Factbites
 Where results make sense
About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   PR   |   Contact us  

Topic: 672 BC


Related Topics

In the News (Fri 17 Feb 12)

  
  CalendarHome.com - 7th century BC - Calendar Encyclopedia
Hezekiah of the Kingdom of Judah (reigned 715 - 687 BC).
Gyges of Lydia (reigned 687 - 652 BC).
Josiah of the Kingdom of Judah (reigned 641-609 BC).
encyclopedia.calendarhome.com /7th_century_BC.htm   (190 words)

  
  7th century BC - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Hezekiah of the Kingdom of Judah (reigned 715 - 687 BC).
Gyges of Lydia (reigned 687 - 652 BC).
Josiah of the Kingdom of Judah (reigned 641-609 BC).
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/7th_century_BC   (166 words)

  
 Ethics of Roman Expansion to 133 BC by Sanderson Beck
In 312 BC censor Appius Claudius got the landless population distributed throughout the tribes, the sons of freedman admitted into the senate, the first aqueduct built to bring water nine miles from Gabii to the Circus Maximus, and the Appian Way paved for the 115 miles from Rome to Capua.
In 287 BC the problem of debt led to the appointment of Hortensius as dictator, and from then on plebiscites passed by the plebeian council had the force of law on everyone and did not have to be approved by the assembly, the classes of centuries, or the senate.
In 225 BC Celtic Gauls crossed the alps with an army of 150,000 infantry and 20,000 horse and chariots.
www.san.beck.org /EC24-RomanExpansion.html   (15529 words)

  
 Larnaca - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
That this was still a recent settlement in the 7th century BC is suggested by an allusion in a list of the allies of Assurbanipal of Assyria in 668 BC to a King Damusu (Damasos) of Karti-hadasti (Phoenician "new city"), where Citium would be expected.
The discovery here of an official monument of Sargon II suggests that Citium was the administrative center of Cyprus during the Assyrian protectorate (709–668 BC).
During the Ionian Greek revolts of the 4th century BC, Citium led the side that was loyal to Persia and was besieged by an Athenian force in 449 BC.
www.wikipedia.org /wiki/Citium   (474 words)

  
 Necho I - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Necho I (672 BC–664 BC) was governor of the Egyptian city of Sais.
He was "installed" as ruler by Assurbanipal around 664 BC, but he already ruled Egypt prior this event.
According to historical records, he was killed by an invading Kushite force in 664 BC under Tantamani.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Necho_I   (228 words)

  
 Soil compactor BC 672 EB   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Four dump trucks delivered the material to be laid, bulldozers took over the distribution and the high speed soil compactor BC 672 EB from BOMAG with driver Edi Fourmann finally spread the material with its 3.80 m wide blade layer by layer, to then knead it and compact it.
Weighing around 29 tonnes, the BC 672 EB applies the necessary weight to the soil, the 50 Hardox steel teeth of on each compaction wheel ensures the interlocking between the layers with a thickness of 15 - 20 cm.
That also applies to the new high speed BOMAG soil compacter BC 672 EB which is based on the well-known refuse compactor series and has retained all the features of these machines which have been tried and tested over the years.
www.bomag.com /worldwide/D5E1E7AB889B4452A87111FF3BC7637C.aspx   (1074 words)

  
 History of Rome
The legendary date of the founding was 753 BC; it was ascribed to Romulus and Remus, the twin sons of Rhea Silvia, a vestal virgin and the daughter of Numitor, king of Alba Longa.
In 494 BC a secession of plebeian soldiers led to the institution of the tribuni plebis, who were elected annually as protectors of the plebs; they had the power to veto the acts of patrician magistrates, and thus served as the leaders of the plebs in the struggles with the patricians.
In Africa the overthrow, in 106 BC, of Jugurtha, king of Numidia, by the consul Gaius Marius with the assistance of Lucius Cornelius Sulla increased the military renown of the Republic, as did the defeat of the Cimbri and the Teutones in southern Gaul and northern Italy by Marius after his return from Africa.
depthome.brooklyn.cuny.edu /classics/dunkle/courses/romehist.htm   (5203 words)

  
 Encyclopedia: Larnaca   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Zeno of Citium Zeno of Citium (The Stoic) (333 BC-264 BC) was a Hellenistic philosopher from Citium, Cyprus.
Cimon or Kimon (Greek Κίμων, 510-450 BC), was a Athenian statesman and general, and a major figure of the 470s BC and 460s BC in Athens His mother was Hegesipyle, the daughter of Olorus the King of Thrace.
Like other cities of Cyprus, it has suffered repeatedly from earthquakes, and in medieval times when its harbour silted up (a sign that the island was deforested and overgrazed) the population moved to Larnaca, on the open seafront farther south.
www.nationmaster.com /encyclopedia/Larnaca   (1578 words)

  
 Saturnian Cosmology - Part 11: The 8th century BC and the death of Quetzalcoatl
In 668 BC his third son, Ashurbanipal, took the crown of Assyria and Shamash-shum-ukin was crowned king of Babylon.
The snakes being trampled are described in Vedic literature in the 7th and 8th century BC as contemporaneous companions of Mars.
It is certain that before 747 BC there were 12 months of 30 days in the year, so that the Roman addition of two months to the calendar may have nothing to do with the year 747 BC.
saturniancosmology.org /quet.php   (15197 words)

  
 Tales of Rome
The Greek historian Dionysius of Halicarnassus (flourished in 25 BC) wrote that Rhome was said to be the woman who had fired Aeneas' ship because she was tired from their travelling, forcing the Trojans to settle in Latinum.
Servius Tullius was the son-in-law of Lucius Tarquinius Priscus, and was the sixth king of Rome (578-534 BC).
Though the power of Rome had gained new heights in the 1st century BC, several civil wars saw the dwindling of power of the Senate and the increase powers of the proconsuls (ex-consuls who served as provincial governors) with the backing of the military might of the Roman legions.
www.timelessmyths.com /classical/rome.html   (5263 words)

  
 Roman Kings   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The grandson of Numa Pompilius, Marcius reigned from 640 — 616 BC.
Cato, in the early second century B.C., combined the two stories to come up with what is the generally accepted version, with Aeneas coming to Italy and Romulus founding the actual seven-hilled (Palatine, Aventine, Capitoline or Capitolium, Quirinal, Viminal, Esquiline and Caelian) city of Rome, according to Jane Gardner.
Laws attributed to Romulus, the founder; traditional dates, 753-716 B.C. Romulus compelled the citizens to rear every male child and the first-born of the females, and he forbade them to put to death any child under three years of age, unless it was a cripple or a monster from birth.
idcs0100.lib.iup.edu /WestCivI/roman_kings.htm   (3162 words)

  
 Halicarnassus, birthplace of Heredotus, Bodrum is full of history
Scholars believe that he does not mention anything beyond the date 430 BC and appears to be unaware of the destruction of the Aeginetans in 424 BC.
About 447 BC he went to Athens, then the center and focus of culture in the Greek world, where he won the admiration of the most illustrious men of Greece, including the great Athenian statesman Pericles.
In 443 BC Herodotus settled in the Panhellenic colony of Thurii in southern Italy.
www.bodrumpages.com /English/herodotus.html   (1485 words)

  
 Twenty Sixth Dynasty Of Egypt   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
When the Assyrian Empire was preoccupied with revolts, and civil war over control of the throne, Psammetichus threw off his ties to the Assyrians, and formed alliances with Gyges, king of Lydia, and recruited mercenaries from Caria and Greece to resist Assyrian attacks.
With the sack of Nineveh in 612 BC and the fall of the Assyrian Empire, both Psammetichus and his successors attempted to reassert Egyptian power in the Near East, but were driven back by the Babylonians under Nebuchadnezzar II.
With the help of Greek mercenaries, Apries was able to hold back Babylonian attempts to conquer Egypt, but it was the Persians who conquered Egypt, and their king Cambyses II carried Psammetichus III to Susa in chains.
www.wikiverse.org /twenty-sixth-dynasty-of-egypt   (195 words)

  
 /tr_egypt.asp?id=66   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
The face of a decorated mummy dating to the 26th Pharaoh Dynasty that ruled from 672 BC to 525 BC is seen in Sakkara.
An Egyptian worker carries an ancient stone statue of the deceased Meri, left, and his wife, found at a tomb with ancient wooden coffins dating back to the 26th Pharaoh Dynasty that ruled from 672 BC to 525 BC.
Egyptian archeologist Osama el-Shemi brushes an ancient wooden coffin shaped like a human body that dates back to the 26th Pharaoh Dynasty that ruled from 672 BC to 525 BC, in Sakkara, south of Cairo.
www.treasuregategallery.com /tr_egypt.asp?id=66   (148 words)

  
 Roman Empire History
121 BC C. Gracchus killed; as tribune he had instituted radical reforms, including the land re-forms of his brother, T. Gracchus, and measure forcing government to supply grain at a fair price; reforms reversed after his tribunate and he was killed in subsequent ri ots.
Civil war (49-46 BC) began; Caesar, refusing to disband his army, led his soldiers in the famous crossing of the Rubicon (Jan. 10-11); marched into Italy against Pompey.
44 BC Caesar assassinated (Mar. 15) by opponents who feared his growing power; Cassius, Marcus Brutus, and Decimus Brutus among the assassins; M. Antony rose to power in Rome; began to organize against the assassins, who had fled Rome.
www.geocities.com /Athens/Acropolis/5576/roma-T.html   (2623 words)

  
 672 BC Encyclopedia Article, Definition, History, Biography   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Find 672 bc - Your relevant result is a click away!
673 BC - Numa Pompilius, second of the Kings of Rome, successor to Romulus.
670 BC - Mettius Fufetius, latin king of Alba Longa.
www.artquilt.com /encyclopedia/672_BC   (356 words)

  
 570s BC : 572 BC
572 BC - Death of Zhou jian wang[?], King of the BC - 256 BC)">Zhou Dynasty of China.
571 BC - Zhou ling wang[?] becomes King of the BC - 256 BC)">Zhou Dynasty of China.
Just as the whale was curving himself to dart; that is, he hurled his weapon into the air, where it back just as he was disappearing.
www.factspider.com /57/572-bc.html   (334 words)

  
 Astrology: Between Religion and the Empirical
By the time astrology became "religion and science at the same time"—the oldest known personal horoscope is from the year 410 BC [6] —it had already undergone a long period of development.
Thus we know that around 2100 BC the observation of the positions of the planets was already taken for granted.
The emperor Augustus did similarly with his birth sign "Capricorn." The comet which appeared in 44 BC, the year of Caesar’s death, was likewise interpreted in politics as a sign from the gods.
www.esoteric.msu.edu /VolumeIV/astrology.htm   (17233 words)

  
 Twenty sixth dynasty of Egypt   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
When the Assyrian Empire was preoccupied withrevolts, and civil war over control of the throne, Psammetichus threw off his ties to the Assyrians, and formed alliances with Gyges, king of Lydia, and recruited mercenariesfrom Caria and Greece to resist Assyrian attacks.
With the sack of Nineveh in 612 BC andthe fall of the Assyrian Empire, both Psammetichus and his successors attempted to reassert Egyptian power in the Near East, butwere driven back by the Babylonians under Nebuchadnezzar II.
With the help of Greek mercenaries, Apries was able to hold back Babylonian attempts to conquer Egypt, but it was the Persians who conquered Egypt, and their king Cambyses II carried Psammetichus III to Susa inchains.
www.therfcc.org /twenty-sixth-dynasty-of-egypt-6272.html   (187 words)

  
 Terni - art, accomodation, events and so ...
The name of the town derives from the term "interamna", which means "between two rivers", a clear reference to the setting of the town at the confluence of the stream Serra with the river Nera.
The valley where Terni is situated, a natural amphitheatre surrounded by green hills, was already inhabited in prehistoric times, and there are a lot of remains testifying it: Eneolithic huts, protovillanoviano tombs, necropolis from the Iron Age to the 4th century BC.
We don't know exactly where the prehistoric site was situated: a Roman inscription reports that the town was founded in 672 BC; moreover, the inhabitants of the valley are mentioned in the Eugubine Tablets as enemies of the Umbrians: they were, in fact, even more ancient people, perhaps pre-Indo-European.
www.argoweb.it /terni/terni.uk.html   (393 words)

  
 26th century BC   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Rock and stone collecting, on the other hand, is quite popular and can be traced back to 200 BC when the royal families sought and preserved rare stones.
2500 BC – The legendary line of Sanhuangwudi rulers of China is founded by Huang Di(approximate date).
2575 BC – A foot defined as 26.45 cm by Sumerian ruler Gudea of Lagash.
hallencyclopedia.com /26th_century_BC   (397 words)

  
 Cyprus, Larnaka, Nicosia, Famagusta, Limassol, Kyrenia, Paphos
When the Ionian Greeks revolted against Persia (499 BC) the Cypriots except for Amathus, joined in at the instigation of Onesilos, brother of the king of Salamis, whom he dethroned for not wanting to fight for independence.
That this was still a recent settlement in the 7th century BC is suggested by an allusion in a list of the allies of Assurbanipal of Assyria in 668 BC to a King Damusu (Damasos) of Karti-hadasti (Phoenician "new city"), where Citium would be expected.
During the Ionian Greek revolts of the 4th century BC, Citium led the side that was loyal to Persia and was besieged by an Athenian force in 449 BC.
cyprus.world-guide.info   (4363 words)

  
 Vman714's License Plate Page
1922 BC (nice rp tab only) # 34242 $ 75.00
1933 BC vg-ex xh's # -2-815 $ 65.00
1937 BC vg(1st plate issued) # -1-001 $ 195.00
members.aol.com /vman714/_CanadaBritishColumbia.html   (59 words)

  
 Ashurbanipal --  Britannica Concise Encyclopedia - Your gateway to all Britannica has to offer!
He led a coalition of Arabic tribes against Ashurbanipal, but, after being starved out by his brother's siege of Babylon (684 BC), he capitulated.
BC) were written on animal bones and tortoise shells.
An early library called “The Healing Place of the Soul,” in the palace of Egypt's King Ramses II (1304?–1237 BC) at Thebes, consisted of thousands of papyrus scrolls.
concise.britannica.com /ebc/article-9355939?tocId=9355939   (633 words)

  
 Northern British Columbia, Canada: A Travel Guide
Box 1100, 770 Pacific Avenue, Port Edward, BC V0V 1G0.
After the Duke of Kent (1902-42), a younger brother of King George VI (no, there were not two brothers of the same name, the King's forename was Albert).
Use their listings to find homes with a high standard of cleanliness, comfort and service, and courteous hosts who will show you friendly northern hospitality.
www.gonorthwest.com /BC/Northern/Northern.htm   (165 words)

  
 Judgment Against Tyre
From 700 to 630 BC, Assyria did not permit Tyre to carry on trade.
When Alexander the Great took the city, he slaughtered 6,000 fighting men and 2,000 Tyrians were crucified on the beach in 332 BC (livius1).
All that remains of it is a series of fl reefs offshore from Tyre, which surely could not have been there in the first and second millennia B.C., since they pose such a threat to navigation.
www.geocities.com /k9ocu/TYRE-SIP.htm   (1260 words)

  
 A Brief History of Rome
Pompilius, from 715 to 676 or 672 BC, to whom was attributed the
In 494 BC a secession of plebeian soldiers led to the institution of the
BC, is known as the Social War, or the Marsian War, from the important
www.lifesmith.com /rome.html   (5083 words)

  
 History   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Brutus and Collatinus-----become the first consuls of the Roman Republic in 509 BC Brutus----- "the dullard", due to the fact that when Tarquin was building the Capitolium,
War in 245 BC Lectisternium-----the draping of the couches begun in 399 BC to invite the gods to re-
Vercingetorix in 52 BC ; all of Gaul is under Roman dominion
www.fatherryan.org /frhsonline/clubs/history.htm   (7175 words)

  
 680s BC : 682 BC
687 BC - Hezekiah succeeded by Manasseh as king of Judah
682 BC - Death of Zhou zhuang wang[?], King of the BC - 256 BC)">Zhou Dynasty of China.
681 BC - Zhou li wang[?] becomes King of the BC - 256 BC)">Zhou Dynasty of China.
www.factspider.com /68/682-bc.html   (225 words)

  
 Citium
The earliest remains go back to the Mycenean age (ca 1400-1100 BC) and seem to mark an Aegean colony, but in historic times Citium was the chief center of Phoenician influence in Cyprus.
(The same ten kings appear in an earlier list of Asarhaddon's 673/672 BC, which might simply have been copied by Assurbanipal's scribes.) A Phoenician dedication to Baal, dated also to the 7th century BC, suggests that Citium may have belonged to Tyre.
The discovery here of an official monument of Sargon II suggests that Citium was the administrative center of Cyprus during the Assyrian protectorate (709 - 668 BC).
www.mlahanas.de /Greeks/Cities/Citium.html   (377 words)

Try your search on: Qwika (all wikis)

Factbites
  About us   |   Why use us?   |   Reviews   |   Press   |   Contact us  
Copyright © 2005-2007 www.factbites.com Usage implies agreement with terms.