90s
- Note: Sometimes the '90s is used as shorthand for the 1990s, the 1890s, or other such decades in various centuries – see List of decades.
90s: events by year
Contents: 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99
By place
Roman Empire
Asia
By topic
Art
Literature
Religion
By place
Roman Empire
Asia
By topic
Arts and sciences
By place
Roman Empire
Dacia
By place
Roman Empire
Asia
Roman Empire
Asia
By topic
Arts and sciences
By place
Roman Empire
By topic
Medicine
- In Rome a severe form of malaria appears in the farm districts and will continue for the next 500 years, taking out of cultivation the fertile land of the Campagna, whose market gardens supply the city with fresh products. The fever drives small farmers into the crowded city, they bring the malaria with them, and lowers Rome's live-birth rate while rates elsewhere in the empire rising.
Religion
By place
Roman Empire
By topic
Arts and sciences
Religion
By place
Roman Empire
Asia
By topic
Religion
By place
Roman Empire
- Emperor Nerva suffers a stroke during a private audience. Shortly after he dies of a fever at his villa in the Gardens of Sallust.
- January 27 – Nerva is succeeded by his adopted son Trajan.
- Trajan is the first Roman Emperor born in Italica, near Seville. A brilliant soldier and administrator, he enters Rome without ceremony and wins over the public. Continuing the policies of Augustus, Vespasian and Nerva, he restores the Senate to its full status in the government. He has a specific vision of the Empire, and keeps a close watch on finances. Taxes, without any increase, are sufficient during his reign to pay the considerable costs of the budget.
- The informers used by Domitian to support his tyranny are expelled from Rome.
- In order to maintain the Port of Alexandria, Trajan reopens the canal between the Nile and the Red Sea.
- Carrying out an idea of Nerva's, Trajan begins a form of state welfare aimed at assuring that poor children are fed and taken care of.
By topic
Arts and sciences
Commerce
- The silver content of the Roman denarius rises to 93 percent under emperor Trajan, up from 92 percent under Domitian.
Significant people
Births
Deaths
References