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100s BC (decade)

This article concerns the period 109 BC – 100 BC.

Map of the world in 100 BC

Events edit

109 BC

By place edit

Roman Republic edit
Asia edit
  • After She He, a Han envoy, murders a minor king of the vassal state of Gojoseon and is rewarded by Emperor Wu with a military command, Ugeo, the king of Gojoseon, attacks and kills She He.
  • Autumn – Emperor Wu orders the invasion. The Han general Yang Pu crosses the Yellow Sea and marches on the capital Wangxian (Pyongyang) but is defeated outside its gates. Another general, Xun Zhi, invades overland but fails to make headway.
  • Peace negotiations are initiated by Emperor Wu but fail due to mutual suspicion.[2]
  • The Han general Zhao Ponu and 700 cavalrymen are victorious in the Battle of Loulan in the Tarim Basin, capturing the king of Loulan in the first Han intervention west of the Hexi Corridor.[3][4]

108 BC edit

By place edit

Roman Republic edit
Asia edit
  • The Han generals Yang Pu and Xun Zhi besiege Wangxian (Pyongyang), the capital of Gojoseon. Infighting between the generals leads Xun Zhi to arrest Yang Pu.
  • Summer – After being deserted by some of his officials, king Ugeo of Gojoseon is assassinated. Cheng Yi takes over the defense of Wangxian but is killed by Han sympathizers.
  • Han subjugates Gojoseon and divides it into four prefectures. Xun Zhi is executed for infighting.[5]

107 BC edit

By place edit

Crimea edit
Roman Republic edit

106 BC edit

By place edit

Roman Republic edit
Anatolia edit
China edit
  • Following the death of General-in-Chief Wei Qing, his sister Empress Wei Zifu and nephew Crown Prince Liu Ju begin to lose influence at court.[8]

105 BC edit

By place edit

Roman Republic edit
Asia edit
  • The Han Dynasty forms an alliance with the Wusun by marrying a Han princess to their king.[10]
  • Wuwei Chanyu of the Xiongnu dies and is succeeded by his youthful son Er Chanyu. That winter heavy snowstorms lead to the deaths of many livestock, and there is discontent with the new ruler, who is regarded as belligerent.[11]

104 BC edit

By place edit

Roman Republic edit
Judea edit
Asia edit
  • War of the Heavenly Horses: Emperor Wu of Han sends an army of 6000 cavalrymen and 10,000 convicts under Li Guangli to attack Dayuan in modern Kyrgyzstan after Wugua, the king of Dayuan, refuses to send the Han any of the prized horses of Dayuan and, following a contentious meeting with the Han diplomats, has a vassal king kill the diplomats and seize their goods. The Han expeditionary force proceeds with difficulty, marching through arid regions and facing hostile cities.[12]

103 BC edit

By place edit

Roman Republic edit
Judea edit
Asia edit
  • After having fought their way west across arid regions, the Han expeditionary force under Li Guangli fails to capture the Dayuan city of Yucheng and returns east to the area of Dunhuang, having lost 90% of their men.
  • Emperor Wu of Han reinforces Li Guangli's army with 60,000 men, numerous horses and beasts of burden, and more than fifty high-ranking officers. Li Guangli's army then returns west.[14]
  • Spring – After the Xiongnu Left Commander offers to kill Er Chanyu and surrender to the Han, Emperor Wu sends the Han general Zhao Ponu with an army of 20,000 to invade Xiongnu territory. When Zhao reaches the Altay Mountains, the commander's conspiracy is discovered, and after killing the commander, Er marches against Zhao but suffers an initial defeat.
  • Summer – The Han army retreats south, but the Xiongnu surround them. After capturing Zhao Ponu during the night, the Xiongnu defeat and force the surrender of the Han soldiers.
  • The Xiongnu invade parts of China and unsuccessfully attack Shouxiang.[15]

102 BC edit

By place edit

Roman Republic edit
Asia edit
  • War of the Heavenly Horses: the Han expeditionary force under Li Guangli conquers the state of Luntai. Li Guangli then besieges Alexandria Eschate, the capital of Dayuan in the Hellenistic Ferghana Valley, despite having lost half his army to hunger, thirst and battle by the time he reached the city. The Dayuan are defeated in battle, and after losing their outer wall and their best general Jianmi in battle, the nobles kill King Wugua and offer terms of peace to Li Guangli, who accepts. The Han receive some of the prized horses of Dayuan and Li Guangli appoints Mocai as the new king.[16]
  • Han-Xiongnu War
  • Er Chanyu marches against Shouxiang but dies en route from illness and is succeeded by his uncle Xulihu.
  • Emperor Wu orders fortified outposts to be built to the north as far as the Yin Mountains and Juyan Lake. The generals Han Yue and Wei Kang garrison the outposts north of Wuyuan, including the Yin Mountains, and Lu Bode garrisons Juyan Lake.
  • Autumn – The Xiongnu invade the prefectures of Yunzhong, Dingxiang, Wuyuan and Shuofang and destroy the new Han outposts. The Tuqi King of the Right invades the area around Jiuquan and Zhangye. The Han general Ren Wen defeats a Xiongnu army.[17]

101 BC edit

By place edit

Roman Republic edit
Libya edit
Asia edit
  • War of the Heavenly Horses: Han general Li Guangli detaches forces to attack Yucheng. After a failed attack by Wang Shengshen and Hu Chongguo, in which Wang is killed, a new Han detachment under Shangguan Jie defeats and captures the king of Yucheng. The king is then killed by the soldiers escorting him to Li Guangli.[18]
  • Han-Xiongnu War: At the beginning of the year, Xulihu Chanyu dies from illness and is succeeded by Qiedihou Chanyu. Qiedihou releases the Han envoys detained by the Xiongnu and receives gifts from Emperor Wu of Han.[19]

100 BC edit

By place edit

Roman Republic edit
Asia Minor edit
Judea edit
India edit
China edit
  • War of the Heavenly Horses: the Han expedition under Li Guangli returns victorious to China. He is followed by dynastic representatives sent by various Central Asian kings, so that they may pay tribute to Emperor Wu of Han. Emperor Wu keeps these representatives as hostages and sends soldiers to build pavilions and reclaim wasteland along the route to the west to provide food and shelter for Han envoys.[20]
  • Han-Xiongnu War: the Han general Zhao Ponu escapes Xiongnu custody and returns to China.[21]
America edit

Births

108 BC

106 BC

105 BC

104 BC

103 BC

102 BC

100 BC

Deaths

109 BC

108 BC

107 BC

106 BC

105 BC

104 BC

103 BC

101 BC

100 BC

Notes edit

  1. ^ October 2 in the Julian calendar.

References edit

  1. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 189–190. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  2. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 191–193. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  3. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 197–198. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  4. ^ Qian, Sima. Records of the Grand Historian, Section: Wei Qing & Huo Qubing.
  5. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 193–195. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  6. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. p. 204. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  7. ^ Dillon, Matthew; Matthew, Christopher (2020). Religion & Classical Warfare: The Roman Republic. Pen and Sword Military. ISBN 978-1473889699.
  8. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. p. 226. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  9. ^ Clément, François (1820). L'Art de vérifier les dates des faits historiques, des inscriptions, des chroniques et autres anciens monumens, avant l'ère chrétienne (in French). Moreau. p. 737.
  10. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 195–196. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  11. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. p. 206. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  12. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 197–198. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  13. ^ VanderKam, James C. (2004). From Joshua to Caiaphas: High Priests After the Exile. Fortress Press. p. 318. ISBN 9781451410662.
  14. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 198–199. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  15. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 198–199, 206–208. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  16. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 198–201. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  17. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 207–208. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  18. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 201–202. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  19. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. p. 208. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  20. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. pp. 202–203. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  21. ^ Hung, Hing Ming (2020). The Magnificent Emperor Wu: China's Han Dynasty. p. 208. ISBN 978-1628944167.
  22. ^ "Pompey the Great | Roman statesman | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 2 December 2022.
  23. ^ "PerseusCatalog". catalog.perseus.org. Retrieved 2023-09-22.
  24. ^ "Julius Caesar Biography". Biography.com. September 4, 2019. Retrieved October 17, 2020.
  25. ^ There is some dispute over the year of Caesar's birth. Some scholars have made a case for 101 or 102 BC as the year of his birth, based on the dates that he held certain magistracies, but scholarly consensus favors 100 BC. Similarly, some scholars prefer 12 July for the day of his birth, but others give 13 July. Goldsworthy, p. 30, Ward, Heichelheim, & Yeo p. 194. For a source arguing for 12 July, see Badian in Griffin (ed.) p.16
  26. ^ Lynda Telford, Sulla A Dictator Reconsidered, p.43
  27. ^ Gelb, Norman (2010). Kings of the Jews: The Origins of the Jewish Nation. Jewish Publication Society. p. 175. ISBN 9780827609136.

100s, decade, this, article, concerns, period, world, contents, events, place, roman, republic, asia, place, roman, republic, asia, place, crimea, roman, republic, place, roman, republic, anatolia, china, place, roman, republic, asia, place, roman, republic, j. This article concerns the period 109 BC 100 BC Map of the world in 100 BC Contents 1 Events 1 1 109 BC 1 1 1 By place 1 1 1 1 Roman Republic 1 1 1 2 Asia 1 2 108 BC 1 2 1 By place 1 2 1 1 Roman Republic 1 2 1 2 Asia 1 3 107 BC 1 3 1 By place 1 3 1 1 Crimea 1 3 1 2 Roman Republic 1 4 106 BC 1 4 1 By place 1 4 1 1 Roman Republic 1 4 1 2 Anatolia 1 4 1 3 China 1 5 105 BC 1 5 1 By place 1 5 1 1 Roman Republic 1 5 1 2 Asia 1 6 104 BC 1 6 1 By place 1 6 1 1 Roman Republic 1 6 1 2 Judea 1 6 1 3 Asia 1 7 103 BC 1 7 1 By place 1 7 1 1 Roman Republic 1 7 1 2 Judea 1 7 1 3 Asia 1 8 102 BC 1 8 1 By place 1 8 1 1 Roman Republic 1 8 1 2 Asia 1 9 101 BC 1 9 1 By place 1 9 1 1 Roman Republic 1 9 1 2 Libya 1 9 1 3 Asia 1 10 100 BC 1 10 1 By place 1 10 1 1 Roman Republic 1 10 1 2 Asia Minor 1 10 1 3 Judea 1 10 1 4 India 1 10 1 5 China 1 10 1 6 America 2 Births 3 Deaths 4 Notes 5 ReferencesEvents edit109 BC This section is transcluded from 109 BC edit history By place edit Roman Republic edit A Roman army under Marcus Junius Silanus is defeated by the Cimbri and Teutones near the river Rhone Asia edit Emperor Wu of Han inspects the Han Empire traveling 9 000 km 5 600 mi He also sends diplomats to search for the legendary Penglai Island 1 Han campaigns against Dian Emperor Wu launches a new campaign against the Dian Kingdom and establishes the Yizhou commandery in Yunnan during the dynasty s expansion southward Han invasion of GojoseonAfter She He a Han envoy murders a minor king of the vassal state of Gojoseon and is rewarded by Emperor Wu with a military command Ugeo the king of Gojoseon attacks and kills She He Autumn Emperor Wu orders the invasion The Han general Yang Pu crosses the Yellow Sea and marches on the capital Wangxian Pyongyang but is defeated outside its gates Another general Xun Zhi invades overland but fails to make headway Peace negotiations are initiated by Emperor Wu but fail due to mutual suspicion 2 The Han general Zhao Ponu and 700 cavalrymen are victorious in the Battle of Loulan in the Tarim Basin capturing the king of Loulan in the first Han intervention west of the Hexi Corridor 3 4 108 BC edit This section is transcluded from 108 BC edit history By place edit Roman Republic edit Roman forces under Quintus Caecilius Metellus Numidicus defeat the forces of Jugurtha of Numidia at the Battle of the Muthul with Gaius Marius as a subordinate Asia edit Han conquest of GojoseonThe Han generals Yang Pu and Xun Zhi besiege Wangxian Pyongyang the capital of Gojoseon Infighting between the generals leads Xun Zhi to arrest Yang Pu Summer After being deserted by some of his officials king Ugeo of Gojoseon is assassinated Cheng Yi takes over the defense of Wangxian but is killed by Han sympathizers Han subjugates Gojoseon and divides it into four prefectures Xun Zhi is executed for infighting 5 Emperor Wu of Han founds Jiuquan in the Hexi Corridor as a military outpost on the Silk Road to Central Asia It serves to protect diplomats and merchants and it cuts off the kings of the region from the Xiongnu He also founds Xianlei in present day Inner Mongolia extending Han control further north than before 6 107 BC edit This section is transcluded from 107 BC edit history By place edit Crimea edit The uprising of Saumachus against Mithridates VI in the Bosporan Kingdom Roman Republic edit Gaius Marius to whom the putative Marian reforms of the Roman army are commonly attributed arrives in North Africa to lead the war against Jugurtha with a young quaestor named Lucius Cornelius Sulla as a subordinate 7 106 BC edit This section is transcluded from 106 BC edit history By place edit Roman Republic edit The Romans under Quintus Servilius Caepio seize the Gold of Tolosa while recapturing the Volcae town Anatolia edit Nicomedes III of Bithynia and Mithridates VI of Pontus share their dominion over Paphlagonia China edit Following the death of General in Chief Wei Qing his sister Empress Wei Zifu and nephew Crown Prince Liu Ju begin to lose influence at court 8 105 BC edit This section is transcluded from 105 BC edit history By place edit Roman Republic edit January 1 note 1 Gnaeus Mallius Maximus and Publius Rutilius Rufus become Roman consuls 9 October 6 The Battle of Arausio where the Cimbri destroy two Roman armies on the Rhone is the most severe defeat of Roman forces since the Battle of Cannae Gaius Marius together with the consul Publius Rutilius Rufus initiates sweeping reforms of the Roman army Lucius Cornelius Sulla secures the capture of Jugurtha His success is made possible by the treachery of Bocchus I king of Mauretania and this ends the Jugurthine War which began in 112 BC At Rome the first official gladiator match is demonstrated by gladiators from Capua as part of a training program for the military Asia edit The Han Dynasty forms an alliance with the Wusun by marrying a Han princess to their king 10 Wuwei Chanyu of the Xiongnu dies and is succeeded by his youthful son Er Chanyu That winter heavy snowstorms lead to the deaths of many livestock and there is discontent with the new ruler who is regarded as belligerent 11 104 BC edit This section is transcluded from 104 BC edit history By place edit Roman Republic edit Rome enacts a state of emergency as the way to Italy lays open to the Germanic invaders Gaius Marius the conqueror of Jugurtha is elected consul for the second time He celebrates his triumph over Jugurtha who is led in the procession and thrown into the Tullianum where he dies of starvation Second Servile War Athenion starts a slave rebellion in Segesta Sicily Judea edit Aristobulus I succeeds John Hyrcanus becoming king and high priest of Judea until 103 BC Asia edit War of the Heavenly Horses Emperor Wu of Han sends an army of 6000 cavalrymen and 10 000 convicts under Li Guangli to attack Dayuan in modern Kyrgyzstan after Wugua the king of Dayuan refuses to send the Han any of the prized horses of Dayuan and following a contentious meeting with the Han diplomats has a vassal king kill the diplomats and seize their goods The Han expeditionary force proceeds with difficulty marching through arid regions and facing hostile cities 12 103 BC edit This section is transcluded from 103 BC edit history By place edit Roman Republic edit Gaius Marius prepares a campaign against the Ambrones and Teutones under king Teutobod who are settled in Gaul Tryphon and Athenion lead the Second Servile War in Sicily Judea edit Alexander Jannaeus succeeds his brother Aristobulus I as king and high priest of Judea until 76 BC 13 Asia edit War of the Heavenly HorsesAfter having fought their way west across arid regions the Han expeditionary force under Li Guangli fails to capture the Dayuan city of Yucheng and returns east to the area of Dunhuang having lost 90 of their men Emperor Wu of Han reinforces Li Guangli s army with 60 000 men numerous horses and beasts of burden and more than fifty high ranking officers Li Guangli s army then returns west 14 Han Xiongnu WarSpring After the Xiongnu Left Commander offers to kill Er Chanyu and surrender to the Han Emperor Wu sends the Han general Zhao Ponu with an army of 20 000 to invade Xiongnu territory When Zhao reaches the Altay Mountains the commander s conspiracy is discovered and after killing the commander Er marches against Zhao but suffers an initial defeat Summer The Han army retreats south but the Xiongnu surround them After capturing Zhao Ponu during the night the Xiongnu defeat and force the surrender of the Han soldiers The Xiongnu invade parts of China and unsuccessfully attack Shouxiang 15 102 BC edit This section is transcluded from 102 BC edit history By place edit Roman Republic edit Gaius Marius defeats the Sciri and Teutones at Aix en Provence or Battle of Aquae Sextae The Cimbri defeat the Consul Quintus Lutatius Catulus in the Adige Valley Asia edit War of the Heavenly Horses the Han expeditionary force under Li Guangli conquers the state of Luntai Li Guangli then besieges Alexandria Eschate the capital of Dayuan in the Hellenistic Ferghana Valley despite having lost half his army to hunger thirst and battle by the time he reached the city The Dayuan are defeated in battle and after losing their outer wall and their best general Jianmi in battle the nobles kill King Wugua and offer terms of peace to Li Guangli who accepts The Han receive some of the prized horses of Dayuan and Li Guangli appoints Mocai as the new king 16 Han Xiongnu WarEr Chanyu marches against Shouxiang but dies en route from illness and is succeeded by his uncle Xulihu Emperor Wu orders fortified outposts to be built to the north as far as the Yin Mountains and Juyan Lake The generals Han Yue and Wei Kang garrison the outposts north of Wuyuan including the Yin Mountains and Lu Bode garrisons Juyan Lake Autumn The Xiongnu invade the prefectures of Yunzhong Dingxiang Wuyuan and Shuofang and destroy the new Han outposts The Tuqi King of the Right invades the area around Jiuquan and Zhangye The Han general Ren Wen defeats a Xiongnu army 17 101 BC edit This section is transcluded from 101 BC edit history By place edit Roman Republic edit July 30 Battle of Vercellae Battle of the Raudine Plain or Battle of Campi Raudii The Roman consuls Gaius Marius and Manius Aquillius defeat the Cimbri Libya edit Ptolemy Apion inherits the kingdom of Cyrenaica Asia edit War of the Heavenly Horses Han general Li Guangli detaches forces to attack Yucheng After a failed attack by Wang Shengshen and Hu Chongguo in which Wang is killed a new Han detachment under Shangguan Jie defeats and captures the king of Yucheng The king is then killed by the soldiers escorting him to Li Guangli 18 Han Xiongnu War At the beginning of the year Xulihu Chanyu dies from illness and is succeeded by Qiedihou Chanyu Qiedihou releases the Han envoys detained by the Xiongnu and receives gifts from Emperor Wu of Han 19 100 BC edit This section is transcluded from 100 BC edit history By place edit Roman Republic edit Consuls Lucius Valerius Flaccus Gaius Marius Marius s sixth consulship Manius Aquillius celebrates an ovation for victories in the Second Servile War Lucius Appuleius Saturninus a tribune passes a law to redistribute land to military veterans The law requires that all senators swear to abide by it Quintus Caecilus Metellus Numidicus refuses and is exiled He goes to Rhodes to study philosophy Late summer autumn Saturninus stands for tribune again for the following year and is elected His associate the praetor Gaius Servilius Glaucia attempts to stand for the consulship illegally as praetors cannot immediately become consul A rival candidate Gaius Memmius is found murdered by agents of Saturninus and Glaucia who are declared public enemies by the Senate The Senate issues the senatus consultum ultimum and Marius as consul defeats his former ally in battle in the Forum Saturninus and his followers surrender on condition that their lives are spared but they are stoned to death with roof tiles in the Curia Hostilia by renegade senators The building of the Sanctuary of Fortuna Primigenia Palestrina Italy is begun The model of it is now kept at the Museo Archeologico Nazionale Italy approximate date Asia Minor edit Tigranes II of Armenia is placed on the Armenian throne by the Parthians in exchange for the cession of seventy valley approximate date Judea edit The deuterocanonical books of 1 and 2 Maccabees are written India edit Gandhara and Punjab are ruled by the Indo Greek king Demetrius III Aniketos China edit War of the Heavenly Horses the Han expedition under Li Guangli returns victorious to China He is followed by dynastic representatives sent by various Central Asian kings so that they may pay tribute to Emperor Wu of Han Emperor Wu keeps these representatives as hostages and sends soldiers to build pavilions and reclaim wasteland along the route to the west to provide food and shelter for Han envoys 20 Han Xiongnu War the Han general Zhao Ponu escapes Xiongnu custody and returns to China 21 America edit Mural room in the Maya pyramid at San Bartolo Guatemala painted BirthsTranscluding articles 109 BC 108 BC 107 BC 106 BC 105 BC 104 BC 103 BC 102 BC 101 BC and 100 BC 108 BC Lucius Sergius Catilina Roman politician d 62 BC 106 BC January 3 Cicero Roman politician and author d 43 BC September 29 Pompey the Great Roman general and politician d 48 BC 22 Servius Sulpicius Rufus Roman politician d 43 BC 105 BC Decimus Laberius Roman nobleman and Latin writer d 43 BC Tiberius Claudius Nero Roman politician and general Marcus Atius Balbus Roman praetor and governor d 51 BC 104 BC Julia mother of Mark Antony Servilia mistress of Julius Caesar103 BC Marcus Furius Bibaculus Roman poet 23 102 BC Quintus Tullius Cicero Roman general and statesman d 43 BC 100 BC Julius Caesar Roman general and politician d 44 BC 24 25 Titus Labienus Caesar s chief lieutenant in the conquest of Gaul d 45 BC DeathsTranscluding articles 109 BC 108 BC 107 BC 106 BC 105 BC 104 BC 103 BC 102 BC 101 BC and 100 BC 109 BC Paerisades V king of the Bosporan Kingdom approximate date Sames II Theosebes Dikaios king of Commagene108 BC Marcus Livius Drusus the Elder Roman consul Ugeo of Gojoseon king of Wiman Joseon Korea 107 BC Lucius Cassius Longinus 26 106 BC Wei Qing Chinese general of the Han Dynasty105 BC Marcus Aurelius Scaurus Roman politician and general executed as a prisoner of war in the advent of the Battle of Arausio104 BC Dong Zhongshu Chinese scholar who promoted Confucianism at the central court of the Han Dynasty b 179 BC Gnaeus Domitius Ahenobarbus Roman consul and general John Hyrcanus prince and high priest of Judea b 164 BC Jugurtha king of Numidia execution by Rome b c 169 BC 103 BC Aristobulus I king of Judea 27 Gaius Lucilius Roman satirist Khallata Naga of Anuradhapura king of the Anuradhapura Kingdom101 BC Boiorix king of the Cimbri killed at the Battle of Vercellae Cleopatra III queen of the Ptolemaic Kingdom assassinated by her son Ptolemy X Alexander I 100 BC Cornelia mother of Tiberius Gracchus b c 190 BC Gaius Memmius Roman politician Gaius Servilius Glaucia Roman politician Lucius Appuleius Saturninus Roman politician Salvius Tryphon Rebel slave Theodosius of Bithynia Greek astronomer and mathematician b c 169 BC Notes edit October 2 in the Julian calendar References edit Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 189 190 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 191 193 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 197 198 ISBN 978 1628944167 Qian Sima Records of the Grand Historian Section Wei Qing amp Huo Qubing Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 193 195 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty p 204 ISBN 978 1628944167 Dillon Matthew Matthew Christopher 2020 Religion amp Classical Warfare The Roman Republic Pen and Sword Military ISBN 978 1473889699 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty p 226 ISBN 978 1628944167 Clement Francois 1820 L Art de verifier les dates des faits historiques des inscriptions des chroniques et autres anciens monumens avant l ere chretienne in French Moreau p 737 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 195 196 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty p 206 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 197 198 ISBN 978 1628944167 VanderKam James C 2004 From Joshua to Caiaphas High Priests After the Exile Fortress Press p 318 ISBN 9781451410662 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 198 199 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 198 199 206 208 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 198 201 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 207 208 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 201 202 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty p 208 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty pp 202 203 ISBN 978 1628944167 Hung Hing Ming 2020 The Magnificent Emperor Wu China s Han Dynasty p 208 ISBN 978 1628944167 Pompey the Great Roman statesman Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2 December 2022 PerseusCatalog catalog perseus org Retrieved 2023 09 22 Julius Caesar Biography Biography com September 4 2019 Retrieved October 17 2020 There is some dispute over the year of Caesar s birth Some scholars have made a case for 101 or 102 BC as the year of his birth based on the dates that he held certain magistracies but scholarly consensus favors 100 BC Similarly some scholars prefer 12 July for the day of his birth but others give 13 July Goldsworthy p 30 Ward Heichelheim amp Yeo p 194 For a source arguing for 12 July see Badian in Griffin ed p 16 Lynda Telford Sulla A Dictator Reconsidered p 43 Gelb Norman 2010 Kings of the Jews The Origins of the Jewish Nation Jewish Publication Society p 175 ISBN 9780827609136 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 100s BC decade amp oldid 1176549080, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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