Chronology of Rome (TV series)
- Chronology of Rome (TV series)
This article provides a chronology of events that occur in the HBO/BBC2 original television series, "Rome", and historical events which would have affected the events depicted in the series, not all of which were explicitly mentioned.
Wikimedia Foundation.
2010.
Look at other dictionaries:
Rome (TV series) — Infobox Television show name = Rome caption = Rome title screen (1st season) aka = Roma genre = Historical Drama creator = Bruno Heller John Milius William J. MacDonald writer = director = Michael Apted creat director = developer = presenter =… … Wikipedia
chronology — /kreuh nol euh jee/, n., pl. chronologies. 1. the sequential order in which past events occur. 2. a statement of this order. 3. the science of arranging time in periods and ascertaining the dates and historical order of past events. 4. a… … Universalium
Chronology of real-time tactics video games — Part of a series on … Wikipedia
Chronology of turn-based strategy video games — Part of a series on … Wikipedia
Chronology of 4X video games — Part of a series on … Wikipedia
Chronology of Jesus — See also: Gospel harmony, Historical Jesus, and Historicity of Jesus Medieval Russian icon depicting the life of Jesus. The Chronology of Jesus aims to establish a historical order for some of the events of the life of Jesus in the four… … Wikipedia
Chronology of grand strategy video games — Part of a series on … Wikipedia
Chronology of city-building video games — Part of a series on … Wikipedia
Rome — /rohm/, n. 1. Harold (Jacob), born 1908, U.S. lyricist and composer. 2. Italian, Roma. a city in and the capital of Italy, in the central part, on the Tiber: ancient capital of the Roman Empire; site of Vatican City, seat of authority of the… … Universalium
CHRONOLOGY — GENERAL The human notion of time involves the simultaneous and successive occurrence of events; the science of chronology ascertains their proper sequence. The human idea of time also involves measuring; chronology, therefore, attempts to… … Encyclopedia of Judaism