230 BC

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Millennium: 1st millennium BC
Centuries: 4th century BC3rd century BC2nd century BC
Decades: 260s BC  250s BC  240s BC 230s BC 220s BC  210s BC  200s BC
Years: 233 BC 232 BC 231 BC230 BC229 BC 228 BC 227 BC
230 BC by topic
Politics
State leaders – Sovereign states
Birth and death categories
Births – Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments – Disestablishments
230 BC in other calendars
Gregorian calendar230 BC
Ab urbe condita524
Armenian calendarN/A
Assyrian calendar4521
Bahá'í calendar−2073 – −2072
Bengali calendar−822
Berber calendar721
English Regnal yearN/A
Buddhist calendar315
Burmese calendar−867
Byzantine calendar5279–5280
Chinese calendar庚午(Metal Horse)
2467 or 2407
     to 
辛未年 (Metal Goat)
2468 or 2408
Coptic calendar−513 – −512
Discordian calendar937
Ethiopian calendar−237 – −236
Hebrew calendar3531–3532
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat−173 – −172
 - Shaka SamvatN/A
 - Kali Yuga2872–2873
Holocene calendar9771
Igbo calendar−1229 – −1228
Iranian calendar851 BP – 850 BP
Islamic calendar877 BH – 876 BH
Japanese calendarN/A
Juche calendarN/A
Julian calendarN/A
Korean calendar2104
Minguo calendar2141 before ROC
民前2141年
Thai solar calendar314

Year 230 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Barbula and Pera (or, less frequently, year 524 Ab urbe condita). The denomination 230 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

Asia Minor

  • The city of Pergamum is attacked by the Galatians (Celts who have settled in central Anatolia) because the leader of Pergamum, Attalus I Soter, has refused to pay them the customary tribute. Attalus crushes his enemy in a battle outside the walls of his city and to mark the success he takes the title of king and the name Soter.

Greece

  • King Agron of Illyria dies. Pinnes, the son of Agron and Agron's first wife Triteuta, officially succeeds his father as king, but the kingdom is effectively ruled by Agron's second wife, Queen Teuta (Tefta), who expels the Greeks from the Illyrian coast and then launches Illyrian pirate ships into the Ionian Sea, preying on Roman shipping. She continues her husband's policy of attacking cities on the west coast of Greece and practising large-scale piracy in the Adriatic and Ionian Seas.

Roman Republic

  • With Roman merchants being killed by the Illyrian pirates, envoys are sent by Rome to Illyria. After the Roman ambassador lucius Coruncanius and the Issaean ambassador Cleemporus are murdered at sea by Illyrian soldiers after causing offence to Queen Teuta, Roman forces occupy the island of Corcyra with the aim of humbling Teuta.

Egypt

China

India

Births

Deaths

References

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