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Topic: 189 BC


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  J1402   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
BC under the authority of the king of the Molossian tribe.
The small silver coins (hemidrachms or triobols) which were issued until 146 BC constitute a currency, analogous to those of other leagues, that was expressly used for the payment of military expenses.
The Thessalian cities were declared free by the Romans in 196 BC and thereafter the Thessalian Confederacy (Koinon) was established.
www.culture.gr /2/21/214/21401m/presveis/Pages/museum/14/p1402_2.html   (932 words)

  
 Welcome- Roman Gordion
BC), and later shifting to the Persians (in 547 BC), the Macedonians (in 334-3 BC), and the Galatians (by the late 3rd cent.
According to the ancient historian Livy (38.18.11-13), the city's inhabitants fled in 189 BC, when the Roman consul Manlius Vulso and his army approached Gordion during a punitive campaign against the Galatians.
While recent excavations have shown that Gordion continued to be occupied into the mid-second century BC, the city appears to have been abandoned completely by its few remaining inhabitants at a time not long afterwards.
ccat.sas.upenn.edu /~wrightk/rg.html   (750 words)

  
 Greece After the Second Punic War   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Hannibal himself turned up at the court of Antiochus III and was present at the Roman defeat of Antiochus in 189 BC at Magnesia, after which Hannibal fled to King Prusias of Bithynia.
In 192 BC there were rumours that the Romans would cede Demetrias to Philip, and Flamininus, who was in Greece as a senatorial legate to try to settle affairs, would not make an overt denial (wishing to let Philip believe there was such a possibility).
In 149 BC there appeared a new Macedon claimant to the throne, Andriscus, calling himself Philip and pretending to be the grandson of Philip V and son of Perseus.
www.barca.fsnet.co.uk /punic2-after-greece.htm   (4834 words)

  
 Travel Guide To Turkey, Travel, turkey, GUIDE MARTINE,Turkey, Guide, Guide Martine, istanbul, Martine, turkey photos, ...
The three Macedonian Wars followed by the Aechean War that led to the creation of the Roman Provinces of Macedonia and Aechea (146 BC), proved that Rome had become the new great power of the Mediterranean, and showed her ambition to expand eastward.
In reaction to the conquest of Thrace by the Seleucids, the Romans, for the first time, headed towards Asia Minor and, in 189 BC, defeated Antiochus III at the Battle of Magnesia with the aid of Eumenes II of Pergamon.
In 133 BC, Attalus III of Pergamon bequeathed his kingdom to Rome, opening Asia Minor to the Roman power.
www.guide-martine.com /history6.asp   (2349 words)

  
 BC Hydro - Info - Q&As - Timing for Release of VIGP Benchmark
A commitment was made at the first bidders workshop for BC Hydro to provide their benchmark costs for the VIGP in the evaluation spreadsheets.
In the Bidders Workshop and in the responses to Questions 119 and 189 BC Hydro committed to release the cost assumptions of the VIGP benchmark defined by the BCUC.
BC Hydro also committed to advising bidders of the VIGP Net Tender Cost derived from inputting into the evaluation spreadsheet a VIGP bid that is based on the benchmark parameters.
www.bchydro.com /info/ipp/qa/evaluation/evaluation11707.html   (189 words)

  
 Galatia on Encyclopedia.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
BC The name applies to the Gallic territory that was originally composed of parts of Phrygia and Cappadocia.
The region was subjected (189 BC) by the Romans.
The name was also used for the Roman province, formed in 25 BC At first the Roman province was much larger than old Galatia, but it was reduced (AD 72) to a smaller scope.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/G/Galatia.asp   (255 words)

  
 Armenia -> History on Encyclopedia.com 2002   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
BC Invading the Khaldian state called Urartu by the Assyrians, they intermarried with the indigenous peoples there and formed a homogeneous nation by the 6th cent.
BC This state was a Persian satrapy from the late 6th cent.
Conquered (330 BC) by Alexander the Great, it became after his death part of the Syrian kingdom of Seleucus I and his descendants.
www.encyclopedia.com /html/section/armenia_history.asp   (1592 words)

  
 189 BC - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Centuries: 3rd century BC - 2nd century BC - 1st century BC
Decades: 230s BC 220s BC 210s BC 200s BC 190s BC - 180s BC - 170s BC 160s BC 150s BC 140s BC 130s BC
Years: 194 BC 193 BC 192 BC 191 BC 190 BC - 189 BC - 188 BC 187 BC 186 BC 185 BC 184 BC
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/189_BC   (129 words)

  
 Hannibal   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
He was able to destroy several Roman troops in an ambush on the shores of Lake Trasimeno.
202 BC Hannibal was defeated by Scipio at Zama.
189 BC The Syrians did not use Hannibal's military genius and lost the war with Rome.
www.worldhistory.com /hannibal.htm   (366 words)

  
 194 BC - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Decades: 240s BC 230s BC 220s BC 210s BC 200s BC - 190s BC - 180s BC 170s BC 160s BC 150s BC 140s BC
Years: 199 BC 198 BC 197 BC 196 BC 195 BC - 194 BC - 193 BC 192 BC 191 BC 190 BC 189 BC
Rome declares war upon Antiochus III the Great, king of Syria.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/194_BC   (149 words)

  
 SC Wrestling Results mid-January 2004
Thomas Dinwoodie, 12-6; 152 -- Rashaud Singleton (BHS) pinned Berry, second; 160 -- JI won by forfeit; 171 -- JI won by forfeit; 189 -- Aaron Greene (BHS) pinned Davis, 2nd; 215 -- JI won by forfeit; 275 -- Frasier (JI) pinned Ricky Dounias, 1st.
Singleton, 16-1; 160 -- Double forfeit; 171 -- BYR won by forfeit; 189 -- Greene (BHS) pinned Brookshire, 1st; 215 -- Double forfeit; 275 -- Bluhm (BYR) pinned Holmquist, 1st.
Thomas Dinwoodie, 7-5; 160 -- Adam Lypton (FD) pinned Rashaud Singleton, 2nd; 171 -- FD won by forfeit; 189 -- BC won by forfeit; 215 -- FD won by forfeit; 275 -- Craig LaChance (FD) pinned Ross Holmquist, 3rd.
www.scmat.com /Januarymid2004.htm   (1182 words)

  
 SC Wrestling Results February 2004
Battery Creek 48, Berkeley 15 103 -- double forfeit 112 -- BC won by forfeit 119 -- BC won by forfeit 125 -- BC won by forfeit 130 -- BC won by forfeit 135 -- Rally Hyrne (BER) def.
Zach Johnson, 16-9 140 -- Ben Mastrofilippo (BC) pinned Brent Dubay, first 145 -- Monte Middleton (BC) pinned Derek Winingham, second 152 -- Paul Armstrong (BC) pinned Daniel Chronbonski, first 160 -- BC won by forfeit 171 -- Kantata Simmons (BC) pinned Matt McBee, second 189 -- Jamal McNeil (BER) def.
Shenton, 15-1 140 -- Sobieszczyk (BE) pinned Middleton, second 145 -- Fussell (BC) pinned Weissglass, first 152 -- Stanley (BE) def.
www.scmat.com /February2004.htm   (429 words)

  
 Galatia --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Invited from Europe to participate in a Bithynian civil war (278 BC), the Gallic horde plagued western Anatolia until checked by the Seleucid king Antiochus I at the so-called Elephant Battle...
Continental Celtic is the generic name for the languages spoken by the people known to classical writers as Keltoi and Galatae; at various times during a period of roughly 1,000 years (approximately 500 BC–AD 500), they occupied an area that stretched from Gaul to Iberia in the south and Galatia in the east.
By 500 BC they were living in northeastern France, southwestern Germany, and Bohemia.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9035846?tocId=9035846   (476 words)

  
 Galatians (280-25 BC) - DBA 45   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
In 278 B.C., two groups of 20,000 Galatians crossed over into Asia Minor where they were engaged in service to King Nicomedes I of Bithynia, helping to suppress a rebellion by his younger brother.
In 64 BC, the tetrarch Deiotarus fought for Rome against King Mithrades I of Pontus, and was rewarded by being named King of the Galatians by the Romans.
The Galatian migration (II/30a) and subsequent period to 189 BCE are classed as aggression 4, whereas the Galatians drop to a placid aggression of 1 after 189 BCE
www.fanaticus.org /dba/armies/II30   (1127 words)

  
 Philip V and Perseus
Philip V was endowed with considerable political and military abilities, which he evinced as much in his wars against the Aitolians, the Romans and their allies (War of the Allies, 220-217 BC; 1st Macedonian War, 215-205 BC; 2nd Macedonian War, 200-197 BC; Antiochian War, 192-189 BC), as in his fundamental reforms in his kingdom.
After four years of failing resistance, the Macedon-ians were crushed at Pydna in 168 BC by Lucius Aemilius Paullus.
Perseus was taken as a prisoner to Italy, where he died, while Macedonia became a federation of four small semi-autonomous areas called 'merides' (portions).
www.macedonian-heritage.gr /HellenicMacedonia/en/A1.6.4.html   (206 words)

  
 Armenie in the Late Antiquity
BC the newly formed Parthian state was the rising power in the east and a century later, after successful wars against the Seleucides in the west, its boundaries reached the river of Euphrates in Northern Mesopotamia.
During the reign of Mithridates II Parthia was already a neighbour of Great Armenia of Tigran II and of Rome.
BC and the beginning of the I c.
groznijat.tripod.com /armen/armen_1.html   (1142 words)

  
 186 BC   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
186 BC Centuries: 3rd century BC - 2nd century BC - 1st century BC
Years: 191 BC 190 BC 189 BC 188 BC 187 BC - 186 BC - 185 BC 184 BC 183 BC 182 BC 181 BC
The Roman Senate passes a law (the Senatus consultum de Bacchanalibus) prohibiting Bacchanalia -- or the worship of Dionysus -- except under certain circumstances that required the approval of the Senate.
www.1-free-software.com /en/wikipedia/1/18/186_bc.html   (108 words)

  
 philadelphia txt
The city's founder, King Eumenes II of Pergamum (197-160 BC), named it out of love for his brother and successor Attalus II (159-138 BC), whose trustworthiness and loyalty earned him the nickname, "Philadelphos" (Greek "one who loves his brother").
In 129 BC Rome set up the province of Asia* by combining Ionia and the former Kingdom of Pergamum.
63 BC - c.21 AD) wrote: "Philadelphia has no trustworthy walls, but daily in one direction or another they keep tottering and falling apart." That a city should ever have been founded in such a locality was astonishing to him, and he questioned the sanity of the people for planning to return and rebuild.
www.ourfatherlutheran.net /biblehomelands/sevenchurches/philadelphia/philatxt.htm   (986 words)

  
 Ankara Details, Meaning Ankara Article and Explanation Guide
The Celtic occupation caused the city's status to be damaged, and the town shrank to a mere village inhabited chiefly by the old native population.
In 189 BC, the Roman Consul Gnaeus Manlius Vulso occupied Ankara, and made it his headquarters in his operations against the Galatians.
In 63 BC Pompey placed it (together with the Tectosagan territory) under one chief, and it continued under native rule until it became the capital of the Emperial Roman province of Galatia in 25 BC under emperor Augustus Caesar
www.e-paranoids.com /a/an/ankara.html   (739 words)

  
 SOTA - Roman Coin 14K Gold Pendant 189-180 BC
SOTA - Roman Coin 14K Gold Pendant 189-180 BC Advertising
Description: Roman Denarius coin with silver overlayed bronze set in contemporary 14K gold pendant; 189-180 BC.
Year: 189-180 BC Dealer Policies: Art Of Antiquity, Sands Of Time Policy Details
www.antiqnet.com /detail,sota-roman-coin,663420.html   (141 words)

  
 The Hutchinson Dictionary of the Arts: Ennius, Quintus (c. 239-169 BC)@ HighBeam Research   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Ennius was born at Rudiae in Calabria, S Italy.
While serving with the Roman army in Sardinia he attracted the notice of Cato the Elder, who brought him to Rome in 204 BC.
There he made a living by teaching Greek and adapting Greek plays for the Roman stage, until 189 BC when he...
www.highbeam.com /library/doc0.asp?DOCID=1P1:28929671&refid=ip_encyclopedia_hf   (175 words)

  
 Biblical Archeology, Bible And Archeology
The Assyrian king Uras-Pal-acur (circa 1190-1170 BC) made a raid into Armenia, and mentions the central district (UrarTu proper, near Lake Van), the land of the Manna (Minni, Jeremiah 51:27), Nahri ("the Rivers"), Ashguza (Ashkenaz, ib), etc. Another invader was Tiglath-pileser I (circa 1110-1090 BC).
Finally in 606 BC they took part in the destruction of Nineveh, and in that of Babylon later.
The greatest Armenian king was Tigranes I. (96-55 BC), a warrior who raised Armenia for a time to the foremost position in Asia.
www.biblicalarcheology.net /OlderWorks/Armenia.html   (2015 words)

  
 Parthian Ruler List
Elected leader of the Parni in about 248 BC and defeated Andragoras, the Seleucid satrap of Parthia, in about 238 BC.
Regained Parthian independence after Antiochus III's defeat by the Romans in 189 BC and began to expand the kingdom.
Re-established strong central control in Parthia and influence in Armenian affairs, and was responsible for defeating Roman ambitions in the east, most notably with the defeat of Crassus at Carrhae in 53 BC.
americanhistory.si.edu /collections/numismatics/parthia/frames/prulfm.htm   (1456 words)

  
 A timeline of the Roman empire
189 BC : Antiochus III, king of the Seleucids, is defeated at the battle of Magnesia and surrenders his possessions in Europe and Asia Minor
149 BC : Roma conquers Greece with the battle of Corinth (and destroys Corinth)
13 BC : Augustus expands the borders to the region of the Danube
www.scaruffi.com /politics/romans.html   (2232 words)

  
 Paphlagonians (950-65 BC) - DBA 2.0 Variant Army List   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Paphlagonians fought as subjects and allies of the Persians in several campaigns (during his transit of the region, Xenephon noted that the Paphlagonians were governed by a prince of their own), including a large contingent that fought with Xerxes.
When Agesilaus, the Lame King of Sparta, landed an army in Asia Minor in 396 BC and outfoxed the Persian satrap Tisaphernes in a series of campaigns, Paphlagonia joined a number of states in the region who lent aid and troops to Agesilaus until he was recalled by the Spartan ephors in 394 BC.
In 108/107 BC, Nicomedes II of Bithynia marched on Paphlagonia and deposed its king Astreodon.
fanaticus.org /DBA/armies/paphlagonians.html   (1728 words)

  
 Off Campus Accommodations - Boston College   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
bc home > centers > irish programs > gaelic roots > registration > off campus accommodations >
Rates are effective March 2000 and are subject to change with the seasons or rate of occupancy.
5 miles to BC Howard Johnson Motor Lodge
www.bc.edu /centers/irish/gaelicroots/registration/accommodations   (157 words)

  
 332 BC ­ 632 AD   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
321-311 BC Warfare among Alexander's successors ends with Seleucids in Syria, Mesopotamia and parts of Persia.
189 BC Armenia becomes independent of Seleucid rule.
73-63 BC Roman invasion of Syria and Palestine.
www.internews.org /visavis/BTVPagesInews/Timelines2.html   (229 words)

  
 Jerusalem   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
In 2500 BC, Arab Jebusites, descendants of the Jebusite Ben Canaan, made the City their capital and called it Orsalem, from which the Europeans derived Jerusalem, which means the City of Light.
In 1479 BC, the City came under the Pharaohs, in the era of Thutmose III.
Then came the Nabataean Arabs to invade it in 90 BC as was annexed to their capital till the Roman invasion in the 1st.
www.sis.gov.eg /jerusalem/html/jintro.htm   (1255 words)

  
 artnet.com: Resource Library: Polykles   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-07)
Since the Aitolian League honoured a Polykles in 210 BC, and several of his works have an Aitolian context, the family may have made its reputation working for the League.
Some of their statues probably went to Rome when the Romans conquered and looted Aitolia in 189 BC, and commissions for others swiftly followed.
At the end of the 2nd century BC a Polykles and Dionysios, the last two known members of the family, were recorded as working for the Romans on Delos.
www.artnet.com /library/06/0685/T068536.asp   (351 words)

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