Science Fair Project Encyclopedia
Timeline of Ancient Rome
This is a Timeline of events concerning Ancient Rome, from the city foundation until the last attempt of the Roman Empire of the East to conquer Rome.
Note: After the 3rd century AD, the timeline is very incomplete – you can help Wikipedia by adding dates to it.
| Contents |
8th century BC
- 753 BC – Traditional date for the founding of Rome by Romulus; Rome as a kingdom
- 753/715 BC – reign of Romulus
- 715/673 BC – reign of Numa Pompilius: creation of the Roman senate and the priestly offices
7th century BC
- 673/642 BC – reign of Tullus Hostilius: building of the Curia Hostilia – the senate-house
- 642/617 BC – reign of Ancus Marcius
- 617/578 BC – reign of Lucius Tarquinius Priscus: building of the Circus Maximus, Rome gets the first system of sewers; first census
6th century BC
- 578/534 BC – reign of Servius Tullius: defined the sacred boundary of Rome - the pomerium
- 534/509 BC – reign of Lucius Tarquinius Superbus, the last Roman king: builds temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus
- 509 BC – Roman Republic begins: expulsion of Tarquinius Superbus: first consuls are Lucius Junius Brutus and Lucius Tarquinius Collatinus
- 508 BC – The office of pontifex maximus (high priest) is created
5th century BC
- 496 BC – Rome defeats the Latin League at the battle of Lake Regillus
- 494 BC – Two tribunes of the plebs and two plebeian aediles are elected for the first time
- 459 BC – The college of the tribune of the Plebs is raised from two to ten tribunes
- 451 BC – The Decemviri publishes the Twelve Tables of Roman law
- 447 BC – Assembly of the People created: two quaestors elected for the first time
- 445 BC –
- The office of consul is replaced by an assembly of military tribune with consular powers
- Marriage between patricians and plebeians allowed
- 443 BC – Censors elected for the first time
- 421 BC – Number of quaestors raised from 2 to 4; office opened to plebeians
4th century BC
- 396 BC –
- Rome conquers the Etruscans
- Roman soldiers earn their first salary
- 390 BC – The Gauls defeat the Roman army at the battle of the Allia; sack of Rome by the Gauls
- 375/371 BC – Anarchy years: no magistrates elected
- 367 BC – The consulship restored in its original form
- 366 BC –
- Elected the first non-patrician consul: Lucius Sextius Sextinus
- Office of Praetor urbanus created
- 351 BC – Elected the first non-patrician censor
- 343/341 BC – First Samnite war
- 342 BC - Lex Genucia: no man can hold the same office before 10 years have elapsed from the first election
- 338 BC – Latin League dissolved after yet another rebellion
- 326/304 BC – Second Samnite war
- 300 BC - Lex Ogulnia: priesthoods opened to plebeians
3rd century BC
- 298/290 BC – Third Samnite war
- 283 BC – Rome defeats the Etruscans and the Boii (a Gallic tribe) in the Battle of Lake Vadimo
- 280/275 BC – War against Pyrrhus, king of Epirus (modern Greece)
- 267 BC – Number of quaestors raised from 4 to 6
- 264/241 BC – First Punic War against Carthage
- 242 BC - Office of Praetor peregrinus created
- 241 BC – Following the defeat of Carthage, Sardinia and Corsica becomes the first Roman province
- 227 BC – Number of quaestors raised from 6 to 8; number of praetors raised from 2 to 4
- 224 BC – Rome defeats invading Gallic army at the Battle of Telamon
- 223 BC – Rome defeats Gauls in Cisalpine Gaul
- 218/201 BC – Second Punic War against Carthage
- 216 BC – Hannibal inflicts a disaster for Rome at the Battle of Cannae
- 214/205 BC – First Macedonian War, Romans defeated
- 213/211 BC – Siege of Syracuse, Rome captures the city
- 204/202 BC – Scipio Africanus Major invades Africa, Hannibal recalled and defeated in the Battle of Zama in 202 BC
- 202/196 BC – Second Macedonian War, Roman victory
2nd century BC
- 197 BC –
- Hispania Ulterior and Hispania Tarraconensis become Roman provinces
- Number of quaestors raised from 8 to 12; number of praetors raised from 4 to 6
- 192/189 BC – Syrian war against the Seleucid dynasty
- 180 BC – Lex Villia annalis: established minimum ages for the cursus honorum offices; determined an interval of two years between offices
- 172/167 BC – Third Macedonian War, Roman victory
- 154/138 BC – War against the Lusitanians
- 149/146 BC – Third Punic War against Carthage
- 149/148 BC – Fourth Macedonian War
- 149 BC – A permanent extortion court is established by Lex Calpurnia
- 146 BC – Scipio Aemilianus Africanus (Scipio Africanus the Younger) puts an end in the Punic and Macedonian threat by destroying the cities of Carthage and Corinth; Macedonia and Africa are annexed as provinces
- 133 BC – The tribune Tiberius Gracchus is murdered after approving an agrarian reform
- 121 BC –
- Rome acquires the province of Transalpine Gaul (south of modern France) and a safe land route to Hispania
- The Senate approves the first Senatus consultum de re publica defenda to deal with the threat of violence started by tribune Gaius Gracchus
- 112/106 BC – Jugurthine War against king Jughurta of Numidia, eventually defeated and captured by Marius
- 105 BC – The invading tribe of the Cimbri inflict a major defeat on the Roman army in the battle of Arausio
- 104/100 BC - Gaius Marius elected consul for five years in a row
- 102 BC - Romans under Marius defeat Teutons in the Battle of Aquae Sextae
- 101 BC - Romans under Marius and Quintus Lutatius Catulus defeat the Cimbri in the Battle of Vercellae
1st century BC
- 91/88 BC – Social wars, the last rebellion of the Italian nations against Rome
- 88 BC – Sulla crosses the pomerium with his legions and invades Rome
- 88/85 BC – First Mithridatic War against Mithridates VI of Pontus
- 83/82 BC – First Roman civil war, between Sulla and the popular faction; Sulla wins and becomes dictator; censor office abolished (to be recreated in 70 BC)
- 83/82 BC – Second Mithridatic War; Sulla returns to Rome and is nominated dictator
- 82/72 BC – Sertorius, the last Marian general continues the civil war in Hispania
- 74/66 BC – Third Mithridatic War , eventually won by Pompey
- 67 BC – Pompey clears the Mediterranean of pirates
- 63 BC –
- 59/54 BC – First triumvirate, an alliance between Julius Caesar, Pompey and Crassus
- 58/50 BC – Caesar fights the Gallic wars, acquiring the province of Gallia Comata
- 54/53 BC – First campaign against the Parthian Empire; Crassus utterly defeated and killed
- 49 BC – Caesar crosses the Rubicon (alea iacta est) and begins the Second Roman civil war against the Optimates, the conservative faction of the senate, led by Pompey
- 48/45 BC – Caesar pursues and defeats the Optimates in Greece and Africa
- 44 BC – Caesar is assassinated in the Ides of March
- 44/42 BC – Third Roman civil war, between the assassins of Caesar (led by Cassius and Brutus) and Caesar's heirs, Octavian and Mark Antony
- 43 BC – Octavian, Antony and Lepidus form the second triumvirate
- 36 BC – Antony' Parthian campaign ends in failure
- 32 BC – End of peaceful relations between Octavian and Antony
- 31 BC – In the battle of Actium, Octavian decisively defeats Antony and Cleopatra
- 30 BC – Antony and Cleopatra commit suicide; Egypt becomes a Roman province
- 27 BC – End of the Republic, begin of the Roman Empire: Octavian is now called Augustus Caesar and becomes the sole ruler of Rome
- 28/24 BC – Augustus' campaigns against the Cantabrians in Hispania Tarraconensis
- 16/15 BC – Augustus' campaigns against the Alpine tribes
- 12/7 BC – Tiberius and Drusus conquer Pannonia and campaign against the Germanic tribes
1st century
- 5 – Tiberius conquers Germania Inferior
- 6 – Judaea becomes a Roman province
- 6/9 – Rebellions in Pannonia and Dalmatia suppressed by Germanicus
- 9 – Three Roman legions are ambushed and massacred by the Germans in the Battle of the Teutoburg Forest
- 11 – Germania Inferior and the Rhine secured by Germanicus
- 14 – Death of Augustus, Tiberius becomes emperor
- 14/15 – Germanicus campaigns against the Germanic tribes
- 26 – Tiberius retires to Capri, governing Rome by proxy
- 28 – The tribe of the Frisii rebel because of taxes
- 31 – The fall of Sejanus
- 37 –Caligula becomes emperor
- 41 –Claudius becomes emperor
- 43 – Claudius orders the Roman invasion of Britain
- 54 –Nero becomes emperor
- 60/61 – Boudicca, queen of the Iceni, leads a rebellion that devastates Britain
- 64 – Rome is destroyed by fire; Nero blames the Christians and orders first persecution
- 66/74 – Jewish rebellions in Judea
- 68 – Nero commits suicide – end of the Julio-Claudian dynasty; succeeded by Galba
- 69 – Year of the four emperors: after the assassination of Galba, Otho and Vitellius briefly become emperors before Vespasian's accession to power in the end of the year; Flavian dynasty begins
- 69/70 – Civilis leads the Batavian rebellion in Germania Inferior; defeated by Quintus Petillius Cerialis
- 71/84 – pacification of Britain, conquest of modern Wales and Scotland
- 79 –
- Titus Flavius becomes emperor
- August 24, an eruption of Vesuvius destroys of Pompeii and Herculaneum
- 80 – Rome partially destroyed by fire
- 81 – Domitian becomes emperor
- 85 – king Decebalus of Dacia rebels and invades Moesia
- 89 – rebellions in Germania Inferior and Pannonia force peace with Decebalus of Dacia
- 96 – Domitian killed – end of Flavian dynasty; succeeded by Nerva, the first of the Five good emperors
- 98 – Trajan becomes emperor
2nd century
- 101/102 – First Dacian War
- 105/106 – Second Dacian War; king Decebalus commits suicide and Dacia becomes a province
- 106 – Building of Trajan's Forum and construction of Trajan's column
- 113/117 – Trajan's unsuccessful campaigns against the Parthian Empire
- 115/117 – Jewish rebellions in Egypt
- 117 – Hadrian becomes emperor
- 121/125 – Hadrian travels through the Northern Empire
- 122 – construction of Hadrian's Wall begins
- 128/132 – Hadrian travels through Africa and the Eastern Empire
- 131/135 - Jewish rebellions led by Simon bar Kokhba
- 138 – Antoninus Pius becomes emperor
- 140/143 – After a rebellion Antoninus conquers Scotland; construction of Antonine Wall begins
- 150/163 – rebellions in Scotland, Antonine Wall is abandoned and reoccupied several times
- 161 – Marcus Aurelius becomes emperor
- 162/166 – Lucius Verus unsuccessful campaigns against the Parthian Empire
- 167 – The tribe of the Marcomanni crosses the Danube and invades Dacia
- 168/175 – Marcus Aurelius' campaigns against the Marcomanni
- 180 – Death of Marcus Aurelius, the last of the Five good emperors; Commodus becomes emperor
- 184 – Antonine Wall abandoned for the last time
- 193 – Commodus is murdered. After the short two and a half month reign of Pertinax, Septimius Severus becomes emperor. There is opposition from first from Pescennius Niger, then from Clodius Albinus
- 197 – Septimius Severus secures the empire after the battle of Lugdunum
- 198 – Septimius Severus invades Parthia
3rd century
- 208/211 – Severus campaigns against the Caledonians
- 211 – Caracalla becomes emperor
- 217 – Caracalla murdered; Macrinus becomes emperor
- 218 – Elagabulus usurps the throne
- 222 – Alexander Severus becomes emperor
- 284 – Diocletian becomes emperor
4th century
- 330 – Constantine I makes Constantinople the capital
- 378 – Valens is defeated and killed by the Goths at the Battle of Adrianople
- 395 – Theodosius I divided the empire into two halves
5th century
- 410 – Rome is sacked by Alaric I
- 447 – Eastern Rome loses to Attila the Hun
- 455 – Rome is plundered by the Vandals
- 468 – Leo I launches a naval expedition against the Vandals
- 475 – Romulus Augustus becomes emperor
- 476 – Romulus Augustus forced to abdicate. Traditional date for the fall of the western Roman Empire.
6th century
- 533 – Justinian I begins to restore the empire in the west; Belisarius defeats the Vandals at the Battle of Ad Decimum and the Battle of Ticameron
- 536 – Belisarius recaptures Rome from the Ostrogoths
- 552 – Narses defeats the Ostrogoths at the Battle of Taginae
- 553 – Narses defeats the Ostrogoths at the Battle of Mons Lactarius
- 568 – The Lombards invade Italy; no further attempts to restore the empire
History – Ancient History - Ancient Rome – Timeline of Ancient Rome
See also: List of ancient Romans – List of Roman battles – Military History of Rome – Political Institutions of Rome – Roman culture
10-26-2009 08:16:03
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details
The contents of this article is licensed from www.wikipedia.org under the GNU Free Documentation License. Click here to see the transparent copy and copyright details


