450 BC
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "450_BC"
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Millennium: 1st millennium BC
Centuries: 6th century BC - 5th century BC - 4th century BC
Decades: 480s BC  470s BC  460s BC  - 450s BC -  440s BC  430s BC  420s BC
Years: 453 BC 452 BC 451 BC - 450 BC - 449 BC 448 BC 447 BC
450 BC by topic
Politics
State leaders - Sovereign states
Birth and death categories
Births - Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments - Disestablishments
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Greek colonies in the northern part of the Black Sea in 450 BC.
450 BC in other calendars
Gregorian calendar 450 BC
Ab urbe condita 304
Armenian calendar N/A
Bahá'í calendar -2293 – -2292
Berber calendar 501
Buddhist calendar 95
Burmese calendar -1087
Byzantine calendar 5059 – 5060
Chinese calendar [[Sexagenary cycle|]]年
(2187/2247)
— to —
[[Sexagenary cycle|]]年
(2188/2248)
Coptic calendar -733 – -732
Ethiopian calendar -457 – -456
Hebrew calendar 33113312
Hindu calendars
 - Vikram Samvat -394 – -393
 - Shaka Samvat N/A
 - Kali Yuga 2652 – 2653
Holocene calendar 9551
Iranian calendar 1071 BP – 1070 BP
Islamic calendar 1104 BH – 1103 BH
Japanese calendar
Korean calendar 1884
Thai solar calendar 94
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Events

By place

Greece

  • Athenian general Cimon sails to Cyprus with two hundred triremes of the Delian League. From there, he sends sixty ships to Egypt to help the Egyptians under Amyrtaeus, who is fighting the Persians in the Nile Delta. Cimon uses the remaining ships to aid an uprising of the Cypriot Greek city-states against Persian control of the island. Cimon lays siege to the Persians stronghold of Citium on the south west coast of Cyprus. However, the siege fails and Cyprus remains under Phoenician (and Persian) control.
  • During the siege Cimon dies and the command of the fleet is given to Anaxicrates, who leaves Citium to engage the Phoenician fleet in the Battle of Salamis in Cyprus. The Greek fleet is victorious against the Persians and their allies and then returns to Athens.
  • The Athenians reduce the tribute due from their subject city-states (ie members of the Delian League), and each city is allowed to issue its own coinage.
  • 5,000 talents are transferred to the treasury of the Delian League in Athens.
  • The Temple of Theseus is completed in Athens.

Macedonia

Roman Republic

  • The success of the first Decemvirate prompts the appointment of a second Decemvirate which also includes plebians amongst its members. This second decemviri adds two more headings to their predecessor's ten, completing the Law of the Twelve Tables (Lex Duodecim Tabularum), which will form the centrepiece of Roman law for the next several centuries. Nevertheless, this Decemvirate's rule becomes increasingly violent and tyrannical.

Sicily

  • After minor preliminary successes (including the capture of Inessa from its Greek colonists), Ducetius, a Hellenised leader of the Siculi, an ancient people of Sicily, is decisively defeated by the combined forces of Syracuse and Acragas. Ducetius flees to exile in Corinth.

By topic

Arts

Births

Deaths

  • Cimon, Athenian statesman and general (b. c. 510 BC)
  • Alexander I, king of Macedonia (approximate date)
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