169 bcの例文
- In 169 BC 1, 500 more families were settled there.
- In c . 169 BC, Antiochus IV of Syria invaded Egypt.
- Etuta married Gentius in 169 BC.
- In 169 BC he was elected censor with Tiberius Gracchus the Elder, his former co-consul.
- Albright and Mann note that evidence for Andrew being used as a name for a Jew dates back to 169 BC.
- In 169 BC he was " triumvir coloniae deducendae ", an official charged with establishing a colony in Aquileia.
- In 169 BC, he was chosen censor, but his censorship was so strict that it provoked an attempted prosecution of his co-censor.
- Plator may have been killed because he wanted to marry Etuta in 169 BC . She was the daughter of Monunius and was married to Gentius himself.
- It was not until the appearance of Ennius ( 239-169 BC ), the father of Roman poetry, that any sort of national literature surfaced.
- Antiochus invaded Egypt twice, in 169 BC with success, but on the second incursion, in late 168, he was forced to withdraw by the Romans.
- However, Gentius in 169 BC changed sides and allied himself with Perseus of Macedon and led his army to a victory over the Romans in Uskana via Oaeneum.
- In 169 BC, Chao Cuo ( Af / ?), then a low-level official, offered Emperor Wen a number of suggestions for dealing with the Xiongnu.
- He finally passed over to the Romans, when Perseus resolved to declare war against the latter, 169 BC, and received in consequence magnificent rewards from the Roman Senate.
- In a memorandum entitled " Guard the Frontiers and Protect the Borders " that he presented to the throne in 169 BC, Chao compared the relative strengths of Xiongnu and Han battle tactics.
- In 169 BC Hispania was given reinforcements of 3, 000 Roman and infantry and 300 cavalry and the number of soldiers in each legion was fixed at 5, 200 infantry and 300 cavalry.
- In a memorandum entitled " Guard the Frontiers and Protect the Borders " that he presented to the throne in 169 BC, Chao compared the relative strengths of Xiongnu and Han battle tactics.
- The chronology of Geoffrey Keating's " Foras Feasa ar 蒳rinn " dates his reign to 135 120 BC, that of the " Annals of the Four Masters " to 184 169 BC.
- The works of ancient authors fail to provide a clear picture on Illyrian weapons and the only true contributor to this matter was the Roman poet Ennius ( 239 BC 169 BC ) who was of Messapian origin.
- In 169 BC, during the war against Perseus, Rhodes sent Agepolis as ambassador to the consul Quintus Marcius Philippus, and then to Rome in the following year, hoping to turn the Senate against the war.
- A " venatio " held there in 169 BC, one of several in the 2nd century, employed " 63 leopards and 40 bears and elephants ", with spectators presumably kept safe by a substantial barrier.