110s BC

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

This article concerns the period 119 BC – 110 BC.

Events

119 BC

By place

Roman Republic
  • The
    second Dalmatian war
    begins.
China
  • Emperor Wu suspends further campaigning against the Xiongnu due to a shortage of horses.[1][2]
  • Government monopolies are established in
    iron, salt and liquor
    .

118 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Numidia
China

117 BC

116 BC

By place

Egypt

115 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Middle East
  • Parthia makes a trade treaty with China.
  • The
    Kingdom of Sheba
    collapses.

114 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Asia Minor

113 BC

By place

Roman Republic
  • Teutones cross the Danube and enter the lands of the Celtic tribe, the Taurisci (centered in what is now Austria and north-eastern Italy). The latter sent emissaries to Rome, seeking help in dealing with the migration. The Senate sends consul Gnaeus Papirius Carbo across the Julian Alps, to deal with the migration at the head of an army (some 30,000 men). He offers guides to escort them out of the territory of the Taurisci. The guides are instructed to lead the tribes to the town of Noreia, where Carbo sets an ambush. The Cimbri manage to discover Carbo's plan, they turn the tables and defeat the Romans during an ambush. Carbo manages to escape with the remnants of his consular army (some 6,000 men) during a heavy thunderstorm. Later, he is indicted by the Senate for losing the battle, but escapes conviction by committing suicide.[3][4]
  • Germanic tribes attack Gaul and northern Iberia
    .
  • Celtiberians lead a war against the Romans.
Syria
Numidia
China
  • The state of Nanyue, a vassal of the Han dynasty, agrees to submit to Han laws and receives envoys to oversee the succession of the young king Zhao Xing.[5]

By topic

Art
  • An incense burner, later found in the tomb of
    Hebei Provincial Museum, Shijiazhuang
    .

112 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Asia
  • Han-Nanyue War
  • Lü Jia, Premier of the Han vassal state of Nanyue, opposes increased Han control and refuses to appear before the king of Nanyue and the envoys of Han. He rebels against the Han when Emperor Wu sends an armed force of 2,000 men to kill him and his allies. Lü kills king Zhao Xing and his regent, Queen Dowager Jiu, massacres the Han force, and installs Zhao Jiande as king.[6]
  • Autumn – Emperor Wu launches a major invasion of Nanyue, sending five riverine fleets to invade under Lu Bode, Yang Pu and three former Yue generals.[7]
  • The king of Dongyue, Zou Yushan, sends an army to link up with Yang Pu, but he secretly sends an envoy to Zhao Jiande and halts the transport fleet to await the war's outcome, claiming that the weather is preventing its advance.[8]
  • Emperor Wu executes his favourite necromancer Luan Da for fraud.[9]

111 BC

By place

Roman Republic
China
  • Han-Xiongnu War: the Han generals Gongsun He and Zhao Ponu invade deep into Xiongnu territory, Gongsun marching from Wuhuan and Zhao from Lingju. However, neither come upon a Xiongnu army. There follows a period of several years in which the Han and Xiongnu seek to establish peace.[11][12]
  • Han-Dongyue War
  • Autumn – After learning that Yang Pu had suggested an invasion of Dongyue to Emperor Wu of Han, Dongyue's king, Zou Yushan, declares himself 'Emperor Wu' and sends an army under Zou Li to invade Han territory. They capture Baisha, Wulin and Meiling, and the Han Treasurer Zhang Cheng is executed for avoiding the Dongyue army.
  • Emperor Wu of Han sends two maritime fleets and three armies, including an army under Yang Pu, to invade Dongyue.[13]

110 BC

By place

Roman Republic
Asia
  • In winter, the Han general Yang Pu retakes Wulin, and a faction of Dongyue nobles kill their king Zou Yushan before surrendering to the Han general Han Yue.
  • Emperor Wu of Han annexes Dongyue and Minyue and relocates their population to the area between the Yangtze and Huai rivers.[14]

Births

118 BC

117 BC

116 BC

115 BC

114 BC

111 BC

110 BC

Deaths

119 BC

118 BC

117 BC

116 BC

115 BC

114 BC

113 BC

112 BC

111 BC

110 BC

  • Sima Tan, Chinese astrologist and historian

References

  1. .
  2. ^ Qian, Sima. Records of the Grand Historian, Section: Xiongnu, Section: Wei Qing & Huo Qubing.
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  12. ^ Qian, Sima. Records of the Grand Historian, Section: Wei Qing & Huo Qubing.
  13. .
  14. .
  15. ^ "Marcus Terentius Varro". Encyclopaedia Britannica. Retrieved February 22, 2024.
  16. .