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called Apamea include:
Apamea (Euphrates), in Osroene,
opposite Zeugma on the Euphrates, now
flooded by the
Birecik Dam
Apamea (Phrygia) or
Apamea Cibotus...
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Apamea (Gr****: Ἀπάμεια, Apameia; Arabic: آفاميا, Afamia), on the
right bank of the
Orontes River, was an
ancient Gr**** and
Roman city. It was the capital...
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Apamea Cibotus,
Apamea ad
Maeandrum (on the Maeander),
Apamea or
Apameia (Ancient Gr****: Ἀπάμεια, romanized: Apámeia,
Ancient Gr****: κιβωτός, romanized: kibōtós)...
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Apamea Ragiana (Gr****: Απάμεια) –
Apamea Rhagiana,
Apamea Raphiana, or
Apameia Rhagiane; previously, Arsace, Khuvar, and C****a – was an
ancient ****enistic...
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Apamea or
Apameia (Gr****: Απάμεια) was a ****enistic city in
Media founded by
Seleucus I Nicator, near
Laodicea (now Nahavand, Iran) and Heraclea. (Strabo...
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Apamea Myrlea (/ˌæpəˈmiːə mərˈliːə/;
Ancient Gr****: Απάμεια Μύρλεια) was an
ancient city and
bishopric (
Apamea in Bithynia) on the Sea of Marmara, in Bithynia...
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Apamea or
Apameia (Gr****: Απάμεια) is an
ancient ****enistic city
described by
Pliny (vi. 31) in Sittacene,
which was
surrounded by the Tigris. Its precise...
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Apamea or
Apameia (Gr****: Απάμεια, Syriac: ܐܦܡܝܐ) was a ****enistic city on the left (viz., the eastern) bank of the Euphrates,
opposite the
famous city...
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Demetrius of
Apamea (fl. late-third to early-first
century BC) was a ****enistic
physiologist of the
Herophilean school. He
studied the ****ual organs,...
- The
Treaty of
Apamea was a
peace treaty conducted in 188 BC
between the
Roman Republic and
Antiochus III,
ruler of the
Seleucid Empire. It
ended the Roman–Seleucid...