230s BC
Decade From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article concerns the period 239 BC – 230 BC.
239 BC
By place
Carthage
- Concerned that Hamilcar Barca's leniency in pardoning those who he has captured who have participated in the Mercenary War will encourage others to defect, Mathos and Spendius order the mutilation and execution of "about seven hundred" Carthaginian prisoners, including Gesco. With the mercenaries jointly guilty of these atrocities, defectors dare not face Carthaginian justice under Hamilcar.
- Carthage is besieged by the mercenary armies, while the city of Utica revolts and attempts to secede from Carthage. Carthage appeals to Hiero II of Syracuse and to Rome for aid against the mercenaries. However, the mercenary leaders reject the efforts of Roman mediators.
- Sardinia revolts against Carthage and Rome takes the opportunity to annex the island.
Greece
- Antigonus II, King of Macedonia, dies and is succeeded by his son, Demetrius II.
- With Aetolia now as its ally, the Achaean League under the command of Aratus of Sicyon repeatedly attacks Athens and Argos.
Seleucid Empire
- Seleucus II's brother Antiochus Hierax, who is governor of Seleucid Anatolia, sends an army into Syria ostensibly to assist Seleucus but actually to seize the rest of the empire. After achieving peace with Egypt, Seleucus II promptly invades Anatolia and begins the "War of the Brothers".
Persia
- Diodotus of Bactria defeats an army of Parthians. He dies shortly thereafter and is succeeded by his son Diodotus II.
China
- Cheng Jiao, the half-brother of Ying Zheng, the king of Qin, is sent to attack the State of Zhao, but he attempts to usurp power and is defeated and executed.
- Qin Prime Minister Lü Buwei publishes the "Spring and Autumn Annals of Lü Buwei" (Lüshi Chunqiu).[1]
- Rough date: The Zhao general Pang Nuan captures the Qi city of Rao'an and the Yan cities of Li and Yangcheng.[2]
Korea
- Haemosu, who is a descendant of the people of the empire of Gojoseon, establishes the ancient kingdom of Bukbuyeo in modern-day Jilin, northeast China.
Births
239 BC
- Quintus Ennius, Latin poet and writer, considered the father of Roman poetry (approximate date)
238 BC
236 BC
- Scipio Africanus, Roman general in the Second Punic War and statesman of the Roman Republic (approximate date) (d. 183 BC)[9]
235 BC
- Ellalan, king of the Anuradhapura Kingdom (d. 161 BC)
234 BC
- Marcus Porcius Cato (Cato the Elder), Roman statesman, (d. 149 BC)
- Mete Khan, Xiongnu emperor, (d. 174 BC)
232 BC
- Xiang Yu, Chinese rebel general against the Qin dynasty, as well as the later nemesis of Liu Bang in the civil war of the Chu-Han contention (d. 202 BC)
231 BC
- Hieronymus, tyrant of Syracuse (d. 214 BC)
- Han Xin, prominent Chinese general of the early Han dynasty is born.
Deaths
239 BC
- Antigonus II Gonatas, king of Macedon from 277 BC who has rebuilt his kingdom's power and established its hegemony over Greece (b. c. 319 BC)
- Diodotus I, king of the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom (b. c. 285 BC)
- Huanhui of Han, Chinese king of the Han State
238 BC
- Andragoras, Seleucid governor (satrap) of Parthia
- Autaritus, Gallic mercenary leader
- Chunshen, Chinese nobleman
- Hannibal, Carthaginian general
- Kaolie of Chu, Chinese king of the Chu State
- Lao Ai, Chinese eunuch and official
- Xun Zi, Chinese philosopher (approximate date)
237 BC
- Xun Zi, Confucian philosopher who has contributed to one of the Hundred Schools of Thought (b. c. 310 BC)
- Istolatios, warlord of the Turdetani (Iberian Peninsula), crucified by Hamilcar Barca (father of Hannibal)
235 BC
- Aristippus, Greek tyrant of Argos
- Lü Buwei, Chinese politician (b. 291 BC)
234 BC
- Pharnavaz I of Iberia, King of Georgia
- Zenodotus of Ephesus, first librarian of the Library of Alexandria
233 BC
- Deidamia II is the Greek princess and daughter of Pyrrhus II of Epirus (approximate date)
- Han Fei, Chinese philosopher who, along with Li Si, has developed Xun Zi's philosophy into the doctrine embodied by the School of Law (or Legalism) (b. c. 280 BC)
232 BC
- Ashoka, Indian emperor, who has ruled the Maurya Empire across the Indian subcontinent from 273 BC (b. 304 BC)
- Cleanthes of Assos, Stoic philosopher who has been the head of the Stoic school from 263 BC, after the death of Zeno of Citium (b. c. 301 BC)
231 BC
- Agron, king of the Ardiaean Kingdom (Western Balkans)[10]
230 BC
- Adherbal, admiral of the Carthaginian fleet who has battled for domination of the Mediterranean Sea for Carthage in the First Punic War against Rome
- Agron of Illyria as aforementioned (vid. supra)
- Aristarchus of Samos, Greek astronomer and mathematician (b. c. 310 BC)
References
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