369 BC

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369 BC by topic
Politics
State leaders - Sovereign states
Birth and death categories
Births - Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments - Disestablishments

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Events

By place

Greece

  • After driving off the Spartan army that has threatened Mantinea, Epaminondas of Thebes moves south and crosses the Evrotas River (the frontier of Sparta), which no hostile army has breached in historical memory. The Spartans, unwilling to engage the massive Theban army in battle, remain inside their city while the Thebans and their allies ravage Laconia.
  • Epaminondas briefly returns to Arcadia, then marches south to Messenia, a territory which the Spartans had conquered some 200 years before. There, Epaminondas starts the rebuilding of the ancient city of Messene on Mount Ithome, with fortifications that are among the strongest in Greece. He then issues a call to Messenian exiles all over Greece to return and rebuild their homeland. The loss of Messenia is particularly damaging to the Spartans, since the territory comprises one-third of Sparta's territory and contains half of their helot population.
  • On returning to Thebes, Epaminondas is put on trial by his political enemies who charge that he has retained his command longer than constitutionally permitted. While this charge is considered to be true, Epaminondas persuades the Thebans that this has been necessary to protect Thebes and its allies and reduce the power of Sparta. As a result, the charges against him are dropped.
  • In a search for a balance of power against the now powerful Thebes, Athens responds to an appeal for help from Sparta and allies itself with its traditional enemy.
  • On the death of the Macedonian King Amyntas III, his eldest son Alexander II becomes king. The young king is simultaneously faced with an Illyrian invasion from the north-west and an attack from the east by the pretender of the Macedonian throne, Pausanias (who quickly captures several cities and threatens the queen mother, Eurydice). Alexander defeats his enemies with the help of the Athenian general Iphicrates, who has been sailing along the Macedonian coast on the way to recapture Amphipolis.
  • Alexander of Pherae becomes tyrant of Thessaly following the death of his father. Alexander's tyranny causes the Aleuadae of Larissa to seek the help of Alexander II of Macedon. Alexander II successfully gains control of Larissa and several other cities but, betraying a promise he has made, put garrisons in them. This provokes a hostile reaction from Thebes. The Theban general Pelopidas drives the Macedonians from Thessaly.
  • Pelopidas forces Alexander to abandon his alliance with Athens in favour of Thebes by threatening to support Alexander's brother-in-law, Ptolemy of Aloros. As part of this new alliance, Alexander is compelled to hand over hostages, including his younger brother Philip, the future conqueror of Greece.
  • Cleomenes II succeeds his brother Agesipolis II as Agiad king of Sparta.

Births

Deaths

bs:369 p.n.e. ca:369 aC cs:369 př. n. l. da:369 f.Kr. de:369 v. Chr. el:369 π.Χ. es:369 adC eo:-369 eu:K. a. 369 fr:-369 ko:기원전 369년 hr:369. p. n. e. io:369 aK id:369 SM it:369 a.C. ka:ძვ. წ. 369 la:369 a.C.n. lb:-369 hu:I. e. 369 ms:369 SM nl:369 v.Chr. new:इ॰ पू॰ ३६९ nap:369 AC no:369 f.Kr. nn:-369 oc:-369 uz:Mil. av. 369 pl:369 p.n.e. pt:369 a.C. ro:369 î.Hr. ru:369 год до н. э. sq:369 p.e.s. sk:369 pred Kr. sl:369 pr. n. št. sr:369. п. н. е. su:369 SM fi:369 eaa. sv:369 f.Kr. th:พ.ศ. 175 uk:369 до Р.Х. vec:369 a.C. zh:前369年

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