-
Carthaginian general in 218 BC, the city was
occupied by the
Romans (Latin:
Emporiae). In the
Early Middle Ages, the city's
exposed coastal position left it...
- M****ille and
their other colonies such as Agde, Nice, Antibes, Monaco,
Emporiae and Rhoda. The Gr****s from
Phocaea also
founded settlements in the island...
- Phocaea's
major colonies were to the west.
These included Alalia in Corsica,
Emporiae and
Rhoda in Spain, and
especially M****alia (M****ille) in France. Phocaea...
-
Battle of
Cissa and
established their army at
Tarraco and
their fleet at
Emporiae. Hasdrubal,
commanding only 8,000
troops and
outnumbered by the Romans...
-
Thurston Peck,
Harpers Dictionary of
classical Antiquities (1898), E,
Emporiae, Encaustĭké". www.****us.tufts.edu.
Pliny the
Elder 1855, Book 35, ch...
- The
latter left a
small garrison at
Tarraco and took the
fleet back to
Emporiae.[citation needed]
Hasdrubal then
incited the Ilergetes, who had
given Gnaeus...
-
Thurston Peck,
Harpers Dictionary of
classical Antiquities (1898), E,
Emporiae, Eparĭti". www.****us.tufts.edu.
Retrieved 2023-10-06. "Xenophon, ****enica...
- [citation needed] Gr****
coinage occurred in
three Gr****
cities of M****alia,
Emporiae and Rhoda, and was
copied throughout southern Gaul.
Northern Gaulish coins...
-
Thurston Peck,
Harpers Dictionary of
classical Antiquities (1898), E,
Emporiae, Epaphrodītus". www.****us.tufts.edu.
Retrieved 19
January 2025. "Epaphroditus...
- 915956; -6.337893 (Emerita
Augusta (Mérida)) 125 x 100 Mérida
amphitheatre Emporiae Empúries
Spain 2nd
century AD 42°07′48″N 3°07′03″E / 42.1301°N 3.11741°E...