing Arab armies from advancing into the Pontic steppe and securing Turkish dominance north of the Caucasus.
AD 675: King Childeric II is murdered by a band of dissatisfied Neustrians, along with his wife Bilichild and 5-year-old son Dagobert, while hunting in the forest of Livry (modern-day Lognes) near Chelles.
AD 676: Across the steppes, Turkish clans begin to reorganize against Tang domination, while the Khazar Khaganate fortifies the Caucasian passes a prelude to the resurgence of Turkish power in the decades to come.
AD 678: Asparuh, of Turkish origin, crosses the Danube and establishes a fortified base at Onglos a decisive move that will soon lead to the emergence of a new Turkish state in the Balkans.
AD 680: Asparuh’s Turkish forces defeat the Byzantine army at the Battle of Ongal, opening the way for the rise of a new Turkish state south of the Danube.