From the conquests of Seleukos Nikator, Seleukid rulers presented themselves as heirs to the age-old Near Eastern ideal of universal monarchy. But since their power had started to decline in the 2nd century BC, new claims to ‘Great Kingship’ were made by the Parthian Arsakids, the Mithradatids of Pontos, the Ptolemies, and conspicuously by Antiochos I of Kommagene, whose house had been bound to the imperial centre by intermarriage and kinship ties. The same Antiochos famously displayed his royal ancestors in the sanctuary on Nemrut Dağı. While such dynastic expressions are predominantly viewed as fictitious Persian revivalism, it will be argued that the idea of universal monarchy had always been pivotal to Seleukid rule and that with the de...
Power transition from one ruler to the next is a crucial moment for a monarchy, potentially raising...
In 323 BC, the Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great died in Babylon. In his life, he conquered t...
At section X.5, the Tabula Peutingeriana shows a settlement called Filadelfijia (Gr. Philadelpheia) l...
From the conquests of Seleukos Nikator, Seleukid rulers presented themselves as heirs to the age-old...
One of the more striking features of the Hellenistic period is the emergence of royal dynasties whos...
The study of royal women has been one of the most dynamic fields of inquiry into the Hellenistic wor...
In the 3rd century the Seleukids faced the first significant fracture in the dynasty. This dynastic ...
This thesis examines usurpation in the Seleukid empire between the third and second centuries BCE. S...
This thesis examines usurpation in the Seleukid empire between the third and second centuries BCE. S...
Combining the latest interpretative approaches to the Seleucid Empire with recent research on its ro...
In the Hellenistic Period most of the Greek poleis (city-states) came under the control of the Greco...
Harders A-C. The Making of a Queen. Seleucus Nikator and his Wives. In: Coşkun A, McAuley A, eds. S...
The Seleucids conquered and then controlled for c.200 years (312–64 bce) a territory that was remark...
Before Alexander, the Near East was ruled by dynasts who could draw on the significant resources and...
This dissertation provides the first overarching and comparative study of Hellenistic Egyptian queen...
Power transition from one ruler to the next is a crucial moment for a monarchy, potentially raising...
In 323 BC, the Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great died in Babylon. In his life, he conquered t...
At section X.5, the Tabula Peutingeriana shows a settlement called Filadelfijia (Gr. Philadelpheia) l...
From the conquests of Seleukos Nikator, Seleukid rulers presented themselves as heirs to the age-old...
One of the more striking features of the Hellenistic period is the emergence of royal dynasties whos...
The study of royal women has been one of the most dynamic fields of inquiry into the Hellenistic wor...
In the 3rd century the Seleukids faced the first significant fracture in the dynasty. This dynastic ...
This thesis examines usurpation in the Seleukid empire between the third and second centuries BCE. S...
This thesis examines usurpation in the Seleukid empire between the third and second centuries BCE. S...
Combining the latest interpretative approaches to the Seleucid Empire with recent research on its ro...
In the Hellenistic Period most of the Greek poleis (city-states) came under the control of the Greco...
Harders A-C. The Making of a Queen. Seleucus Nikator and his Wives. In: Coşkun A, McAuley A, eds. S...
The Seleucids conquered and then controlled for c.200 years (312–64 bce) a territory that was remark...
Before Alexander, the Near East was ruled by dynasts who could draw on the significant resources and...
This dissertation provides the first overarching and comparative study of Hellenistic Egyptian queen...
Power transition from one ruler to the next is a crucial moment for a monarchy, potentially raising...
In 323 BC, the Macedonian conqueror Alexander the Great died in Babylon. In his life, he conquered t...
At section X.5, the Tabula Peutingeriana shows a settlement called Filadelfijia (Gr. Philadelpheia) l...