246 BC
Millennium:
1st millennium BC
Centuries:
4th century BC -
3rd century BC -
2nd century BC
Decades:
270s BC 260s BC 250s BC - 240s BC - 230s BC 220s BC 210s BC
Years:
249 BC 248 BC 247 BC -
246 BC -
245 BC 244 BC 243 BC
246 BC by topic
Politics
State leaders - Sovereign states
Birth and death categories
Births -
Deaths
Establishments and disestablishments categories
Establishments - Disestablishments
246 BC in other calendars
Gregorian calendar
246 BC
Ab urbe condita
508
Armenian calendar
N/A
Bahá'í calendar
-2089 – -2088
Berber calendar
705
Buddhist calendar
299
Burmese calendar
-883
Byzantine calendar
5263 – 5264
Chinese calendar
甲年
(2391/2451)
— to —
[[Sexagenary cycle|]]年
(2392/2452)
Coptic calendar
-529 – -528
Ethiopian calendar
-253 – -252
Hebrew calendar
3515 – 3516
Hindu calendars
-
Vikram Samvat
-190 – -189
-
Shaka Samvat
N/A
-
Kali Yuga
2856 – 2857
Holocene calendar
9755
Iranian calendar
867 BP – 866 BP
Islamic calendar
894 BH – 893 BH
Japanese calendar
Korean calendar
2088
Thai solar calendar
298
Events
By place
Egypt
Seleucid Empire
- Antiochus II leaves Berenice in order to live again with his former wife Laodice and his son Seleucus. However, Laodice poisons him and proclaims her son as King Seleucus II Callinicus, while her supporters in Antioch kill Berenice and her children who have taken refuge at Daphne, near Antioch, in Syria.
- Berenice's brother, Ptolemy III, sets about to avenge his sister's murder by invading Syria which begins the Third Syrian War (also known as the Laodicean War). Ptolemy III's navy, perhaps with the aid of rebels in the cities, advances against Seleucus II's forces as far as Thrace, across the Hellespont, and also captures some islands off the Anatolian coast.
- Ptolemy III wins major victories over Seleucus II in Syria and Anatolia and briefly occupies Antioch. These victories are marred by the loss of the Cyclades to Antigonus II Gonatas in the Battle of Andros.
- Seleucus II Callinicus' mother, Laodice attempts to take control over the Seleucid Empire by insisting that Seleucus II make his younger brother, Antiochus Hierax, co-regent and give him all the Seleucid territory in Anatolia. Antiochus promptly declares independence and begins fighting a war with his brother.
- In order to secure the Bactrian King Diodotus' friendship, Seleucus II Callinicus arranges the marriage of one of his sisters to King Diodotus.
Roman Republic
- With Hamilcar Barca wearing the Romans down in Sicily, the Romans, by private subscription, build another fleet with the aim of regaining command of the sea.
- In Rome, the number of praetors is increased from one to two. The second praetor is appointed to relieve the backlog of judicial business and to give the Republic a magistrate with Imperium who can field an army in an emergency when both consuls are away fighting a war.
China
- An irrigation canal approximately one hundred miles long is built across the current-day province of Shaanxi in China, greatly adding to the agricultural productivity of the area and to the military potency of the Qin dynasty.
Births
Deaths
- Ptolemy II Philadelphus, king of Egypt from 285 BC, second king of the Ptolemaic dynasty, who has extended his power by skilful diplomacy, developed agriculture and commerce, and made Alexandria a leading centre of the arts and sciences (b. 308 BC)
- Antiochus II Theos, king of the Seleucid dominions in the Middle East from 261 BC. He has spent much of his reign at war with Egypt, recovering much of the territory in Anatolia lost in earlier wars between the Ptolemaic and Seleucid dynasties (b. c. 287 BC)
- Berenice, daughter of Ptolemy II Philadelphus and Arsinoe, wife of the Seleucid ruler Antiochus II Theos, supplanting his first wife, Laodice, whose children she has persuaded him to bar from the succession to the throne in favour of her own