Showing posts with label Earthquakes. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Earthquakes. Show all posts

Sunday, November 29, 2015

History Trivia - Antioch struck by an earthquake

November 29

526 - Antioch in modern day Syria was struck by an Earthquake, about 250,000 died.

939 Edmund was crowned as king of England as his half-brother Aethelstan died. 

Thursday, February 5, 2015

History Trivia - Marcus Cato, the Roman philosopher, commits suicide

February 5

 46 BC, Marcus Cato, the Roman philosopher, committed suicide by stabbing himself, after learning of the victory of his enemy, Julius Caesar, over Pompey at Thapsus.

62 Pompeii and Herculaneum were severely damaged by an earthquake. 

1204 Alexius V was proclaimed Eastern Roman Emperor during the siege of Constantinople.

Saturday, November 29, 2014

History Trivia - Edmund crowned king of England

November 29

 526 - Antioch in modern day Syria was struck by an Earthquake, about 250,000 died.

799 Pope Leo III, aided by Charles the Great, returned to Rome.

939 Edmund was crowned as king of England after the death of his half-brother Aethelstan.

1268 Clement IV died. Upon the death of Clement, no new pope was elected for almost three years. Follow on Bloglovin

Thursday, October 2, 2014

Skeletons Shed Light on Ancient Earthquake in Israel

The golden dove shaped pendant between the skeleton remains at the basilica.
Michael Eisenberg

by Rossella Lorenzi

Archaeologists have uncovered startling evidence of a severe earthquake that rumbled more than 1,700 years ago in the region of the Sea of Galilee, where Jesus performed most of the miracles described in the New Testament.
Skeletons crushed under a collapsed roof depicted a scenario of death and destruction caused by the earthquake that hit Israel and the region in 363 A.D.
Photos: Ancient Quake Revealed by Remains
The ancient city of Hippos, known as Sussita in Hebrew (both names mean “horse”) was among the most damaged centers. However, it was another powerful quake, on Jan. 18, 749, that razed the city, leaving it covered in debris, never to be resettled.
“While the evidence of the final destruction are clear and dramatic, those of the 363 are less known and not as evident in the ruins of Hippos,” said Michael Eisenberg, director of the Hippos-Sussita project, an international enterprise affiliated with the Zinman Institute of Archaeology at the University of Haifa.
“The reason is rather simple. The city was rebuilt and some of the ruins cleared while others were buried as new building enterprises took place,” he added.
Did an Earthquake Destroy Ancient Greece?
A mountaintop town overlooking the Sea of Galilee in northern Israel, Hippos was founded during the Hellenistic period, in the 2nd century B.C.
In Roman times it became known as one of the Decapolis, a group of 10 cities in Jordan, Israel and Syria which were regarded as centers of Greek and Roman culture. Hippos became a powerful city-state, allowed to mint its own coins, with the emblem of a horse on the back of each coin.
With its Graeco-Roman temples, its large marketplace and colonnaded streets, Hippos would have been for Jesus the “city set upon a hill” that “cannot be hidden.”
The city was prospering and was almost entirely Christian when the 363 quake violently struck its walls.
Ancient Magic Curse Tablet Found in Jerusalem
Eisenberg’s team found a number of skeletons crushed under a collapsed roof in the northern section of the Basilica, the largest structure in the city. Built at the end of the 1st century A.D. during the peak of Roman building in the city and the region, it served as marketplace and main seat of the judge.
Among the bones of the people killed in the collapse, the archaeologists found the skeleton of a woman with a golden pendant in the shape of a dove.
“Looking at the angle of the skeleton’s head we realized it was facing south towards the entrances to the basilica, about 140 feet away,” Eisenberg told Discovery News.
Photos: Ancient Tomb Holds Jesus Mystery
The skeletons could be dated to the 363 earthquake because of coins found trapped between the basilica floor and some architectural elements made of marble.
“The latest of those coins dated to 362 A.D. About three feet above the debris of the basilica we found Early Byzantine rooms dated by dozens of coins in the floors themselves to 383 A.D.,” Eisenberg said.
“It shows that major parts of the city were totally destroyed and neglected for a period of about 20 years,” he added.
Stunning Byzantine Mosaic Uncovered in Israel
The earthquake also destroyed the Roman baths. Located on the southern mountain cliffs and overlooking the Sea of Galilee, Tiberias and the Galilee itself, the baths’ dramatic location provided a remarkable view and breeze.
“Under the debris of the 363 earthquake we found part of a Roman statue. Superb Roman craftsmanship in marble, but just the right leg of a muscular man leaning on a trunk was found,” Eisenberg said.
He noted it’s hard to identify the statue that was above 6 feet in height, as no attributes survived.
“We do hope to find additional parts next seasons once we clear the debris of the earthquake. Like the basilica, this bathhouse was never rebuilt and another bath house was built in Hippos later on some 500ft to the north-east,” Eisenberg said.

Discovery News

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Wednesday, July 23, 2014

History Trivia - Crusaders attack Damascus

July 23

 365 a great earthquake struck the eastern Mediterranean and destroyed the Roman city of Kourion on the island of Cyprus.

685 John V became Roman Catholic pope. He was the first pope of the Byzantine Papacy allowed to be consecrated by the Byzantine Emperor without prior consent, and the first in a line of ten consecutive popes of Eastern origin. His papacy was marked by reconciliation between the city of Rome and the Empire.

1148 Crusaders attacked Damascus.

1313 Bridget the patron saint of Sweden who founded the Brigittine Order died. Bridget was a Swedish princess renowned for her piety from her childhood; she was given in marriage to Ulf, Prince of Mercia, by whom she had a large family. After Ulf's death in 1344 and with the help of King Magnus, she established on her own estate at Vadstena the first monastery for men and women, of which Katherine, her daughter, became the first Abbess soon after her death in 1375. At this time double monasteries were not unusual: the monks and nuns used the same chapel, but lived in separate wings of the monastery, the confessor alone having access to the nuns.

 
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Sunday, January 26, 2014

History Trivia - 5th recorded perihelion passage of Halley's Comet

January 26

66 5th recorded perihelion passage of Halley's Comet.

1316 Revolt in Wales against the authority of Edward II began.

1340 King Edward III of England was declared King of France.

1531 An earthquake killed thousands in Lisbon, Portugal.

1564The Council of Trent issued its conclusions in the Tridentinum, which established a distinction between Roman Catholicism and Protestantism.

Thursday, December 5, 2013

History Trivia - The French Franc is created

December 5

63 BC Marcus Tullius Cicero, the consul of Rome, read the last of his Catiline Orations, exposing to the Roman Senate the plot of Lucius Sergius Catilina and his allies to overthrow the Roman government.

1349 Five hundred Jews of Nuremberg were massacred during Black Death riots.

1360 The French Franc was created.

1456 Earthquake struck Naples and about 35,000 died.

1484 Pope Innocent VIII issued the Summis desiderantes, a papal bull that deputized Heinrich Kramer and James Sprenger as inquisitors to root out alleged witchcraft in Germany and lead to one of the most oppressive witch hunts in European history.

1536 The Pilgrimage of Grace against Henry VIII's Reformation was persuaded to disband by the duke of Norfolk.