82 BC
Year 82 BC was a year of the pre-Julian Roman calendar. At the time it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Marius and Carbo. The denomination 82 BC for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years.
Events
By place
Roman Republic
- April: Sulla defeats the consul Gaius Marius the Younger at the Battle of Sacriportus, and takes control of Rome.
- November 1: Sulla defeats an army of Samnites and Lucanians alliance in the Battle of the Colline Gate.
- November 2: Sulla slaughters the Samnite prisoners in the Villa publica; the senate rejects his proscription plan.
- November 3: Sulla passes his proscription through a popular assembly; he publishes a list of 520 senators and equites to be murdered on sight.
- Gaius Marius the Younger is besieged at the fortress city of Praeneste in Latium. After a fierce resistance, Marius commits suicide.
- Pompey is ordered by Sulla to stamp out Marian rebels in Sicily and Africa, after his campaigns in he gets the insulting nickname of adulescentulus carnifex, the "teenage butcher".
- Lucius Licinius Murena launches a raid against Pontus in the Battle of Halys, starting the Second Mithridatic War.
Dacia
- Burebista unifies the Dacian population forming the first unified Dacian Kingdom, on the territory of modern Romania and surroundings. 82 BC is also the starting year of his reign.
By topic
Astronomy
- The Aurigid shower parent comet C/1911 N1 returns to the inner solar system and sheds the dust particles that one revolution later cause the 1935, 1986, 1994, and 2007 Aurigid meteor outbursts on Earth.
Births
- May 28 - Licinius Macer Calvus, Roman orator and poet
- Marcus Caelius Rufus, Roman orator and politician
- Varro Atacinus, Roman poet and writer
- Vercingetorix, Gaul warrior and leader
Deaths
- Gaius Carrinas, Roman politician and general
- Gaius Fabius Hadrianus, Roman politician and governor
- Gaius Marcius Censorinus, Roman politician and general
- Gaius Marius the Younger, Roman politician
- Gaius Norbanus, Roman consul and governor
- Gnaeus Papirius Carbo, Roman consul
- Marcus Marius Gratidianus, Roman praetor and politician
- Quintus Mucius Scaevola Pontifex, Roman consul
- Quintus Valerius Soranus, Roman politician and Latin poet