- The
Seleucid Empire (/sɪˈljuːsɪd/;
Ancient Gr****: Βασιλεία τῶν Σελευκιδῶν, romanized: Basileía tōn Seleukidōn, lit. 'Kingdom of the
Seleucids') was a...
-
attracted a
large number of
immigrants from
Greece who,
encouraged by the
Seleucids,
formed a
dominant political elite under the
ruling dynasty.
After the...
-
Struggle Against the
Seleucids.
Cambridge University Press. p. 543. ISBN 0521323525. Bickerman,
Elias J. (1943). "Notes on
Seleucid and
Parthian Chronology"...
- also
largely excluding the
Seleucids from the Mediterranean. From 212 to 205 BC,
Antiochus III
campaigned to re****ert
Seleucid authority over
Armenia and...
-
admiration for Rome's
power and methods". Secondly, the ****ure wars that the
Seleucids might be
fighting would probably be in the
eastern satrapies against mobile...
- BCE and
ended with the
Seleucids in
control of Judea, but
conflict between the Maccabees, ****enized Jews, and the
Seleucids continued until 134 BCE...
-
Great in 200 BC.
Seleucids struck some
coins in the
Ptolemaic standard to be used in the region, and both
standards coexisted there.
Seleucid regulations on...
- realm, the
Seleucid state was the most
powerful of the
Diadochi kingdoms that
sprang up
after Alexander's death.
Quickly however, the
Seleucids ran into...
-
Macedonia and the
Seleucid Empire. The
imperial ambitions of the
Seleucids after 230 BC were
particularly destabilizing. The
Seleucids set out to conquer...
- The
Seleucid–Mauryan War was
fought between 305 and 303 BC. It
started when
Seleucus I
Nicator of the
Seleucid Empire sought to
retake the
Indian satrapies...