280 BC

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Millennium: 1st millennium BC
Centuries:
Decades:
Years:
280 BC in various
AG
Thai solar calendar263–264
Tibetan calendar阳金龙年
(male Iron-Dragon)
−153 or −534 or −1306
    — to —
阴金蛇年
(female Iron-Snake)
−152 or −533 or −1305

Year 280 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Laevinus and Coruncanius (or, less frequently, year 474 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 280 BC for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.

Events

By place

Seleucid Empire

  • Antiochus makes his eldest son, Seleucus, king in the east, but he proves to be incompetent.
  • Antiochus is compelled to make peace with his father's murderer and King of Macedon,
    Ptolemy Keraunos
    , abandoning, for the time being, his plans to control Macedonia and Thrace.
  • Zipoites
    . Antiochus actually invades Bithynia but withdraws again without risking a battle.
  • Antiochus is unable to bring under his control the Persian dynasties that rule in Cappadocia.
  • Antiochus is defeated by Egypt's Ptolemy II in the Damascene War.

Greece

Roman Republic

China

  • General Sima Cuo of the
    Bashu
    . This conquest makes it easier for future Qin armies to invade Chu.
  • General
    State of Zhou and captures the city of Guanglang.[1]

By topic

Astronomy

  • Aristarchus of Samos uses the size of the Earth's shadow on the Moon to estimate that the Moon's radius is one-third that of the Earth. He proposes, for the first time, a heliocentric view of the Solar System, but is ignored due to the lack of evidence of the Earth's motion.

Births

  • Xun Zi
    's philosophy (approximate date)
  • Li Si, influential prime minister (or chancellor) of the feudal state and later of the dynasty of Qin (approximate date) (d. 208 BC)
  • Philo of Byzantium, a Greek writer on mechanics (approximate date) (d. c. 220 BC)

Deaths

  • Demetrius Phalereus), Athenian orator, statesman, and philosopher, who has become prominent at the court of Ptolemy I, enjoying a high reputation as an orator (b. c. 350 BC
    )
  • Herophilus, Alexandrian physician who has been an early performer of public dissections on human cadavers; often called the father of anatomy (b. c. 335 BC
    )

References

  1. ^ Qian, Sima. Records of the Grand Historian, Section: Basic Annals of Qin, Section: Bai Qi.
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