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409 BC

A Wisdom Archive on 409 BC

409 BC

A selection of articles related to 409 BC

409 BC, 409 BC, 409 BC - Births, 409 BC - Deaths, 409 BC - Events

ARTICLES RELATED TO 409 BC

409 BC: Encyclopedia II - 400 number - Other fields

Four hundred is also an HTTP status code for a bad request. a phrase meaning the wealthiest, most famous, or most powerful social group, leading to the generation of such lists as the Forbes 400 The Atari 400 home computer. in the title of the film Les Quatre Cent Coups (The 400 Blows), a French film directed by François Truffaut. the designation for a class of Ontario highways called 400-Series Highways.< ...

See also:

400 number, 400 number - Mathematical properties, 400 number - Other fields, 400 number - Integers from 401 to 499

Read more here: » 400 number: Encyclopedia II - 400 number - Other fields

409 BC: Encyclopedia II - Carthage - Life in Carthage

Carthage - Carthaginian Commerce. The early trading empire of Carthage depended heavily on its trade with Tartessos and other cities of the Iberian peninsula, from which it obtained vast quantities of silver and, even more importantly, tin ore, which was essential to the manufacture of bronze objects by the civilizations of antiquity. Carthage followed trade routes already established by her parent city, Tyre. When Tartessos fell, the Carthaginian ships went directly to the primary sources of tin in the northwest ...

See also:

Carthage, Carthage - Founding of Carthage, Carthage - Life in Carthage, Carthage - Carthaginian Commerce, Carthage - Carthaginian Government, Carthage - Carthaginian Religious Practices, Carthage - Conflict with the Greeks and Romans, Carthage - First Sicilian War, Carthage - Second Sicilian War, Carthage - Third Sicilian War, Carthage - Pyrrhus of Epirus, Carthage - The Messanan Crisis, Carthage - The Punic Wars, Carthage - Roman Carthage, Carthage - Carthage in fiction

Read more here: » Carthage: Encyclopedia II - Carthage - Life in Carthage

409 BC: Encyclopedia II - Dionysia - Significance

Dionysus was often seen as the god of everything uncivilized, of the innate wildness of humanity that the Athenians had tried to control. The Dionysia was probably a time to let out their inhibitions through highly emotional tragedies or irreverent comedies. During the pompe there was also an element of role-reversal - lower-class citizens could mock and jeer the upper classes, or women could insult their male relatives. This was known as aischrologia or tothasmos, a concep ...

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Dionysia, Dionysia - Rural Dionysia, Dionysia - City Dionysia, Dionysia - Origins, Dionysia - Pompe and Proagon, Dionysia - Dramatic performances, Dionysia - Significance, Dionysia - Notable winners of the City Dionysia, Dionysia - Tragedy, Dionysia - Comedy, Dionysia - Sources

Read more here: » Dionysia: Encyclopedia II - Dionysia - Significance

409 BC: Encyclopedia II - Dionysia - Rural Dionysia

The Dionysia was originally a rural festival in Attica (Dionysia ta kat' agrous), probably celebrating the cultivation of vines. It was probably a very ancient festival perhaps not originally associated with Dionysus. This "rural Dionysia" was held during the winter in the month of Poseideon (roughly corresponding to December). The central event was the pompe, the procession, in which phalloi were carried by phallophoroi. Also participating in the pompe were kanephoroi (young girls carrying baskets), ...

See also:

Dionysia, Dionysia - Rural Dionysia, Dionysia - City Dionysia, Dionysia - Origins, Dionysia - Pompe and Proagon, Dionysia - Dramatic performances, Dionysia - Significance, Dionysia - Notable winners of the City Dionysia, Dionysia - Tragedy, Dionysia - Comedy, Dionysia - Sources

Read more here: » Dionysia: Encyclopedia II - Dionysia - Rural Dionysia

409 BC: Encyclopedia II - Carthage - Roman Carthage

The site was too well-chosen to let it go to waste, however, and a new city grew up there, eventually becoming the second largest city in the western half of the Roman empire. By the late 2nd century, Carthage was the center of the Roman province of Africa, with a population of 500,000 people. It briefly became the capital of an usurper, Domitius Alexander, in 308-311. Carthage also became a centre of early Christianity. Tertullian rhetorically addresses the Roman governor with the fact that the Christians of Carthage that just yester ...

See also:

Carthage, Carthage - Founding of Carthage, Carthage - Life in Carthage, Carthage - Carthaginian Commerce, Carthage - Carthaginian Government, Carthage - Carthaginian Religious Practices, Carthage - Conflict with the Greeks and Romans, Carthage - First Sicilian War, Carthage - Second Sicilian War, Carthage - Third Sicilian War, Carthage - Pyrrhus of Epirus, Carthage - The Messanan Crisis, Carthage - The Punic Wars, Carthage - Roman Carthage, Carthage - Carthage in fiction

Read more here: » Carthage: Encyclopedia II - Carthage - Roman Carthage

409 BC: Encyclopedia II - Dionysia - Notable winners of the City Dionysia

Dionysia - Tragedy. 484 BC - Aeschylus 472 BC - Aeschylus (The Persians) 471 BC - Polyphrasmon 468 BC - Sophocles (Triptolemus) 467 BC - Aeschylus (Seven Against Thebes) 463 BC - Aeschylus (The Suppliants) 458 BC - Aeschylus (The Oresteia) 449 BC - Herakleides 441 BC - Euripides 431 BC - Euphorion, son of Aeschylus, Sophocles took 2nd place 428 BC - Euripides (Hippolytus) ...

See also:

Dionysia, Dionysia - Rural Dionysia, Dionysia - City Dionysia, Dionysia - Origins, Dionysia - Pompe and Proagon, Dionysia - Dramatic performances, Dionysia - Significance, Dionysia - Notable winners of the City Dionysia, Dionysia - Tragedy, Dionysia - Comedy, Dionysia - Sources

Read more here: » Dionysia: Encyclopedia II - Dionysia - Notable winners of the City Dionysia




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