- up
Orontes in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Orontes (/ɔːˈrɒntiːz, oʊˈrɒn-/) may
refer to:
Orontes River, in Lebanon, Syria, and
Turkey Orontes, a mythological...
- The
Orontes (/ɔːˈrɒntiːz/; from
Ancient Gr**** Ὀρόντης,
Oróntēs) or Asi (Arabic: العاصي, romanized: al-‘Āṣī, IPA: [alˈʕaːsˤiː]; Turkish: Asi) is a 571 kilometres...
- Oronsay, and
Otranto (II).
Orontes was the last of the "Orama"
class and
great effort was
taken to make the
public rooms of
Orontes the best of this class...
- satisfactory, as it had cost 15,000 talents, and as a
result Orontes fell into disfavour.
Orontes later reappears in 362/1 BC, as the
hyparch of
Mysia and...
-
Antioch on the
Orontes (/ˈænti.ɒk/;
Ancient Gr****: Ἀντιόχεια ἡ ἐπὶ Ὀρόντου, romanized: Antiókheia hē epì Oróntou,
pronounced [anti.ó.kʰeː.a]) was a ****enistic...
- RMS
Orontes was a
steam ocean liner of the
Orient Steam Navigation Company that was
launched in 1902 and s****ped in 1925.
Orontes was a
troop ship in...
- have
borne the name HMS
Orontes: HMS
Orontes (1813) was a 36-gun
fifth rate,
built as HMS
Brilliant but
renamed HMS
Orontes in 1812 and
launched in 1813...
- of
Armenia by Alexander.
Orontes dying at
Gaugamela has been contested;
Diodorus and
Polyaenus mention a man
named Orontes, who was a
Satrap of Armenia...
-
Orontes I
Sakavakyats was a
legendary king of Armenia, who was the
personification of the
Orontid dynasty.
Orontes appears in both in the
Cyropaedia of...
-
instigated a
revolt against Orontes,
headed by
Artaxias I.
Aramaic inscriptions found at
Armavir state that King
Orontes IV died at the
hands of his own...