
336 BC - Wikipedia
Year 336 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Crassus and Duillius (or, less frequently, year 418 Ab urbe condita ). The …
336 BC - Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Year 336 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. The young king of Persia, Arses, objects to being controlled by Bagoas and attempts to poison him. Instead, Arses and all his …
336 BC - Wine and Alexander the Great - Wines of Greece
At the zenith of Macedonian rule, when Alexander the Great succeeded Philip (336 BC), the large hubs of winemaking and wine commerce of the Aegean came to add their mite to that of …
Achaemenid Dynasty, Persian Empire, Conqueror - Britannica
Arses (died June 336 bc) was an Achaemenid king of Persia who reigned from November 338–June 336 bc. He was the youngest son of Artaxerxes III Ochus and Atossa. Arses had …
Demetrius I Poliorcetes | Macedonian Conqueror, Military …
Demetrius I Poliorcetes (born 336 bc, Macedonia—died 283, Cilicia [now in Turkey]) was the king of Macedonia from 294 to 288 bc. Demetrius was the son of Alexander the Great’s general …
Alexander's Campaign | Alexander's Balkan Campaign - History …
The Balkan campaign began following the assassination of Philip II of Macedon by the captain of his guard named Pausanias in 336 BC. Following this Alexander III of Macedon was crowned …
【历史地图】马其顿帝國的疆域历史变化图(336BC-323BC)
【歷史地圖】中國退化史(仿外網)
336 BC : E. McNally : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : …
Unordered events occurring during the year of 336BC. This information was collected as part of a lifelong project to create a historical timeline by E. McNally. The rest of the timeline can be …
Drachm - Alexander III the Great Amphipolis - Numista
Eagle with closed wings standing right on thunderbolt. To right, forepart of Pegasus to right. Extremely rare and possibly unpublished. The ‘eagle’ coinage of Alexander was the …
History of Athens - 336 BC to 237 AD - Athens Info Guide
336 BC to 267 AD . Lycurgus of Athens, 396-323 BC. After the battle of Cheronia, Lycurgus, one of the ten Attic orators, ruled Athens from 336 until 324 BC.
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