60s BC

This article concerns the period 69 BC – 60 BC.

Millennium: 1st millennium BC
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
Categories:
  • Births
  • Deaths
  • Establishments

Events

69 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Egypt
  • Ptolemy XII deposes Cleopatra V, and becomes sole ruler.
Greece
  • Kydonia, an ancient city on the island of Crete falls to Roman military forces.[2]
  • Rhodes becomes a bulwark against pirates, the Rhodians are unable to suppress piracy in the Aegean Sea. Delos gets the status of a free port.

68 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Osroene
  • Abgar II becomes ruler of Osroene.

67 BC

By place

Roman Republic
  • Consuls: Manius Acilius Glabrio and Gaius Calpurnius Piso.
  • During Pompey's war against the pirates, he raises a fleet of 500 warships and fights with great success.
  • The lex Gabinia gives Pompey command of the Mediterranean and its coasts for 50 miles inland for three years. He defeats the pirates in three months and pacifies Cilicia.
  • Pompey divides the Mediterranean into 13 zones six in the West and seven in the East to each of which he assigns a fleet under an admiral.
  • Pompey offers the ex-pirates and their families clemency, he settles them in agricultural colonies in eastern Mediterranean lands.
  • Pompey takes over the command of Lucius Lucullus in the war against Mithridates VI, and reaps the fruit of the latter's victories.
  • Lex Acilia Calpurnia: permanent exclusion from office in cases of electoral corruption.
  • Lex Roscia theatralis.
Judea
  • Hyrcanus II becomes king of Judea, for first time (until 66 BC), upon the death of his mother, Salome Alexandra.
Pontus
  • Mithridates VI invades Pontus and defeats a Roman army at the Battle of Zela.
  • After his victory at Zela Mithridates started consolidating his power in Pontus; restoring his rule over his old kingdom.
  • Lucullus returned to Pontus, but his troops refused to campaign for him any longer and he withdrew to Galatia.
China
  • December The army of the Han Dynasty Chinese commander Zheng Ji is victorious over the Xiongnu in the Battle of Jushi.

66 BC

By place

Roman Republic
  • Consuls: Manius Aemilius Lepidus and Lucius Volcatius Tullus.
  • Catiline accused of conspiring against the Roman Republic with Autronius and the younger Sulla (also in 63 BC during the consulship of Cicero).
  • The alliance between Mithridates VI of Pontus and Tigranes II of Armenia is broken.
  • Tigranes II is forced to surrender, by a payment of 6,000 talents, and is reinstated by Pompey as a "friend of the Roman people" to hold Armenia as a buffer zone.
  • Battle of the Lycus: Pompey the Great decisively defeats Mithridates VI, effectively ending the Third Mithridatic War.
  • Gaius Antonius elected Roman praetor.
  • The lex Manilia, supported by Cicero gives Pompey command over all of Asia.
  • Cicero becomes praetor in Rome.
Judea
  • Aristobulus II becomes king and high priest of Judea, until 63 BC.

65 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Western Han Empire
  • 9th year of the reign of Emperor Xuan of Han

64 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Syria
  • King Antiochus XIII Asiaticus is deposed and killed by the Syrian chieftain Sampsiceramus I[5] – this is considered by some the end of the Seleucid Dynasty.

63 BC

By place

Roman Republic
  • Lucullus holds a triumph, then retires from war and politics to live a life of refined luxury.
  • Establishment of the Decapolis and Year 1 of the Pompeian era.
  • Pompey conquers the people of Phonecia, Coele-Syria, and Judea for the Roman Republic.
  • Roman annexation of the Seleucid Empire and of Judea as a client kingdom. King Judah Aristobulus II removed from power, while his brother John Hyrcanus II is reappointed king (ethnarch) under Roman suzerainty and high priest, until 40 BC.
  • Massacre of over 12,000 Jews on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem by Roman troops, in support of John Hyrcanus II against Aristobulus II.
  • Julius Caesar is elected Pontifex Maximus and praetor for 62 BC.
  • Marcus Tullius Cicero is senior consul. He is the first novus homo (new man) to be elected to the consulship in 31 years.
  • Cato the Younger is elected tribune of the people for 62 BC, taking office in early December 63 BC.
  • Servilius Rullus, a Roman tribune, proposes an agrarian reform law.
  • Second Catilinarian Conspiracy against the Roman Republic is foiled by Cicero.
Pontus
  • Pharnaces II becomes King of Pontus.

62 BC

By place

Roman Republic
  • January 5 The forces of the conspirator Catiline are defeated by the loyal Roman armies of Antonius Hybrida led by Marcus Petreius in the Battle of Pistoria.
  • Julius Caesar divorces Pompeia, following the sacrilege of Publius Clodius Pulcher.
  • Cicero delivers his Pro Archia Poeta in defense of Aulus Licinius Archias' claim to Roman citizenship.
  • Cato the Younger, as tribune, presents a lex frumentaria (enacting a grain dole).
  • Metellus Nepos, also tribune, leaves Rome.
  • Caesar and Bibulus are praetors.
Commagene
  • King Antiochus I Theos of Commagene builds his mountain-top tomb-sanctuary at Mount Nemrut.

61 BC

By place

Roman Republic
  • September 29 Pompey celebrates his third triumph for victories over the pirates and the end of the Mithridatic Wars.
  • Marcus Pupius Piso Frugi as consul attempts to gain ratification of Pompey's Eastern Settlement.
  • Julius Caesar becomes governor in Hispania and creates Legio X Gemina (3,500 men). He puts down the Callaici and Lusitani rebellions.

60 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Syria
  • The Seleucid Empire comes to an end with the last two emperors being murdered on orders from Rome.
China
  • The Han Dynasty government establishes the Protectorate of the Western Regions, the highest military position of a military commander on the Western frontier (Tarim Basin).

Significant people

Births

69 BC

68 BC

  • Arsinoe IV of Egypt, daughter of Ptolemy XII (and probably Cleopatra V) (d. 41 BC)

67 BC

  • Arsinoe IV of Egypt, daughter of Ptolemy XII (and probably Cleopatra V) (d. 41 BC)
  • Sextus Pompey, Roman general and governor (d. 35 BC)

66 BC

65 BC

64 BC

  • Marcus Valerius Messalla Corvinus, Roman general and consul (d. AD 8)[8]
  • Nicolaus of Damascus, Jewish historian and philosopher (approximate date)

63 BC

62 BC

60 BC

  • Curia, wife of Quintus Lucretius Vespillo (approximate date)
  • Ptolemy XIV, king (pharaoh) of Egypt (or 59 BC)
  • Tryphon, Greek grammarian (approximate date)
  • Daeso, emperor of Dongbuyeo

Deaths

69 BC

68 BC

  • Antiochus of Ascalon, Greek philosopher (b. c. 130 BC)
  • Cornelia, wife of Julius Caesar (b. 94 BC)
  • Huo Guang, official of the western Han Dynasty
  • Lucius Caecillius Metellus, Roman consul

67 BC

  • Lucius Cornelius Sisenna, Roman general and historian (b. c. 120 BC)
  • Salome Alexandra, queen of Judea (b. 139 BC)

66 BC

  • Licinius Macer, Roman annalist

65 BC

64 BC

63 BC

  • Mithridates VI, King of Pontus (b. 135 BC)
  • Quintus Caecilius Metellus Pius, pontifex maximus and general (b. c. 130 BC or 127 BC)
  • Those involved in the organisation of the Catilinarian conspiracy in Rome, including Publius Cornelius Lentulus Sura

62 BC

61 BC

  • Quintus Marcius Rex, Roman consul and general

60 BC

  • Aretas III Philhellen, king of Nabatea (approximate date)
  • Su Wu, Chinese diplomat and statesman (b. 140 BC)

Citations

  1. Joseph Thomas, Universal Pronouncing Dictionary of Biography and Mythology, 1908, Lippincott, 2550 pages
  2. C. Michael Hogan, Cydonia, Modern Antiquarian, January 23, 2008
  3. Syme, Ronald (1963). "Ten Tribunes". Journal of Roman Studies. 53: 59.
  4. Husband, R. (1916). On the Expulsion of Foreigners from Rome. Classical Philology, 11(3), 315-333. Retrieved March 11, 2021, from http://www.jstor.org/stable/261855
  5. Appian, Syriaca VIII 49, XI 70, Justin, Historiarum Philippicarum T. Pompeii Trogi XL 2.2, Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca Historica XL 1a-b.
  6. Moore 2017, p. 9.
  7. Jerome (Chronicon 2020) says he died in AD 4 in the seventieth year of his life, which would place the year of his birth at 65 BC.
  8. Roberts, John. The Oxford dictionary of the classical world. Oxford University Press. p. 799. ISBN 9780192801463.
  9. "BBC - History - Augustus". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 5 April 2021.

References

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