18 September 96 – the emperor Domitian is assassinated in his bedroom in the Domus Augustiana around ten or eleven AM; Nerva hailed as emperor by the praetorian guard
18 September 96–27 January 98 – reign of the emperor Nerva
19 September 96 – the Senate passes a decree giving Nerva his official power; the Senate passes a damnatio memoriae against Domitian, and imperial shields and images torn down
c. December 96 – publication of Book 11 of Martial’s Epigrams, shortly after the accession of Nerva
winter 96–97 – T. Vestricius Spurinna (24–c. 105) is in Rome; by late 97 is away from Rome
97
1 January 97 – Imp. Nerva Caesar Augustus III (January–February) and L. Verginius Rufus III are ordinary consuls
4–19 September – the Ludi Romani (Roman Games)
September 97 – mutiny of the praetorian guard led by Casperius Aelianus; Sex. Julius Frontinus, L. Julius Ursus Servianus, and L. Licinius Sura support Trajan
October 97 – Nerva announces the adoption of Trajan in the Forum, who now takes the name Marcus Ulpius Nerva Traianus
October 97 – T. Vestricius Spurinna sent as an embassy to Trajan to announce his adoption?
4–17 November – the Ludi Plebeii (Plebeian Games)
winter 97–98 – Trajan spends the winter at Colonia Claudia Agrippina (Cologne), capital Germania Inferior
17–23 December – the Saturnalia, the winter solstice festival of Saturn, with a sacrifice at the temple of Saturn and a public feast
98
c. 98 – Tacitus writes the Agricola
98 – return of Martial to his home at Augusta Bilbilis (now Calatayud) in Hispania Tarraconensis, Spain
98–100 – Pliny is prefect of the treasury of Saturn (praefectus aerari Saturni)
98–102 – Pliny writes the 14 letters of Book 10 of his Letters
1 January 98 – Imp. Nerva Caesar Augustus IV (to 13 January) and Imp. Caesar Nerva Trajanus II (January–June) are ordinary consuls
27 January 98 – death of the emperor Nerva at his villa in the Horti Sallustiani
27 January 98–8 August 117 – reign of the emperor Trajan
28 January 98 – the dies imperii of Trajan
c. January 98 – publication of a revised edition of Book 10 of Martial’s Epigrams, about the time of Trajan’s entrance into Rome
after January 98 – the execution of Casperius Aelianus and the ringleaders of the insurrection against Nerva
2 February 98 – the public funeral of Nerva
January 98 – suffect consuls with Trajan down to June:13 January 13–31 January – Cn. Domitius Tullus II and Trajansummer 98? – Trajan inspects the Danube frontier
February – Sex. Julius Frontinus II and Trajan
March – L. Julius Ursus II and Trajan
April – T. Vestricius Spurinna II and Trajan
May–June – C. Pomponius Pius
99
autumn 99 – Trajan’s entry into Rome
before October/December 99 – Trajan’s donativium and congiarium
100–110 100
c. 100–110 – publication date of Juvenal’s first satire
c. 100 – publication of Book 12 of Martial’s Epigrams; death of Quintilian (Marcus Fabius Quintilianus, 35–c. 100 AD)
January 100 – Imp. Caesar Nerva Trajanus Augustus III (January) and Sex. Julius Frontinus III (January–February) are ordinary consuls
c. September–October 100 – Pliny the Younger is suffect consul with C. Julius Cornutus Tertullus
100 – Pliny gives his Panegyricus Traiani in the Senate
101
25 March 101 – Trajan leaves Rome for Dacia
101–102 – the first Dacian War of Trajan25 March 101 – Trajan leaves Rome for Daciawinter 101–102 – Decebalus attacks the Roman province of Moesia; battle of Nicopolis and Adamclisi
c. June 101 – Roman army crosses the Danube at Viminacium
September 101 – second battle of Tapae
winter 101–102 – Trajan on the Danube
winter 101–102 – Decebalus attacks the Roman province of Moesia; battle of Nicopolis and Adamclisi
spring 102 – Roman army crosses the Danube at Lederata;
summer 102 – Lusius Quietus and Moorish cavalry attack Decebalus via the Vulcan Pass; Laberius Maximus marches along the Olt valley and takes the Red Tower Pass
summer 102 – Trajan, Quietus and Maximus join forces at the hot springs of Aquae (Calan), 20 miles from the Dacian capital.
summer – submission of Decebalus; annexation of the Banat; permanent bridge over the Danube at Drobeta built
102
c. 102–104 – death of Marcus Valerius Martialis (Martial)
January 102 – L. Julius Ursus Servianus II (January–April) and L. Licinius Sura II (January–February) are ordinary consuls
spring 102 – Roman army crosses the Danube at Lederata;
summer 102 – Lusius Quietus and Moorish cavalry attack Decebalus via the Vulcan Pass; Laberius Maximus marches along the Olt valley and takes the Red Tower Pass
summer 102 – Trajan, Quietus and Maximus join forces at the hot springs of Aquae (Calan), 20 miles from the Dacian capital.
summer – submission of Decebalus; annexation of the Banat; permanent bridge over the Danube at Drobeta built
late 102 – Trajan returns to Rome
28 December 102? – Trajan’s Dacian triumph
103
103 – Silius Italicus commits suicide by starvation in Campania, because of a tumour
103 – Pliny is propraetor of Bithynia; from 103–104 Pliny is publicly elected Augur
c. 103/104 – death of Sextus Julius Frontinus (c. 40–103 AD)
104
104–106 – Pliny is superintendent for the banks of the Tiber (curator alvei Tiberis)
104–107 – Pliny is three times a member of Trajan’s judicial council
105
4 June 105? – Trajan leaves Rome for Dacia
June 105–106 – Trajan’s Second Dacian War, after the Dacian King Decebalus violates the peace terms with the Rome4 June 105? – Trajan leaves Rome for Dacia106 AD
autumn 105/106 – Trajan arrives in Drobeta
spring 106 – crossing of the Drobeta bridge and invasion of Dacia
spring 106 – invasion via Danube plain and Vulcan Pass route and the Petroseni Basin
c. July 106 – capture of Sarmizegethusa Regia
after 2 September 106 – Ti. Claudius Maximus and a band of auxiliaries kill Decebalus in the Carpathians
autumn 106 – Trajan at Ranisstorium (Piatri Craivii)
summer 106? – foundation of Porolissum
106/107? – battle of Porolissum
early 106 – annexation of the Nabataean kingdom?
spring 106 – crossing of the Drobeta bridge and invasion of Dacia
spring 106 – invasion via Danube plain and Vulcan Pass route and the Petroseni Basin
c. July 106 – battle of Sarmisegetusa, with the legions II Adiutrix and IV Flavia Felix and a detachment (vexillatio) from Legio VI Ferrata; capture of Sarmizegethusa Regia
after 2 September 106 – Ti. Claudius Maximus and a band of auxiliaries kill Decebalus in the Carpathians
autumn 106 – Trajan at Ranisstorium (Piatri Craivii)
summer 106? – foundation of Porolissum
106/107? – battle of Porolissum
107
by 107 – annexation of the Nabataean kingdom
January 107 – L. Licinius Sura III (January–February or April) and Q. Sosius Senecio II are ordinary consuls
c. June 107 – Trajan leaves the Balkans
June 107 – Trajan arrives in Rome
108
c. 108 – publication of early books of Tacitus’ Historiae?
108 – the IX Hispana legion at York building the fort
c. 108 – Arrian studies under Epictetus at Nicopolis in Epirus
c. 108 – death of Lucius Licinius Sura; Trajan gives him a public funeral
June 108 – P. Aelius Hadrianus is suffect consul
109
c.109/111 – Trajan appoints Pliny as legatus Augusti to Bithynia-Pontus
11–24 November 109 – Trajan inaugurates a naumachia (for mock-sea battles) and holds Dacian games
110
c. 110 – Trajan appoints Pliny as legatus Augusti to Bithynia-Pontus
c. 110–c.113 – Pliny is legatus Augusti to Bithynia-Pontus
110s
111
autumn 111 – departure of Hadrian for Syria?
112 AD
112/113 – Tacitus is governor of Asia
January 112 – Imp. Caesar Nerva Trajanus Augustus VI (January) and T. Sextius Cornelius Africanus (January–March) are ordinary consuls
1 January 112 – dedication of Forum and Basilica build by Trajan
28 January 112 – 15 days of games in theatris tribus
before 29 August 112 – Plotina and Marciana are given the title Augusta
29 August 112 – death of Marciana (the sister of Trajan)
3 September 112 – funeral of Marciana (the sister of Trajan)
113
c. 113 – possible death of Pliny during his appointment in Bithynia-Pontus
113 – the Parthian king Osroes deposes the Armenian ruler Exedares and appoints Parthamasiris
early May 113 – Trajan holds the third set of Dacian games
12 May 113 – Trajan dedicates his Column
autumn 113 – Trajan leaves Rome for the east
December 113 – Trajan arrives in Antioch
114
7 January 114 – Trajan and Hadrian enter Antioch
January–April 114 – Trajan in Antioch
c. May 114–117 – Trajan’s Parthian war, between the Parthian Empire and Rome in Mesopotamiac. May 114 – Trajan arrives in Satala, with an army of 8 legions or 80,000 menlate 114 – Roman forces occupy Armenia
summer 114 – Trajan marches to Elegeia in Armenia and receives the submission of Parthamasiris; Trajan annexes Armenia
summer 114 – Trajan remains in Elegeia and receives the submission of local rulers
late 114 – Roman forces occupy Armenia
winter 114–115 – Trajan in Armenia
spring 115 – Trajan invades northern Mesopotamia from Armenia
summer 115 – Trajan takes Batnae, Nisibis and Adiabene
winter 115–116 – Trajan spends the winter in Antioch; great earthquake in Syria
early 116 – Trajan leaves Antioch; one division invades Adiabene, including Ninus, Arbela and Gaugamela; a second division moves along the Tigris and attacks Babylon
summer 116 – Trajan accompanies a fleet along the Euphrates; he has fleet dragged over land by engines to the Euphrates to capture Seleucia and Ctesiphon; Trajan travels to Charax
later 116 – Trajan visits Babylon; rebellion in Mesopotamia; Lusius Quietus recovers Nisibis and Edessa; Seleucia is burnt
later 116 – battle of Ctesiphon; Trajan crowns Parthamaspates as client-king of Parthia in Ctesiphon and cedes part of Armenia to Parthia
later 116 – siege of Hatra
winter 116–117 – Trajan in Antioch
c. July 117 – Trajan leaves Seleucia-in-Pieria for Rome
8 August 117 – death of the emperor Trajan in Selinus (modern Gazipasa) in Cilicia
winter 114–115 – Trajan in Armenia
115
spring 115 – Trajan invades northern Mesopotamia from Armenia
summer 115 – Trajan takes Batnae, Nisibis and Adiabene
after October 115?–summer/autumn 117 – the Kitos War, major uprisings by ethnic Jews in Cyrenaica, Egypt, Cyprus during Trajan’s Parthian War
winter 115–116 – Trajan spends the winter in Antioch; great earthquake in Syria
116
21 February 116 – a letter of Trajan reaches the Senate informing them of the new provinces of Armenia and Mesopotamia
February 116 – Trajan honoured with the title of Parthicus
early 116 – Trajan leaves Antioch; one division invades Adiabene, including Ninus, Arbela and Gaugamela; a second division moves along the Tigris and attacks Babylon
summer 116 – Trajan accompanies a fleet along the Euphrates; he has fleet dragged over land by engines to the Euphrates to capture Seleucia and Ctesiphon; Trajan travels to Charax
summer 116 – Jewish uprisings in Cyprus, Egypt and Cyrene
later 116 – Trajan visits Babylon; rebellion in Mesopotamia; Lusius Quietus recovers Nisibis and Edessa; Seleucia is burnt
later 116 – battle of Ctesiphon; Trajan crowns Parthamaspates as client-king of Parthia in Ctesiphon and cedes part of Armenia to Parthia
later 116 – siege of Hatra
winter 116–117 – Trajan in Antioch
117
c. 117 – publication of Book 2 of Tacitus’ Ab excessu divi Augusti (Annals)? (alternative date: from 106–115); later books possibly in the 120s
summer/autumn 117 – Marcius Turbo ends the Jewish war
8 August 117 – death of the emperor Trajan in Selinus (modern Gazipasa) in Cilicia
9 August 117 – Trajan’s letter of adoption reaches Hadrian at Antioch
10 August 117 – accession of the emperor Hadrian
10 August 117–10 July 138 – reign of the emperor Hadrian
11 August 117 – news of Trajan’s death reaches Antioch
c. 12 August 117 – Hadrian orders the evacuation of Mesopotamia, Assyria and Greater Armenia; Lusius Quietus (governor of Judaea) removed from office
13–19 October 117 – Hadrian in Mopsucrene, 12 miles beyond Tarsus, then northwards over the Taurus into Cappadocia, via Tyana
late October 117 – Hadrian in Ancyra; he founds a “mystic contest” (mystikos agon) for the worship of Dionysus
11 November 117 – Hadrian was in Bithynia
late 117 – Hadrian withdraws from plains of Oltenia and Muntenia, the south-eastern flank of the Carpathians and southern Moldavia
118
c. 118 – publication of Arrian’s Parthica, a history of Trajan’s Parthian war
January 118 – Hadrian at Byzantium; he is consul with Pedanius Fuscus (the husband of his niece Julia)
Marcius Turbo made governor of both Dacia and Pannonia Inferior
early 118 – the Senate orders the executions of C. Avidius Nigrinus, in alleged conspiracy against Hadrian (he returns to Faventia (Faenza) in northern Italy); Lusius Quietus executed; A. Cornelius Palma executed at the Campanian resort of Baiae, and L. Publius Celsus at Tarracina in Latium
spring 118 – Hadrian in Pannonia
9 July 118 – Hadrian’s return to Rome
10 July 118 – Hadrian addends the senate?
c. 118 – dismissal of Publius Acilianus Attianus as praetorian prefect
summer 118? – Hadrian gave the people a double congiarium, in person (praesens), or six aurei a head
summer 118? – retirement of Servius Sulpicius Similis as Praetorian prefect; appointment of Gaius Septicius Clarus
summer 118? – appointment of Suetonius Tranquillus as ab epistulis
late 118? – Hadrian remits nine hundred million sesterces in tax arrears owed to the fiscus in the years from 104–118
119
119 – war in northern Britain
January–April 119 – Hadrian is ordinary consul at Rome
August 119 – victory in the Danubian war or British war?
119 – Hadrian’s trip to Campania; the Stoic philosopher, Euphrates of Tyre, commits suicide
December 119 – Augusta Matidia (Trajan’s niece) dies
end of 119 – funeral and consecration of Matidia
120s 120
120–125 – birth of Apuleius
120s – publication of the Anabasis of Arrian of Nicomedia
c. 120–130 – death of Tacitus
121
c. April 121 – Hadrian leaves Rome for Gaul, possibly from Ostia, Massilia, and the Rhonel Turbo stays in Rome, with M. Annius Verus as Prefect of the City
121 – Hadrian’s army reforms begin
winter 121–122 – Hadrian in Germany
122
122 – Hadrian in Rhaetia and Noricum
122–128 – construction of Hadrian’s wall, which starts in the east and proceeded westwards
c. June 122 – Hadrian crosses to Britain
by 17 July 122 – Platorius Nepos governor of Britain
summer – Hadrian in Britain
c. 122/123 – Hadrian dismisses Septicius Clarus (praetorian prefect) and Suetonius Tranquillus and others
autumn/winter 122 – death of Borysthenes, Hadrian’s horse
winter 122–123 – Hadrian spends the winter at Tarraco, Spain
123
124
125
126
126 – Arrian of Nicomedia appointed to the Senate
127
128
129
130
c. October 130 – Antinous falls into the Nile and dies while on Hadrian’s journey down the Nile after the visit to Hermopolis Magna
130s 131
132
summer/autumn 132 – beginning of the Bar Kokhba revolt in Modi’in
132–136 – the Bar Kokhba revolt (or The Third Jewish–Roman War or Second Revolt of Judea), led by Simon bar Kokhba
133
134
135
136
137
138
1 January 138 – death of Lucius Aelius Caesar (Lucius Ceionius Commodus), heir of Hadrian
c. 138 – death of Juvenal after the year of Hadrian’s death
11 July 138–7 March 161 – reign of Antoninus Pius
161
8 March 161–17 March 180 – reign of Marcus Aurelius
8 March 161–January/February 169 – reign of Lucius Verus
summer/autumn 161–166 – the Roman–Parthian War of 161–166:summer/autumn 161 – Vologases enters Armenia, expels the king and installs Pacorus (an Arsacid)162
winter 161–162 – Marcus Aurelius decides to send Lucius Verus to the east
summer 162 – Lucius Verus travels to Brundisium
summer 163 – Legions I Minervia (under M. Claudius Fronto) and V Macedonica (under P. Martius Verus) under Marcus Statius Priscus invade Armenia and capture Artaxata; Parthians invade Osroene
late 163 – Roman forces occupy Dausara and Nicephorium
165 – Martius Verus and the V Macedonica take Edessa and Nisibis; Avidius Cassius and the III Gallica move down the Euphrates and fight a battle at Dura-Europos
late 165 – Cassius’ army takes Seleucia and Ctesiphon; Ctesiphon’s royal palace burned
165/166 – Cassius’ army crosses the Tigris into Media
spring 166 – army withdraws from Mesopotamia
summer 162 – Lucius Verus travels to Brundisium
163
summer 163 – Legions I Minervia (under M. Claudius Fronto) and V Macedonica (under P. Martius Verus) under Marcus Statius Priscus invade Armenia and capture Artaxata; Parthians invade Osroene
late 163 – Roman forces occupy Dausara and Nicephorium
164
166
spring 166 – army withdraws from Mesopotamia
166/167–175 – First Marcomannic War
spring 168 – Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus’ expedition to Aquileia
169
January 169 – death of Lucius Verus
autumn 169 – Marcus Aurelius with his son-in-law Claudius Pompeianus begin a campaign against the tribes (especially the Iazyges) between the Danube and Dacia
170
spring 170 – battle of Carnuntum between the Marcomanni and Germanic tribes (under Ballomar) and the Romans
172 – the Romans cross the Danube and subjugate the Marcomanni, the Varistae or Naristi and the Cotini
173 – the Romans campaign against the Quadi
175
c. April 175 – Avidius Cassius declares himself emperor
July 175 – murder of Avidius Cassius in Egypt
176
23 December 176 – Marcus Aurelius and Commodus celebrate a joint German triumph
177
177–autumn 180 – Second Marcomannic War
180
17 March 180–31 December 192 – sole reign of Commodus
182
182/183 – conspiracy of Lucilla; execution of Claudius Pompeianus and Ummidius Quadratus; exile of Lucilla to Capri
9 December 182 – coins record that Commodus has the title Pius
183
c. 183 – assassination of Saoterus
185 – execution of the praetorian prefect Sextus Tigidius Perennis after a plot by Cleander
190
June 190 – execution of Cleander
193 AD
1 January 193 – 28 March 193 – reign of Pertinax
28 March 193–1 June 193 – reign of Didius Julianus
14 April 193–4 February 211 – reign of Septimius Severus
1 June 193 – execution of Didius Julianus in the palace
198 – Severus makes Caracalla Augustus
200
22 January 205 – execution of the praetorian prefect Lucius Fulvius Plautianus
208–4 February 211 – Septimius Severus’ expedition to Britain
c. 208–224 – Artabanus V of Parthia
4 February 211–8 April 217 – Caracalla is emperor
4 February 211– 26 December 211– Geta (rule with Caracalla)
26 December 211 – murder of Geta
winter 215–216 – Caracalla in Nicomedia with the army
April 215 – Caracalla arrives at Antioch
November 215 – Caracalla arrives in Pelusium
December 215–March/April 216 – Caracalla in Alexandria
spring 216–summer 217 – Caracalla’s Parthian war:summer 216 – Caracalla attacks country east of the Tigris near borders of Adiabene11 April 217–8 June 218 – Macrinus
winter 216/217 – Caracalla winters at Edessa
8 April 217 – assassination of Caracalla
summer 217 – battle of Nisibis between Macrinus and King Artabanus V
16 May 218–11 March 222 – Elagabalus
11 March 222–18/19 March 235 – Severus Alexander
28 April 224 – Ardashir I defeats Artabanus V of Parthia at the battle of Hormozdgan; end of Parthian dynasty
28 April 224–651 – Sasanian Empire
224–242 – reign of Ardashir I, first king of Sasanian Empire:224–242 – Ardashir I28 April 224 – Ardashir I, crowned at Ctesiphon as the sole ruler of Persia (alternative dates: 226 or 6 April 227)
12 April 240–May 270 – Shapur I
May 270–June 271 – Hormizd I
June 271–September 274 – Bahram I
September 274–293 – Bahram II
293 – Bahram III
293–302 – Narseh
302–309 – Hormizd II
309 – Adur Narseh
309–379 – Shapur II
379–383 – Ardashir II
383–388 – Shapur III
388–399 – Bahram IV
399–21 January 420 – Yazdegerd I
20 March 235–early May 238 – Maximinus Thrax
22 April–29 July 238 – Pupienus and Balbinus
22 March–12 April 238 – Gordian I and Gordian II
22 April–29 July 238 – Gordian III
244–249 – Philip the Arab
249–251 – Decius
253–260 – Valerian
253–268 – Gallienus
September 268–January 270 – Claudius Gothicus
September 270–September/October 275 – Aurelian
25 September 275–June 276 – Marcus Claudius Tacitus
July–September 276 – Florianus
276–September/October 282 – Probus
282–283 – Carus
20 November 284–1 May 305 – reign of Diocletian:20 November 284–July 285 – (in competition with Carinus)300
July 285–1 April 286 – (alone)
1 April 286–1 May 305 – (as Senior Augustus of the east, with Maximian in the west)
2 April 286–1 May 305 – Maximian is Augustus of the West
305–306 – Constantius Chlorus is Augustus in the west
305–306 – the Synod of Elvira in Hispania Baetica, now Granada in southern Spain
1 May 305 – in Milan and Nicomedia, Diocletian and Maximian retired simultaneously
1 May 305–summer 306 – Valerius Severus appointed Caesar of the West
East
1 April 286–1 May 305 – Diocletian Senior Augustus of the east
1 May 305–late April/early May 311 – Galerius Augustus in the East
11 November 308 – Licinius appointed Augustus (Illyricum, Thrace and Pannonia and the West)
310–May 313 – Maximinus II Augustus in the east
311 – Maximinus divides Eastern Empire between Licinius and himself
313–324 – Licinius is Augustus in the eastWest
2 April 286–1 May 305 – Maximian is Augustus of the West
1 May 305–25 July 306 – Constantius Chlorus is Augustus in the west
25 July 306–29 October 312 – Constantine is Caesar in the west
28 October 306–28 October 312 – Maxentius
11 November 308 – Galerius’ general council at Carnuntum
28 October 312 – battle of the Milvian Bridge between Constantine I and Maxentius
25 July 306–22 May 337 – reign of Constantine the Great:25 July 306–29 October 312 – Constantine is Caesar in the westsummer 306–March/April 307 – Valerius Severus Augustus in the west
309 – Constantine self-proclaimed Augustus
29 October 312 – Constantine enters Rome
29 October 312–19 September 324 – Constantine undisputed Augustus
February 313 – Edict of Milan
3 July 324 – the Battle of Adrianople between Constantine I and Licinius
18 September 324 – the battle of Chrysopolis between Constantine and Licinius
19 September 324–22 May 337 – Constantine is emperor of whole empire
324 – foundation of Constantinople
11 May 330 – dedication of Constantinople
28 October 306 – Maxentius and his father Maximian declared Augusti
28 October 306–28 October 312 – Maxentius
late 307 – Galerius leads an invasion of Italy against Maxentius but retreats north with his army
early 308 – Maximian forced to leave Italy in disgrace after trying to remove his son from power
11 November 308 – Galerius’ general council at the military city of Carnuntum (with Diocletian, Galerius, and Maximian): Maximian forced to abdicate; Constantine was again demoted to Caesar; Licinius appointed Augustus in the western regions
11 November 308–313 – Licinius appointed Augustus in the west (Danube, Illyricum, Thrace and Pannonia and the West)
309 – Maximian returns to the court of Constantine in Gaul
c. July 310 – Maximian hanged himself
April/May 311 – death of Galerius on journey from Thessalonica to Romuliana, perhaps Serdica; he is buried in mausoleum at Gamzigrad-Romuliana, part of his palace, in Zaječar in Serbia
9 June 311 – Licinius in Serdica
28 October 312 – battle of the Milvian Bridge between Constantine I and Maxentius
28 October 312 – death of Maxentius while crossing the Tiber in Rome
3 December 312 – death of Diocletian at his Palace
February 313 – Edict of Milan
30 April 313 – battle of Tzirallum between Licinius and Maximinus, at Çorlu, in Tekirdağ Province, in the Turkish region of Eastern Thrace; Maximinus defeated and he flees to Tarsus
July/August 313 – death of Maximinus II in Tarsus
East 313–324
July/August 313–18 September 324 – Licinius is Augustus I in the East
July–18 September 324 – Martinian is Caesar of LiciniusWest 313–324
28 October 312–18 September 324 – Constantine the Great is Augustus in the West
1 March 317–326 – Crispus is Caesar of his father Constantine I
25 July 306–22 May 337 – reign of Constantine the Great
1 March 317–326 – Crispus is Caesar of his father Constantine I
3 July 324 – the Battle of Adrianople between Constantine I and Licinius
July 324 – battle of the Hellespont, two separate naval clashes between Constantine’s fleet (led by Crispus) and a larger fleet under Licinius’ admiral, Abantus
18 September 324 – battle of Chrysopolis (modern Üsküdar), near Chalcedon between Constantine I and Licinius; Licinius defeated
19 September 324–22 May 337 – Constantine is emperor of whole empire
8 November 324 – foundation of Constantinople when Constantine marks out the perimeter
winter 324–325? – Constantine tours Asia Minor and Antioch
spring 325 – death of Licinius in Thessalonica
20 May–19 June 325 – Constantine presides over the First Ecumenical Council at Nicaea
spring/summer 326 – execution of Crispus
11 May 330 – Constantine I dedicates Constantinople
22 May 337 – death of Constantine at his suburban villa Achyron, near Nicomedia
summer 337 – killing of Dalmatius (Caesar of Thracia, Achaea and Macedonia)
September 337 – death of Hannibalianus (nephew of Constantine I and Rex Regum et Ponticarum Gentium)
9 September 337 – Constantine II, Constantius II and Constans meet at Pannonia and divide the empire
East
337–350 – Constantius II co-Augustus (Constantinople, Thrace, Asia Minor, Syria, Egypt, and Cyrenaica)
18 January 350–11 August 353 – MagnentiusWest
September 337–340 – Constantine II is Augustus (Gaul, Britannia and Hispania)
337–350 – Constans (Italy, Africa, Illyricum, Pannonia, Macedonia, and Achaea)
337–340 – Constantine II is joint emperor (over Gaul, Hispania, and Britannia) with Constantius II and Constans
337–3 November 361 – rule of Constantius II:337–340 – Constantius II is co-Augustus (ruling Asian provinces and Egypt) with Constantine II and Constans350 – assassination of Constans in Helena (now Elne) in the eastern Pyrenees of southwestern Gaul by supporters of the general Magnentius
340 – killing of Constantine II in an ambush outside Aquileia in civil war with Constans
340–350 – Constantius II is co-Augustus with Constans
350 – assassination of Constans in Helena (now Elne) in the eastern Pyrenees of southwestern Gaul by supporters of the general Magnentius
350–361 – Constantius II is sole Augustus of the Roman Empire
350–361 – Constantius II is sole Augustus of the Roman Empire
351 – battle of Mursa Major between Constantius II and Magnentius
6 November 355–February 360 – Julian the Apostate is Caesar in Gaul
3 November 361 – Constantius II dies of fever in Mopsucrene, Cilicia
3 November 361–26 June 363 – Julian the Apostate is emperor of the entire empire
11 December 361 – Julian entered Constantinople as sole emperor
27 June 363–17 February 364 – reign of Jovian
Showing posts with label Chronology of the Roman Empire 200–300 AD. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chronology of the Roman Empire 200–300 AD. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 27, 2018
Chronology of the Roman Empire 100–300 AD
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