# 264

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This article is about the year 264. For the number, see [264 (number)](/source/264_(number)). For the locomotive, see [2-6-4](/source/2-6-4).

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Calendar year

Years Millennium 1st millennium Centuries 2nd century 3rd century 4th century Decades 240s 250s 260s 270s 280s Years 261 262 263 264 265 266 267 v t e

264 by topic Leaders Political entities State leaders Religious leaders Categories Deaths v t e

264 in various calendars Gregorian calendar 264 CCLXIV Ab urbe condita 1017 Assyrian calendar 5014 Balinese saka calendar 185–186 Bengali calendar −330 – −329 Berber calendar 1214 Buddhist calendar 808 Burmese calendar −374 Byzantine calendar 5772–5773 Chinese calendar 癸未年 (Water Goat) 2961 or 2754 — to — 甲申年 (Wood Monkey) 2962 or 2755 Coptic calendar −20 – −19 Discordian calendar 1430 Ethiopian calendar 256–257 Hebrew calendar 4024–4025 Hindu calendars - Vikram Samvat 320–321 - Shaka Samvat 185–186 - Kali Yuga 3364–3365 Holocene calendar 10264 Iranian calendar 358 BP – 357 BP Islamic calendar 369 BH – 368 BH Javanese calendar 143–144 Julian calendar 264 CCLXIV Korean calendar 2597 Minguo calendar 1648 before ROC 民前1648年 Nanakshahi calendar −1204 Seleucid era 575/576 AG Thai solar calendar 806–807 Tibetan calendar ཆུ་མོ་ལུག་ལོ་ (female Water-Sheep) 390 or 9 or −763 — to — ཤིང་ཕོ་སྤྲེ་ལོ་ (male Wood-Monkey) 391 or 10 or −762

Year **264** (**[CCLXIV](/source/Roman_numerals)**) was a [leap year starting on Friday](/source/Leap_year_starting_on_Friday) of the [Julian calendar](/source/Julian_calendar). At the time, it was known as the **Year of the Consulship of Gallienus and Saturninus** (or, less frequently, **year 1017 *[Ab urbe condita](/source/Ab_urbe_condita)***). The denomination 264 for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the [Anno Domini](/source/Anno_Domini) [calendar era](/source/Calendar_era) became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.

## Events

### By place

#### Asia

- [March 1](/source/March_1)–[3](/source/March_3) – [Zhong Hui's Rebellion](/source/Zhong_Hui's_Rebellion) in [China](/source/China) is quelled.

- [Sima Zhao](/source/Sima_Zhao), regent of the Chinese state of [Cao Wei](/source/Cao_Wei), styles himself the "King of Jin", the penultimate step before usurpation.

- [Sun Hao](/source/Sun_Hao) succeeds [Sun Xiu](/source/Sun_Xiu) as emperor of the Chinese state of [Eastern Wu](/source/Eastern_Wu).

## Deaths

- [Zhong Hui](/source/Zhong_Hui), Chinese philosopher[1]

- [March 3](/source/March_3) - [Jiang Wei](/source/Jiang_Wei) (or **Boyue**), Chinese general and [regent](/source/Regent) (b. [202](/source/202)) - [Zhang Yi](/source/Zhang_Yi_(Bogong)) (or **Bogong**), Chinese general and politician

- [September 3](/source/September_3) – [Sun Xiu](/source/Sun_Xiu) (**Jing of Wu**), Chinese emperor (b. [235](/source/235))

- [Deng Ai](/source/Deng_Ai) (or **Shizai**), Chinese general and politician (b. [197](/source/197))

- [Guo](/source/Empress_Guo_(Cao_Rui's_wife)) (or **Mingyuan**), Chinese empress of the [Cao Wei](/source/Cao_Wei) state

- [Liao Hua](/source/Liao_Hua) (or **Yuanjian**), Chinese general and politician

- [Liu Xuan](/source/Liu_Xuan_(Three_Kingdoms)), Chinese prince of the [Shu Han](/source/Shu_Han) state (b. [224](/source/224))

- [Puyang Xing](/source/Puyang_Xing) (or **Ziyuan**), Chinese official and chancellor

- [Zong Yu](/source/Zong_Yu) (or **Deyan**), Chinese general and politician

[Valerian (emperor)](/source/Valerian_(emperor)) (b.[199](/source/199))

## References

1. **[^](#cite_ref-IEP_1-0)** Chan, Alan Kam-Leung. ["Zhong Hui (Chung Hui, 225–264 C.E."](https://iep.utm.edu/zhong-hui-chung-hui-chinese-philosopher/) Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy. Retrieved February 19, 2024.

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Adapted from the Wikipedia article [264](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/264) by Wikipedia contributors ([contributor history](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/264?action=history)). Available under [Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International](https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/). Changes may have been made.
