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70s BC

Millennium: 1st millennium BC
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This article concerns the period 79 BC – 70 BC.

Events

79 BC

By place

Roman republic

78 BC

By place

Roman Republic

77 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Armenia
  • The city of Tigranakert of Artsakh is built.

76 BC

By place

Judea
Roman Republic
  • The Third Dalmatian war ends with the capture of Salona by proconsul C. Cosconius and the victory of Rome.

75 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Greece

By topic

Literature
  • Start of Golden Age of Latin Literature.

74 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Spain

73 BC

By place

Roman Republic
  • Third Servile War: Spartacus, a Thracian gladiator, escapes with around 70 slave-gladiators from a gladiator school at Capua. They defeat a small Roman force and equip themselves with captured military equipment as well with gladiatorial weapons. Spartacus and his band of gladiators plunder the region surrounding Capua and retire to a defensible position on Mount Vesuvius.[2]
  • Battle of Mount Vesuvius: Spartacus defeats a Roman militia force (3,000 men) under Gaius Claudius Glaber. The rebel slaves spend the winter of 73–72 BC training, arming and equipping their new recruits, as well as expanding their raiding territory, which includes the towns of Nola, Nuceria, Thurii and Metapontum.
India
  • King Devabhuti is assassinated by his minister Vasudeva Kanva and dies after a 10-year reign. The Shunga Empire (an Indian dynasty from Magadha) comes to an end.

72 BC

By place

Roman Republic
  • Third Servile War: Spartacus moves with his followers northward to the Po Valley. Roman forces under Lucius Gellius Publicola defeat a group of slaves (30,000 men) led by Crixus near Mount Gargano. He kills two-thirds of the rebels, including Crixus himself.[3]
  • Summer – Spartacus and his followers defeats the Roman forces under Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus Clodianus and Gellius, forcing the Roman legions to retreat in disarray. Both consuls are recalled to Rome in disgrace and relieved of their duties.[4]
  • Spartacus moves north again, to cross the Alps into Gaul and then to Thracia. Outside Mutina on the plain of the River Po he defeats the Roman forces under Gaius Cassius Longinus, governor of Gallia Cisalpina.
  • Autumn – Spartacus and his followers withdraw to the Bruttium peninsula. At one juncture he contemplates attacking Rome – but moves south. The Senate sends Marcus Licinius Crassus against Spartacus.[5]
  • Winter – Spartacus decides to camp near Thurii. Marcus Licinius Crassus with 10 Roman legions tries to trap the rebels in the toe of Italy. He builds a trench and a low earth rampart (with a fortified palisade).
  • Battle of Cabira: Lucius Lucullus defeats King Mithridates VI and overruns Pontus. Mithridates flees to Armenia, ruled by his son-in-law Tigranes, who refuses to turn his father-in-law in to Lucius Lucullus.
  • Quintus Sertorius is assassinated by his subordinate, Marcus Perperna Vento, who is in turn defeated by Gnaeus Pompeius, thus ending the Sertorian War in Spain.
Europe

71 BC

By place

Roman Republic

70 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Parthia
  • Phraates III becomes the king of Parthia.

Births

78 BC

77 BC

76 BC

  • Matthias Curtus, Jewish high priest

75 BC

74 BC

73 BC

72 BC

71 BC

  • Wang Zhengjun, Chinese empress of the Han Dynasty (d. AD 13)

70 BC

Deaths

78 BC

77 BC

76 BC

74 BC

73 BC

72 BC

71 BC

70 BC


References

  1. ^ Pompey, Command (p. 12). Nic Fields, 2012. ISBN 978-1-84908-572-4.
  2. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1:116; Florus, Epitome, 2.8; - Florus and Appian make the claim that the slaves withdrew to Mount Vesuvius, while Plutarch only mentions "a hill" in the account of Glaber's siege of the slave's encampment.
  3. ^ Appian, Civil Wars, 1.117; Plutarch, Crassus 9:7; Livy, Periochae 96. Livy reports that troops under the (former) praetor Quintus Arrius killed Crixus and 20,000 of his followers.
  4. ^ Nic Fields (2009). Spartacus and the Slave War 73–71 BC: A gladiator rebels against Rome, p. 62. ISBN 978-1-84603-353-7.
  5. ^ Shaw, Brent D (2001). Spartacus and the Slave Wars. New York: Bedford/St. Martins, pp 178–79.
  6. ^ Pompey, Command (p. 20). Nic Fields, 2012. ISBN 978-184908-572-4
  7. ^ "Herod | Biography & Facts". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 7 April 2019.
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