雅虎香港 搜尋

搜尋結果

  1. Antipater I the Idumaean (Biblical Edom) (died 43 BC), was the founder of the Herodian Dynasty. Judah Maccabee's nephew Hyrcanus I actually forcibly converted.

    • 253-255 Ad Eldest Son of Gallienus
    • Monetary System
    • Posthumous Coinage

    Publius Licinius Cornelius Valerianus was the older son of Gallienus and Salonina. As a youth, he was raised to the rank of Caesar in 253 AD. He was being tutored by the eventual usurper Ingenuus (died 260AD). He apparently died two years later, in 255 AD. He was too young to participate in any major events during his father’s reign. Following his ...

    Mints:Rome, Antioch, Cyzicus, Milan, Siscia Obverse Legends: As Caesar (253-255 AD) VALERIANVS CAES P C L VALERIANVS NOB CAES Posthumus struck by Valerian and Gallienus DENOMINATIONS AU Aureus (6.54 grams) AR Antoninianus Æ Antoninianus AR Denarius (3.54 grams) AR Quinarius (1.58 grams) Æ Sestertius Æ Dupondius Æ As

    AU Aureus (6.54 grams) AR Antoninianus Æ Billion Antoninianus (silver washed) AR Quinarius (1.58 grams) Æ Billion Quinarius (silver washed) Æ Sestertius Æ Dupondius Æ As EGYPT Æ Tetradrachm (Egypt)

  2. Placidius Valentinian III was born in 419 AD the son of Constantius III and Galla Placidia. Placidia fled from the court of Honorius at Ravenna in 423 AD when.

  3. Baktrian Kingdom. Baktria (Bactria), was the easternmost region of all the Greek realms. Located in Central Asia, one of Baktria was one of the Hellenistic states founded by the successors of Alexander the Great.

  4. 253-260 AD. Pubius Licinius Valerianus was a man from a respected Roman family, Valerian had held various offices in the government during the reign of Trajan Decius (249-251AD).

  5. www.armstrongeconomics.com › research › monetary-history-ofCaesarion | Armstrong Economics

    Caesarion | Armstrong Economics. Spread the love. Caesarion was the son of Julius Caesar and Cleopatra VIII. His formal name was Ptolemy XV Philopator Philometor Caesar. He was born June 23, 47 BC and was murdered August 23, 30 BC).

  6. Gratian was a devout Catholic. He was the first Emperor of Rome to refuse the title pontifex maximus , which became a title reserved for the Pope. Gratian was also the first Emperor to order the removal of the Altar of Victory from the Senate House in Rome.