Year 393 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Potitus and Maluginensis (or, less...
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(399–396 BC) Aeropus II, King (399–393 BC) Archelaus II, King (396–393 BC) Amyntas II, King (393 BC) Pausanias, King (393 BC) Argaeus II, King (393–392 BC) Amyntas...
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dynasty of South Asia 393 BC Nepherites I or Nefaarud I, Pharaoh of Egypt Emperor Kōshō of Japan, according to legend. 392 BC Conon, Athenian general...
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Corinthian War (category 390s BC conflicts)
Cythera Corinth Athens Abydos Sestos IONIA ACHAEMENID EMPIRE GREECE From 393 BC, Pharnabazus II and Conon sailed with their fleet to the Aegean island of...
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genealogy. Kōshō's reign allegedly began in 475 BC, he had one wife and two sons. After his death in 393 BC, his second son supposedly became the next emperor...
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reign allegedly began in 393 BC, he had one wife and two sons and reigned for more than 100 years until his death in 291 BC at the age of 137. One of...
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Phaedrus (Athenian) (category 393 BC deaths)
Φαῖδρος Πυθοκλέους Μυῤῥινούσιος, Phaĩdros Puthokléous Murrhinoúsios; c. 444 – 393 BC), was an ancient Athenian aristocrat associated with the inner-circle of...
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Amyntas III of Macedon (category 370 BC deaths)
king of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedonia from 393/2 to 388/7 BC and again from 387/6 to 370 BC. He was a member of the Argead dynasty through his...
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Pharnabazus II (redirect from Pharnabazus (5th century BC))
Apame. He was recalled to the Achaemenid Empire in 393 BC, and replaced by satrap Tiribazus. In 386 BC, Artaxerxes II betrayed his Athenian allies and came...
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Against Simon (redirect from Against Simon, iii., 393 BC)
in a military expedition to Coronea (which would place the case around 394 BC). The defendant states that Simon's conduct was so terrible that of all the...
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Sicilian Wars (category 4th-century BC conflicts)
power and sacked Solus in 396 BC. He was engaged in eastern Sicily during 396-393 BC, including the Siege of Tauromenium (394 BC). At this time, Carthage was...
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Battle of the Allia (redirect from Battle of the Allia (390 BC))
or shortly after 393 BC. The Greek historian Polybius used a Greek dating system to derive the battle as having taken place in 387 BC, which is the most...
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Pausanias of Macedon (category 393 BC deaths)
394/3 to 393/2. He was the son of Aeropus II and an unknown mother, but he did not succeed his father when Aeropus died in July or August 394/3 BC. Instead...
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Argead dynasty (category States and territories established in the 9th century BC)
founders and the ruling dynasty of the kingdom of Macedon from about 700 to 310 BC. Their tradition, as described in ancient Greek historiography, traced their...
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Nepherites I (category 393 BC deaths)
philo-Persian admiral Conon of Athens. Nepherites I died during the winter of 394/393 BC after a six-year reign. The Demotic Chronicle simply states that "his son"...
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Year 390 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Tribunate of Ambustus, Longus, Ambustus, Fidenas...
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Consulship of Stolo and Peticus (or, less frequently, year 393 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 361 BC for this year has been used since the early medieval...
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Phaedrus (Athenian) (c. 444 BC – 393 BC), an Athenian aristocrat depicted in Plato's dialogues Phaedrus (fabulist) (c. 15 BC – c. AD 50), a Roman fabulist...
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and 405 BC, and censor in 393. Gaius Julius Iullus was the son of Spurius Julius Iullus, and grandson of Vopiscus Julius Iulus, consul in BC 473. His...
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the Imperial House by dating its foundation further back to the year 660 BC. There are several theories as to who was the first Japanese ruler supported...
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Year 396 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Tribunate of Saccus, Capitolinus, Esquilinus, Augurinus...
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Macedonia (ancient kingdom) (category 146 BC)
seemingly conflicting account about Illyrian invasions occurring in 393 BC and 383 BC, which may have been representative of a single invasion led by the...
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509–479 BC: 1 September–29 August (August had only 29 days in Ancient Rome) 478–451 BC: 1 August–31 July 449–403 BC: 13 December–12 December 402–393 BC: 1...
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Year 395 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Tribunate of Cossus, Medullinus, Scipio, Fidenas...
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Battle of Abacaenum (category 393 BC)
Carthaginian forces under Mago and the Siceliot army under Dionysius in 393 BC near the Sicilian town on Abacaenum in north-eastern Sicily. Dionysius,...
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inception around the middle of the seventh century BC until its conquest by the Roman Republic in 168 BC. Kingship in Macedonia, its earliest attested political...
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Orestes of Macedon (r. 399 – 396 BC) in 396 BC, allegedly by his regent and successor Aeropus II of Macedon (r. 396 – c. 393 BC), clouding the issue of whether...
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They were initially constructed in the mid-5th century BC, and destroyed by the Spartans in 403 BC after Athens' defeat in the Peloponnesian War. They were...
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Patricians. In 393 BC, Marcus Cornelius P.f. P. n. Maluginensis was elected suffect censor to replace the deceased censor Gaius Iulius Iullus. In 351 BC, Gaius...
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Spartan hegemony (category 5th-century BC establishments in Greece)
refers to the period of dominance by Sparta in Greek affairs from 404 to 371 BC. Even before this period the polis of Sparta was the greatest military land...
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