102 adの例文
- People with Ligurian names were living south of Placentia, in Italy, as late as 102 AD.
- Trajan also pursued two conquests of Dacia, the first in 101 102 AD which concluded in a Roman victory.
- In 101 102 AD Trajan assembled an army of up to 150, 000 men to send against Decebalus'50, 000.
- Roman incursions under Emperor Trajan between 101 102 AD and 105 106 AD resulted in half of the ore deposits ( especially gold and silver in places like Alburnus Maior ).
- A second gate positioned through the Sebe Valley was blocked after the first war, sometime after 102 AD . The fort follows the architectural principles of the Dacian Fortresses of the Ortie Mountains; the wall being the typical murus Dacicus.
- About the year 107 or 117 he was Legate ) of the day at the time of the Crucifixion was a Quintus Pompeius Falco ( between 105-107 AD ) and Tiberius Claudius Atticus Herodes was there much earlier from 99-102 AD.
- Of the two inscriptions, one is to the left in the upper story and bears date 94 AD and 102 AD . This writing, cut in stone, is not very archaic and could not be of the date it professes to record.
- In " The Pandorica Opens " ( 2010 ), some Silurians appear in 102 AD alongside various alien enemies of the Doctor ( including alien Daleks, Sontarans, Nestenes and other species ) to imprison the Doctor in the mythical " Pandorica " in order, as they see it, to save the universe from him.
- The " draco " first appears on Trajan's Column in Rome, a monument that depicts the Dacian wars of 101 102 AD and 105 106 AD . German historian Conrad Cichorius notes that, even though Dacians carry the " draco ", it was called the Tactica " written around 136 AD . According to Ellis Minns, the dragon standards of the Arrian were those of the Dacians.
- The effort required two major wars ( the Dacian Wars ), one in 101 102 AD and the other in 105 106 AD . Only fragmentary details survive of the Dacian war : a single sentence of Trajan's own Dacica; little more of the Getica written by his doctor, T . Statilius Crito; nothing whatsoever of the poem proposed by Caninius Rufus ( if it was ever written ), Dio Chrysostom's Getica or Appian's Dacica.