Battle Of Actium

The naval Battle of Actium took place on September 2, 31 BC, near the Roman colony of Actium in Greece, during the Roman Civil War between Mark Antony and Octavian (later the Princeps Augustus, known later as the first Roman Emperor). The fleet of Octavian was commanded by Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, and the fleet of Antony supported by the fleet of his wife, Cleopatra, the queen of Egypt. The battle was won by the forces of Octavian and the date is often used to mark the beginning of the Roman Empire. The fleets met outside the gulf of Actium, each perhaps over 200 strong (the totals given by ancient authorities are very conflicting). Antony's heavy octeres endeavoured to close and crush the enemy with their artillery; Octavian's light and mobile craft, probably quinqueremes, made skillful use of skirmishing tactics. During the engagement Cleopatra suddenly withdrew her squadron and Antony slipped away behind her. His flight escaped notice, and the conflict remained undecided, until Antony's fleet was set on fire and thus annihilated. A year after the battle, Antony and Cleopatra both committed suicide. An account of the battle appears in Virgil's Aeneid.

External links

The Actium Project Actium Actium

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
birmingham small arms company
bovril
benjamin d. santer
bernoulli number
bubble bobble
blackwood
blackwood convention
bill bixby
beast
bronze star medal
ballarat
battle of abrittus
battle of beresteczko
bohdan khmelnytsky
boris yeltsin
ben bova
battle of okinawa
battle of el alamein
brezhnev doctrine
bain marie
ballu tundu
barbagia
brabham racing organisation
b 17 flying fortress
bathyscaphe trieste
battle of bouvines
zebra danio
balance
battle of adowa
bistable
bjrn lomborg
book of counted sorrows
banda islands
battle.net
brisbane broncos
brisbane lions
blondie
battle of chojnice
bloody sunday (1972)
bruno of querfurt
bo diddley
bela lugosi
bride of the monster
berry paradox