29
/it/
it
AIzaSyAYiBZKx7MnpbEhh9jyipgxe19OcubqV5w
April 1, 2024
Creare
Public Timelines
Biblioteca
FAQ
For education
Cabinet
For educational institutions
For teachers
For students/pupils
Scaricare
Export
Creare una copia
Integrare nel sito Web
Visualizzazioni 434
0
0
Timeline of the Roman Republic
CSTS B207: Hellenistic/Rom.Repub.Hist.
è stata creata
Elinor Berger
⟶ è stato aggiornato 15 dic 2018 ⟶
List of edits
Commenti
Eventi
Rome becomes a republic
Hannibal invades Italy
Spartacus the gladiator leads the slaves in an uprising.
Illyrian Wars
Battle of Cannae
First Macedonian War
Siege of Syracuse (214-212 BCE)
First Macedonian War: Treaty of Phoenice
Second Punic War: The consul of Scipio Africanus landed an invasion fleet at Utica
Battle of Zama
Second Punic War: Carthage accepted Roman conditions for peace, end of the war
Second Macedonian War
The provinces of Haspania Ulterior and Hispania Citerior were organized
The number of quaestors was increased to 12
The number of Praetors was increased to six
Second Macedonian War: Macedonia surrendered conquests in Greece and agreed to pay war indemnity, ending the war
Roman-Seleucid War: The Seleucid Empire invaded Greece
Roman-Seleucid War: The Seleucid Empire signed the Treaty of Apamea
The Lex Villia annalis was passed
Third Macedonian War: Rome declared war on Macedonia
Third Macedonian War: The Macedonian king Perseus of Macedon was captured
The Lusitanian War: The Lusitanians of Hispania Ulterior rebelled against Rome
Fourth Macedonian War: An Andriscus rebelled against Rome, claiming to be Perseus' son and the r ightful king of Macedonia
Third Punic War: Rome declared war on Carthage
The Lex Calpurnia was passed, establishing a Praetor-led court to hear appeals against extortionate taxes levied by governors in the provinces
Fourth Macedonian War: Andriscus was surrendered to Rome to be executed
Third Punic War: Roman forces breached the city of Carthage, burned it, and enslaved its surviving inhabitants
Battle of Corinth: Roman forces decisively defeated the armies of the Achaean League at Corinth
Province of Macedonia is organized
Province of Africa is organized on captured Carthaginian territory
Lusitanian War: The Lusitianian leader Viriatus was assassinated by his three ambassadors to Rome Audax, Ditalcus, and Minurus
Lex Gabinia tabellaria: required secret ballot in elections of all magistrates
The Tribune of the Plebs Tiberius Gracchus was beaten to death by a mob of senators led by the Pontifex Maximus Publius Cornelius Sciptio Nasica Serapio (consul 138 BCE)
The province of Gallia Narbonensis was organized
The first Senatus consultum ultimum was passed, granting the consul Lucius Opimius emergency powers to defeats partisans of Gaius Gracchus
Jugurthine War: Rome declared war on Numidia
Gaius Marius was elected consul
Marius instituted the Marian reforms of the military, among them the establishment of a standing army and the recruitment of non- property owners
Marius re-elected consul
Jugurthine War: The Numidian king Jugurtha was imprisoned in Mamertine Prison
Battle of Arausio: A coalition of the Cimbri and Teutons inflicted a serious defeat on the Roman army at modern Orange. Some hundred thousand Roman soldiers were killed.
Marius was elected consul for the first of three years in a row
Battle of Aquae Sextiae: Rome decisively defeated the forces of the Teutons and Ambrones and killed some ninety thousand soldiers and civilians
Battle of Vercellae: An invasion of Italy by the Cimbri was decisively defeated by a numerically inferior Roman force. Some hundred thousand Cimbri soldiers and civilians were killed along with their king Boiorix
Marius is elected consul
Assassins hired by Marius's political allies Lucius Appuleius Saturninus and Gaius Servilius Glaucia beat to death Gaius Memmius (tribune), a candidate for the consulship
Social War (91-88 BCE): The Roman clients in Italy the Marsi, the Paeligni, the Vestini, the Marrucini, the Picentes, the Frentani, the Hirpini, the Iapyges, Pompeii, Venose, Luciana, and Samnium rebelled against Rome
Sulla's first civil war: The consul Sulla led an army of his partisans across the pomerium into Rome
End of the Social War
First Mithridatic War: Roman forces landed in Epirus
First Mithridatic War: A peace was agreed between Rome and Pontus under which the latter returned to its prewar brothers
Sulla's second civil war: Sulla declared dictator
Second Mithridatic War: Murena withdrew from Pontus
Sulla resigns dictatorship after enacting numerous reforms in the same year
Final consulship of Sulla, he leaves Rome once the year is over
Third Mithridatic War: Pontus invaded Bithynia
Third Servile War: Some seventy gladiators, slaves of Lentulus Batiatus in Capua, made a violent escape
Sertorian War: Marcus Perpenna Vento, by now the leader of the Romans in revolt in Iberia, was executed by the general Pompey
Third Servile War: The slaves in rebellion were decisively defeated by Roman forces near Petelia. Their leader Spartacus was killed.
The last of the Cilician pirates were wiped out by Pompey
Third Mithridatic War: Defeated, the Pontic king Mithridates VI of Pontus ordered his friend and body guard to kill him
Siege of Jerusalem: Pompey conquered Jerusalem and entered the Holy of Holies of the Second Temple
Cicero was elected consul
Second Catilinarian conspiracy: A conspiracy led by the senator Catiline to overthrow the Republic was exposed before the Senate. The five conspirators present were summarily executed in the Mamertine Prison
Pompey joined a political alliance, the so- called First Triumvirate, with the consul Julius Caesar and the censor Marcus Licinius Crassus
Consulship of Julius Caesar
Gallic Wars: Roman forces barred the westward migration of the Helvetii across the Rhone
Battle of Carrhae: A Parthian army decisively defeated a numerically superior Roman invasion force near Harran. Crassus was killed
Gallic Wars: The last Gaulish rebels were defeated
Caesar's Civil War: Caesar illegally crossed the Rubicon into Italy with his army
Caesar's Civil War: Caesar landed at Durres in pursuit of Pompey and his partisans the optimates
Caesar left Africa for Iberia in pursuit of Pompey's sons Gnaeus Pompeius (son of Pompey the Great) and Sextus Pompey
Assassination of Julius Caesar: Caesar was assassinated in the Theatre of Pompey by a conspiracy of senators