Events relating to italy

To help the king of Syracuse extract water from the hold of a ship (so the story goes), Archimedes invents the screw now known by his name

A Roman naval victory at Trapani, off the northwest tip of Sicily, completes the blockade of the Carthaginians and ends the First Punic War

At the end of the First Punic War, Sicily becomes Rome's first overseas province

Hannibal destroys a Roman army at Cannae, in the most severe defeat ever suffered by Rome

The Romans, after defeating Macedon, announce at the Isthmian Games that all Greek states are now free under Roman protection

Plautus and Terence, in the second and third century BC, create a Roman drama based on Greek originals

The Roman statesman Cato the Elder writes Origines ('Origins'), a history of Rome which survives only in fragments

The tribune Gaius Gracchus is murdered by an armed group, led by a consul, after which 3000 of his supporters are rounded up and executed

A German tribe, the Cimbri, press into northern Italy until they are defeated at Vercellae and driven out of the peninsula

A three-year war, known as the Social War, breaks out between Rome and her Italian allies

The Roman general Sulla takes the unprecedented step of marching upon Rome with a Roman army, to restore his own faction to power

Sulla, campaigning to the east, besieges Athens and then allows his army to loot the city

Gaius Marius, uncle of Julius Caesar, marches on Rome and massacres many of the supporters of Sulla

Julius Caesar marries Cornelia Cinna, whose family, like Caesar's own, are in the faction opposed to Sulla

Sulla takes Rome for the second time, after a battle at the Colline Gate, and then publishes his lethal 'proscriptions'

Sulla launches a massacre of his opponents and Julius Caesar is lucky to escape with his life, but his inheritance is confiscated

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