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Topic: 86 BCE


  
  Lucius Marcius Philippus (consul 91 BCE) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Marcius Philippus was tribune of the plebs in 104 BCE, during which time he brought forward an agrarian law, of the details of which we are not informed, but which is chiefly memorable for the statement he made in recommending the measure, that there were not two thousand men in the state who possessed property.
He lost in a campaign for the consulship in 93 BCE to Marcus Herennius, but did reach the office in 91 BCE with Sextus Julius Caesar as his colleague.
He even became censor with Marcus Perperna in 86 BCE and he is said to have expelled his own uncle Appius Claudius from the senate.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Lucius_Marcius_Philippus_(consul_91_BCE)   (907 words)

  
 Internet Ancient History Sourcebook: Rome
The Landings of Caesar in Britain, 55 and 54 BCE [At Athenapub]
Horace (65-8 BCE): Secular hymn, and Vergil (70-19 BCE): Aeneid, VI.ii.789-800, 847-853.
A Roman Harvest Sacrifice, from Cato, On Agriculture 134, 160 BCE [At enteract.com]
www.fordham.edu /halsall/ancient/asbook09.html   (3375 words)

  
 Ancient Roman History Timeline III
Marius was Roman general and statesman who led the popular party in the civil war of 88 to 86 BCE.
He was elected tribune of the people in 123 BCE, and attempted the continuation of popular reforms.
Roman general and statesman, led the aristocratic party during the civil war of 88 to 86 BCE.
www.exovedate.com /ancient_timeline_three.html   (1309 words)

  
 ROME, 700 BCE — 476 CE
Consuls (Senate was in control in between rules of powerful consuls): Marius (107-86 BCE): creation of a body of professional soldiers; Jugurthian wars; Sulla (88-79): Civil War #1: Marius v.
Sulla regarding structure of Constitution; Pompey (70-69; 59-58; 52 FF); Roman expansion the in Middle East; Caesar (59-58): proconsulship in Gaul (58-49 BCE); Civil War #2: Caesar v.
Pompey, 49-48 BCE: Pompey murdered in Egypt, 48 BCE.
www.gpc.edu /~proseman/TELCORS/ROME.htm   (441 words)

  
 Coinage of Ancient Athens - The Coins (via CobWeb/3.1 planet03.csc.ncsu.edu)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-06)
Some coins are enlarged and enhanced where noted to present a better image for detail and study.
22.89-92 AA77 Agora states this is a rare issue, connected by the amphora to another issue of this time which were probably struck in conjunction with a celebration f the Greater Panathenaia, held for the first time in 198 BCE after the alliance with Rome.
Athena same as Macedonian Athena Alkidamos of Antigonos Gonatas and Philip V - maybe reference to defeat of Macedonian Kingdom in 168 BCE.
medievalcrusades.com.cob-web.org:8888 /athens/thecoins.htm   (521 words)

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