- (1998). "
Tincomarus Commi Filius". Britannia. 29: 309–315. doi:10.2307/526822. Frere,
Sheppard S.; Millett,
Martin J. (2012). "
Tincomarus". The Oxford...
-
Atrebates name
themselves on
their coins as sons of Commius:
Tincomarus, Ep****s and Verica.
Tincomarus seems to have
ruled jointly with his
father from about...
-
Tincomarus ruled from
Calleva Atrebatum (Silchester) in the north. Ep****s
became ruler of the
whole territory a
little before 7 AD, and
Tincomarus appears...
- Divi Augusti, a
British king
called Dumnovellaunus appears,
alongside Tincomarus of the Atrebates, as a
supplicant to
Augustus around AD 7.
Another Dumnovellaunus...
- BC
Commius appears to have
ruled in
collaboration with
Tincomarus.
After his
death Tincomarus appears to have
ruled the
northern part of the
kingdom from...
-
According to Augustus's Res Gestae, two
British kings,
Dubnovellaunus and
Tincomarus, fled to Rome as
supplicants during his reign, and Strabo's Geographica...
- coin with a thin
silver wash. In the
final years of the 1st
century BC
Tincomarus, a
local ruler in
southern Britain,
started issuing coins that appear...
- Ding'an. Ruzi Ying is
placed under house arrest.[citation needed] AD 8 –
Tincomarus,
deposed king of the Atrebates,
flees Britain for Rome; Ep****s becomes...
- Romans.
After Tincomarus,
Augustus chose to
recognize his brother, Ep****s, as the next
client king.
After ruling jointly with
Tincomarus, he apparently...
- (98–117) See also: List of
Roman consuls Atrebates (complete list) –
Tincomarus,
client King of
Thrace under Rome (c.20 BC–7 AD) Ep****s,
client King...