Pompey Born: Conqueror Who Reshaped Rome's East
Pompey rose through Rome's military ranks to become the Republic's most celebrated general, clearing the Mediterranean of pirates and annexing vast eastern territories that tripled Roman revenue. His fatal decision to challenge Julius Caesar in civil war ended at the Battle of Pharsalus, and his subsequent assassination in Egypt sealed the Republic's irreversible slide toward one-man rule.
September 29, 106 BC
What Else Happened on September 29
Themistocles lured the massive Persian fleet into the narrow straits of Salamis, where the Greeks’ agile triremes systematically dismantled Xerxes’ superior num…
Pompey paraded captured kings, gold, and a fleet of pirate ships through Rome to mark his third triumph on his forty-fifth birthday. This spectacle cemented his…
Pompey arranged his third Roman triumph to land exactly on his 45th birthday — a scheduling flex that was entirely intentional and entirely him. He paraded the …
Danish invaders breached Canterbury’s walls after a three-week siege, seizing Archbishop Ælfheah as a high-value hostage. This capture forced the English crown …
Frederick II kept promising to go on Crusade. He promised in 1215, again in 1220, again in 1227 — and kept not going. When he finally sailed in 1227 and turned …
King Henry III forced Llywelyn ap Gruffudd to accept the title of Prince of Wales only as his feudal vassal in the Treaty of Montgomery. This arrangement grante…
Talk to History
Have a conversation with historical figures who witnessed this era. Ask questions, explore perspectives, and bring history to life.