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A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology (ed. William Smith) | 22 | 22 | Browse | Search |
Polybius, Histories | 7 | 7 | Browse | Search |
Appian, The Foreign Wars (ed. Horace White) | 1 | 1 | Browse | Search |
Appian, The Foreign Wars (ed. Horace White) | 1 | 1 | Browse | Search |
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Browsing named entities in Polybius, Histories. You can also browse the collection for 154 BC or search for 154 BC in all documents.
Your search returned 7 results in 7 document sections:
Marseilles Complains about the Ligurians
This year there came ambassadors also from the people of
B. C. 155. The Ligurians harass Marseilles and besiege Antibes and Nice.
Marseilles, who had long been suffering from the
Ligurians, and at that time were being closely
invested by them, while their cities of Antipolis
and Nicaea were also subjected to a siege.
They, therefore, sent ambassadors to Rome to
represent the state of things and beg for help. On their
being admitted, the Senate decided to send legates to see
personally what was going on, and to endeavour by persuasion
to correct the injurious proceedings of the barbarians. . . .
The peaceful mission failed, and the consul Opimius subdued
the Oxybii, a Ligurian tribe, in arms, B. C. 154. Livy, Ep. 47.
The Ligurians, Ptolemies, And Prusias
At the same time as the Senate despatched Opimius to
B. C. 154. Coss. Q. Opimius, L. Postumius Albinus. Ptolemy Physcon charges his brother with inciting a plot against his life.
the war with the Oxybii, Ptolemy the younger
arrived at Rome; and being admitted to the
Senate brought an accusation against his brother,
laying on him the blame of the attack against
his life. He showed the scars of his wounds,
and speaking with all the bitterness which
they seemed to suggest, moved his hearers
to pity him; and when Neolaidas and
Andromachus also came on behalf of the elder
Ptolemy, to answer the charges brought by his
brother, the Senate refused even to listen to
their pleas, having been entirely prepossessed by
the accusations of the younger.The Senate refues to hear the ambassadors of Ptolemy Philometor,and send commissioners to restore Physcon to Cyprus. They commanded them to
leave Rome at once; while they assigned five
commissioners to the younge
Roman Commissioners Visit Attalus and Prusias
All the previous winter Attalus had been busy collecting
The commissioners visit Attalus and Prusias early in B. C. 154.
a large army, Ariarathes and Mithridates having
sent him a force of cavalry and infantry, in
accordance with the terms of their alliance with
him. While he was still engaged in these preparations the ten commissioners arrived from
Rome: who, after meeting and conferring with him at Cadi
about the business, started to visit Prusias, to whom on meeting him they explained the orders of the Senate in terms of
serious warning. Prusias at once yielded to some of the
injunctions, but refused to submit to the greater part. The
Romans grew angry, renounced his friendship
and alliance, and one and all started to return
to Attalus. Prusias will not yield till too late. Thereupon Prusias repented; followed them a certain distance with vehement entreaties; but,
failing to gain any concession, left them in a state of great
doubt and
Roman Envoys Make Peace Between Prusias and Attalus
At the same time Athenaeus set sail with eighty
Summer of B. C. 154. Attalus's brother Athenaeus harasses the coast of Prusias's kingdom.
decked ships, of which five were quadriremes
sent by the Rhodians for the Cretan war, twenty
from Cyzicus, twenty-seven Attalus's own, and
the rest contributed by the other allies. Having
sailed to the Hellespont, and reached the cities
subject to Prusias, he made frequent descents
upon the coast, and greatly harassed the country. But when
the Senate heard the report of the commissioners who had
returned from Prusias, they immediately despatched three
new ones, Appius Claudius, Lucius Oppius, and Aulus Postumius: who, on arriving in Asia, put an end to the war by
bringing the two kings to make peace, on condition of Prusias
at once handing over to Attalus twenty decked ships, and
paying him five hundred talents in twenty years, both retaining
the territory which they had at the commencement of the