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136 bcの例文

例文モバイル版携帯版

  • By the time Tri?u ?died in 136 BC, he had ruled for more than 70 years and outlived his sons.
  • Carneades was succeeded, in his old age ( 137 / 136 BC ), by his namesake Clitomachus became head of the Academy.
  • A late Bronze Age tomb from the Canaanite period, as well as a necropolis used from 136 BC to 300 AD were discovered.
  • However, a coin of 136 BC and the Lacus Curtius bas-relief of the same period show horsemen in composite bronze cuirasses.
  • One of his descendants, Sextus Atilius Serranus, became a consul in 136 BC with Lucius Furius Philus ( wrongly called Publius by Smith ).
  • This happened in the proconsulship of Lepidus ( 136 BC ) and when the news reached Rome, Lepidus was stripped of his command and consulship.
  • In 136 BC, Emperor Wu founded what became the Imperial University, a college for classical scholars that supplied the Han need for well-trained bureaucrats.
  • Tri?u ?( r . 204-136 BC ), the founder of the dynasty, was an ethnic Chinese born in the Qin Empire was collapsing.
  • Most representations show cavalrymen with the small " parma equestris " type of shield, but the Ahenobarbus monument of 122 BC and the coin of 136 BC both show cavalrymen without shields.
  • He married Claudia, sister of Appius Claudius Pulcher, consul 143 BC and censor and Princeps Senatus in 136 BC . He had several children with her, of whom at least one son and two daughters outlived him.
  • The 5th century historian Orosius reports that Mithridates I managed to occupy territory between the Indus and the Hydaspes towards the end of his reign ( c . 138 BC, before his kingdom was weakened by his death in 136 BC ).
  • Rome decided to ignore Pompeius'peace and sent Gaius Hostilius Mancinus to continue the war in 136 BC, who assaulted the city and was repulsed several times before being routed and encircled, and so forced to accept a treaty, negotiated by a young Tiberius Gracchus.
  • The nearly completely lost work of Antias  cited as " annales " or as " historiae "  began its account of the Roman history with the foundation of Rome and extended at least to the year 91 BC . The second book told about the legendary Roman king Numa Pompilius, the twenty-second book about the capitulation of Gaius Hostilius Mancinus in 136 BC ( this event Livy only reports in book 55 of his history ).