160s bceの例文
- He led the Maccabean Revolt against the Seleucid Empire ( 167 160 BCE ).
- The death of Judah Maccabee ( d . 160 BCE ) stirred the Jews to renewed resistance.
- However, Judas was one of the casualties of the Battle of Elasa ( 161 / 160 BCE ).
- On his death in battle in 160 BCE, Judah was succeeded as army commander by his younger brother, Jonathan, who was already High Priest.
- As the Xiongnu expanded southward into Yuezhi territory around 160 BCE under Modun, the Yuezhi in turn defeated the Sakas and pushed them away at Issyk Kul.
- Modu Chanyu died before the Han tribute reached him, but his successor Laoshang Chanyu ( 174 160 BCE ) renewed the heqin agreement and negotiated the opening of border markets.
- The Achaemenid Empire was conquered by Alexander the Great in the 330s BC . In 160 BCE the continuing Greek ( pagan ) centres, together with a dominant Samaritan enclave in Samaria.
- Some consider Isaiah 33 to be written about 163 BCE; Zechariah 12 14 about 160 BCE; Isaiah 24 27 about 128 BCE; and Isaiah 34 35 sometime in the reign of John Hyrcanus.
- The best known of the Indo-Greek kings was Menander I, known in India as Milinda, who established an independent kingdom centred at Taxila around 160 BCE . He later moved his capital to Sagala ( modern Sialkot ).
- All of the six comedies that Terence wrote between 166 and 160 BCE have survived; the complexity of his plots, in which he often combined several Greek originals, was sometimes denounced, but his double-plots enabled a sophisticated presentation of contrasting human behaviour.
- Next, Bacchides was sent with Alcimus and an army of twenty thousand infantry and two thousand cavalry, and met Judah at the Battle of Elasa ( Laisa ), where this time it was the Hasmonean commander who was killed . ( 161 / 160 BCE ).
- In 400 BCE, the Nabataeans made inroads into southern Palestine and built a separate civilization in the Negev that lasted until 160 BCE . The end of the Persian period was marked by a number of revolts in the region, including a significant uprising against Artaxerxes III in 350 BCE, which resulted in the destruction of Jerusalem.
- The sources from the period do not indicate any real link between Hellenization and the struggle for Jewish religious autonomy in the 160s BCE . Even if representatives of the Seleucid king probably not the king himself ordered the Jews to abandon the Torah with all its ritual commandments, the king did not make a further step and ordered their hellenization.
- Nearly two thirds of this Shuanggudui " Yijing " consist in " formulaic divination statements " that are present neither in the received " Yijing ", nor in the version that was found in Mawangdui that was also sealed in the 160s BCE . Edward Shaughnessy has hypothesized that the line statements of the received " Book of Changes " may have originated in similar but older divination statements.
- Dayuan were Greeks, the descendants of the Greek colonists that were settled by Alexander the Great in Ferghana in 329 BCE, and prospered within the Hellenistic realm of the Seleucids and Greco-Bactrians, until they were isolated by the migrations of the Yuezhi around 160 BCE . It has been suggested that the name " Yuan " was simply a transliteration of the words Yona, or Yavana, used throughout antiquity in Asia to designate Greeks ( Ionians ).
- The Dayuan were probably the descendants of the Greek colonists that were settled by Alexander the Great in Ferghana in 329 BCE ( see Alexandria Eschate ), and prospered within the Hellenistic realm of the Seleucids and Greco-Bactrians, until they were isolated by the migrations of the Yuezhi around 160 BCE . It appears that the name " Yuan " was simply a transliteration of Pali " Yona " or Sanskrit " Yavana ", used throughout antiquity in Asia to designate Greeks ( Ionians ), so that Dayuan would mean " Great Ionians ".
- The Ta-Yuan were probably the descendants of the Greek colonies that were established by Alexander the Great in Ferghana in 329 BCE, and prospered within the Hellenistic realm of the Seleucids and Greco-Bactrians, until they were isolated by the migrations of the Yueh-Chih around 160 BCE . It has also been suggested that the name Yuan was simply a transliteration of the words Yona, or Yavana, used throughout antiquity in Asia to designate Greeks ( Ionians ), so that Ta-Yuan ( lit . Great Yuan ) would mean " Great Ionians ".