List of State Leaders in 14 - Europe

Europe

  • Atrebates – Eppillus, King of the Atrebates (8–15)
  • Bosporan Kingdom – Tiberius Julius Aspurgus, Roman client King of Bosporus (8 BC–38 AD)
  • Catuvellauni – Cunobelinus, King of the Britons and King of the Catuvellauni (9–40)
  • Caucasian Iberia – Aderk, King of Caucasian Iberia (1–30)
  • Ireland
    • Cairbre Cinnchait, High King of Ireland (9–14)
    • Feradach Finnfechtnach, High King of Ireland (14–36)
  • Marcomanni – Marbod, King of the Marcomanni (9 BC–19 AD)
  • Odrysian kingdom
    • Cotys VIII, Odrysian King of Thrace (12–18)
    • Rhescuporis II, Odrysian King of Thrace (12–18)
  • Roman Empire (Principate – Julio-Claudian dynasty)
    • Augustus, Roman Emperor (27 BC–14 AD)
    • Tiberius, Roman Emperor (14–37)
    • Sextus Pompeius, Consul (14)
    • Sextus Appuleius, Consul (14)
    • Augustus, Patrician censor (14)
    • Tiberius, Plebian censor (14)
    • Lucius Seius Strabo, Praetorian prefect (?–15)
    • Sejanus, Praetorian prefect (14–31)
    • Ægyptus Province
    • Quintus Magnus Maximus, Roman Prefect (12–14)
    • Lucius Seius Strabo, Roman Prefect (14–15)
    • Judea (Iudaea Province)
      • Annius Rufus, Roman Prefect (12–15)
      • Herod Antipas, Tetrarch of Galilee (4 BC–39 AD)
      • Herod Philip I, Tetrarch of Batanaea (4 BC–34 AD)
      • Herod Philip II, Tetrarch of Ituraea and Trachonitis (4 BC–34 AD)
      • Annas, High Priest of Judea (6–15)
    • Syria Province – Quintus Caecilius Metellus Creticus Silanus, Roman Prefect (12–17)

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Famous quotes containing the word europe:

    The confrontation between America and Europe reveals not so much a rapprochement as a distortion, an unbridgeable rift. There isn’t just a gap between us, but a whole chasm of modernity.
    Jean Baudrillard (b. 1929)

    Of one thing I can assure you with comparative certainty, whoever wins, Europe will be economically ruined. This war is America’s great opportunity.
    John Dos Passos (1896–1970)

    Can we never extract this tape-worm of Europe from the brain of our countrymen?
    Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–1882)