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  1. Início. Eventos. Falecimentos. 378 foi um ano comum do século IV que teve início e terminou a uma segunda-feira, segundo o Calendário Juliano. A sua letra dominical foi G. Eventos. 9 de Agosto - Batalha de Adrianópolis. Os visigodos derrotam o imperador Valente, que morre em combate, na atual Edirne, na Turquia. Falecimentos.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › 378378 - Wikipedia

    378 - Wikipedia. Battle of Adrianople (378) Year 378 ( CCCLXXVIII) was a common year starting on Monday (link will display the full calendar) of the Julian calendar. At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Valens and Augustus (or, less frequently, year 1131 Ab urbe condita ).

    • Background
    • Composition of The Roman Troops
    • Composition of The Gothic Forces
    • Location
    • Battle
    • Aftermath
    • External Links

    In 376, the Goths, led by Alavivus and Fritigern, asked to be allowed to settle in the Eastern Roman Empire after being displaced by the invasions of the Huns. Hoping that they would become farmers and soldiers, the Eastern Roman emperor Valens allowed them to establish themselves in the Empire as allies (foederati). Once across the Danube and into...

    Valens' army may have included troops from three Roman field armies: the Army of Thrace, based in the eastern Balkans, which may have sustained heavy losses in 376–377; the 1st Army in the Emperor's Presence; and the 2nd Army in the Emperor's Presence. Both armies in the Emperor's Presence were normally based at Constantinople in peacetime but had ...

    There were probably two main Gothic armies south of the Danube. Fritigern led one army, largely recruited from the Therving exiles, while Alatheus and Saphrax led another army, largely recruited from the Greuthung exiles. Fritigern brought most if not all of his fighters to the battle and appears to have led the force the Romans first encountered. ...

    The battle took place within a few hours' march of the city of Adrianopolis, but its precise location is uncertain. Three possible locations of the battle have been discussed in modern historiography: 1. One thesis suggests that the Gothic camp and the battleground were located to the north of Adrianopolis, west of the Tonzos river but east of Hebr...

    On the morning of 9 August, Valens decamped from Adrianople, where he left the imperial treasury and administration under guard. The reconnaissance of the preceding days informed him of the location of the Gothic camp north of the city. Valens arrived there around noon after marching for eight miles over difficult terrain. The Roman troops arrived ...

    According to the historian Ammianus Marcellinus, the Goths immediately marched to the city of Adrianople and attempted to take it; Ammianus gives a detailed account of their failure. Ammianus refers to a great number of Roman soldiers who had not been let into the city and who fought the besieging Goths below the walls. A third of the Roman army su...

    Valens and the Battle of Adrianople (Hadrianopolis) Archived 10 June 2011 at the Wayback Machineby N.S. Gill. About.com – Ancient/ Classical History. 2 April 2007.
  3. Conteúdo. ocultar. Início. Eventos. Em Roma. Na Grécia. 378 a.C. Eventos. Em Roma. Licínio Menênio Lanato, pela terceira vez, Quinto Servílio Fidenato, pela segunda vez, Espúrio Fúrio Medulino, Marco Horácio Púlvilo, Públio Clélio Sículo, Lúcio Gegânio Macerino, tribunos consulares em Roma. Na Grécia.

  4. 5,743 ft⋅lbf (7,786 J) Test barrel length: 26 in (66 cm) Source (s): Weatherby [1] / Nosler [2] The .378 Weatherby Magnum was designed by Roy Weatherby in 1953. [3] [4] It was an original belted magnum design with no parent case, inspired by the .416 Rigby and headspacing of the belted .375 H&H Magnum. [5]

  5. A segunda Batalha de Adrianópolis (9 de agosto de 378) [3] foi travada entre um exército romano comandado pelo imperador Valente, de um lado, e, de outro, tribos germânicas (principalmente grutungos e tervíngios, com o apoio de alguns alanos e hunos, não germanos) comandadas por Fritigerno. [4]

  6. U.S. Route 378 (US 378) is a spur of US 78 in the U.S. states of Georgia and South Carolina. The U.S. Highway runs 234.30 miles (377.07 km) from US 78, Georgia State Route 10 (SR 10), SR 17, and SR 47 in Washington, Georgia, east to US 501 Business in Conway, South Carolina.