Year 64 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Caesar and Figulus (or, less frequently...
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Look up 64 or sixty-four in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. 64 or sixty-four or variation, may refer to: 64 (number) one of the years 64 BC, AD 64, 1864...
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Lucius Julius Caesar (fl. 1st century BC) was a Roman politician and senator who was consul in 64 BC. A supporter of his cousin, the Roman dictator Gaius...
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Lucius Julius Caesar (redirect from Lucius Julius Caesar (praetor 166 BC))
to: Lucius Julius Caesar (consul 90 BC), Roman senator, killed by Gaius Marius Lucius Julius Caesar (consul 64 BC), Roman senator, uncle of Mark Antony...
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The 64 BC Syria earthquake is mentioned in catalogues of historical earthquakes. It affected the region of Syria and may have caused structural damage...
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This article concerns the period 69 BC – 60 BC. October 6 – Roman Republic troops under Lucius Lucullus defeat the army of Tigranes II of Armenia in the...
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Classical Anatolia (redirect from History of Anatolia (700 BC–400 AD))
BC) the last king of Pergamon. In 64 BC Galatia became a client state of Rome and a Roman province in 25 BC following the reign of Amyntas (36–25 BC)...
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Hegemony (section 30th–27th centuries BC)
territories between 200 and 148 BC. The first good evidence for regular taxation of another kingdom comes from Judea as late as 64 BC. The Roman hegemony of the...
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Phraates I (category 2nd-century BC Parthian monarchs)
(Parthian: 𐭐𐭓𐭇𐭕 Frahāt) was king of the Arsacid dynasty from 170/168 BC to 165/64 BC. He subdued the Mardians, conquered their territory in the Alborz mountains...
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Ancient Greece (redirect from Greece in 4th century BC)
Roman Republic (by 149 BC). In the east, the unwieldy Seleucid Empire gradually disintegrated, although a rump survived until 64 BC, whilst the Ptolemaic...
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Caesar was Lucius Julius Caesar, who had been consul in 64 BC, and who was still living in 40 BC. Although other members of the family may have lived after...
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Gaius Octavius (father of Augustus) (redirect from Gaius Octavius (praetor 61 BC))
some time around 73 BC and later plebeian aedile around 64 BC. His first clearly noted office was that of praetor in 61 BC. In 60 BC, after his term as...
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Hattush. Faced with Hittite expansion (since c. 2000 BC), Hattians were gradually absorbed (by c. 1700 BC) into the new political and social order, imposed...
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From 3200 to 539 BC, what was to become Lebanon was part of Phoenicia, a maritime empire that stretched the Mediterranean Basin. In 64 BC, the region of...
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Prehistory of Anatolia (redirect from History of Anatolia (500,000 BC–700 BC))
appearance of classical civilisation in the middle of the 1st millennium BC. It is generally regarded as being divided into three ages reflecting the...
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Marcus Valerius Messalla Corvinus (category 64 BC births)
Corvinus (64 BC – AD 8 or c. 12) was a Roman general, author, and patron of literature and art. Corvinus was the son of a consul in 61 BC, Marcus Valerius...
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account of Strabo (c. 64 BC – 21 AD) possibly based his description on the lost account of Onesicritus from the 4th century BC. He states that the gardens...
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BC, 107–88 BC) Berenice III, Pharaoh (101–88 BC, 81–80 BC) Ptolemy XI Alexander II, Pharaoh (80 BC) Ptolemy XII Auletes, Pharaoh (80–58 BC, 55–51 BC)...
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Mediterranean Sea, Tyre became the leading city of the Phoenician civilization in 969 BC with the reign of the Tyrian king Hiram I, the city of Tyre alongside its...
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Philip II, Count of Schaumburg-Lippe (1723–1787) Philip II Philoromaeus (65–64 BC) Philip II (hospital), in the Republic of North Macedonia Walls of Philip...
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the ancient Celtic state of Galatia (280–64 BC), and later of the Roman province with the same name (25 BC–7th century), Ankara has various Hattian,...
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Catiline (category 108 BC births)
82 BC). Acquitted on all charges with the support of influential friends from across Roman politics, he twice stood for the consulship in 64 and 63 BC....
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Phoenicia (category 2nd millennium BC)
natively. Therefore, the division between Canaanites and Phoenicians around 1200 BC is regarded as a modern and artificial division. The Phoenicians, known for...
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up Hyginus in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Gaius Julius Hyginus (c. 64 BC–17 AD) was a Roman poet, the author of Fabulae, and the reputed author of...
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Nicolaus of Damascus (category 60s BC births)
Νικόλαος Δαμασκηνός, Nikolāos Damaskēnos; Latin: Nicolaus Damascenus; c. 64 BC – after 4 AD), was a Greek historian, diplomat and philosopher who lived...
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by Alexander the Great c. 330 BC, and consequently became Coele-Syria province of the Seleucid Empire (323 BC – 64 BC), with the Seleucid kings styling...
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determinism dominant at that time in ecological studies. Strabo posited in 64 BC that humans can make things happen by their own intelligence over time....
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written by Quintus Tullius Cicero, c. 65-64 BC as a guide for his brother Marcus Tullius Cicero in his campaign in 64 to be elected consul of the Roman Republic...
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distinct regions came under control of the Roman Empire in the second century BC, eventually becoming the core of the Roman Byzantine Empire. For times predating...
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Seleucid dynasty (category 312 BC)
to the Rome's annexation of their territory in 64 BC under Pompey the Great. Seleucus (c. 358 – 281 BC) served as an officer of Alexander the Great, commanding...
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