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List of Syrian monarchs

The title King of Syria appeared in the second century BC in referring to the Seleucid kings who ruled the entirety of the region of Syria. It was also used to refer to Aramean kings in the Greek translations of the Old Testament, mainly indicating the kings of Aram-Damascus. Following the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in World War I, the region came under the rule of France, the United Kingdom and Prince Faisal of Hejaz, who was proclaimed King of Syria on 8 March 1920. Faisal's reign lasted a few months before he was overthrown by France and the title fell out of use.

The region of Syria

Background edit

The term Syria was first applied by Herodotus in the 5th century BC to indicate a region generally extending between Anatolia and Egypt.[1][2] With the advent of the Hellenistic period, Greeks and their Seleucid dynasty used the term "Syria" to designate the region between the Mediterranean and the Euphrates.[3] The usage of the name in referring to the region during the Iron Age (ended 586 BC) is a modern practice.[1][4]

List of monarchs edit

Seleucid dynasty edit

According to Polybius, King Antigonus I Monophthalmus established the Syrian kingdom which included Coele-Syria.[5] The Seleucid king Antiochus III the Great defeated the Ptolemaic Kingdom in the Battle of Panium (200 BC); he annexed the Syrian lands controlled by Egypt (Coele-Syria) and united them with his Syrian lands, thus gaining control of the entirety of Syria.[6] Starting from the 2nd century BC, ancient writers, such as Polybius and Posidonius, began referring to the Seleucid ruler as the king of Syria.[7][8] The evidence for this title's usage by the kings is provided by the inscription of Antigonus son of Menophilus, who described himself as the "admiral of Alexander, king of Syria" (Alexander refers either to Alexander I Balas or Alexander II Zabinas).[8]

Portrait Monarch
(and lifespan)
Reign Consort
(and tenure)
Parents, co-regents, and notes
  Antiochus III the Great
(c. 241–187 BC)
200–187 BC Laodice III
(200–187 BC)
Euboea
(191–187 BC)
  Seleucus IV Philopator
(c. 218–175 BC)
187–175 BC Laodice IV
(187–175 BC)
  • Son of Antiochus III and Laodice III.[13] He married Laodice IV, his brother Antiochus' widow.[14]
  Antiochus
(c. 180–170 BC)
175–170 BC Unmarried
  • Son of Seleucus IV and Laodice IV.[15] The minister Heliodorus held real power,[15] then Antiochus was made co-king by his uncle Antiochus IV.[note 3][17]
  Antiochus IV Epiphanes
(c. 215–164 BC)
175–164 BC Laodice IV
(c. 175–c. 164 BC)
  • Son of Antiochus III and Laodice III.[18] Married his brother's widow.[14]
Antiochus V Eupator
(172–161 BC)
164–162 BC Unmarried
  • Son of Antiochus IV Epiphanes and possibly Laodice IV.[19] His regent Lysias held actual power.[20]
  Demetrius I Soter
(187–150 BC)
162–150 BC
  Antiochus 150 BC
  • Known from a coin minted in the same year Demetrius I lost his throne; his identity is left to speculations.[note 4][26]
  Alexander I Balas
( –145 BC)
150–145 BC Cleopatra Thea
(150–145 BC)
  • Claimed to be a son of Antiochus IV.[27][28] He could have been an illegitimate son of Antiochus by a concubine named Antiochis.[note 5][30]
  Demetrius II Nicator
( –125 BC)
145–138 BC
(first reign)
Cleopatra Thea
(145–138 BC)
  • Son of Demetrius I and possibly Laodice V.[31]
  • First reign; Ptolemy VI Philometor of Egypt divorced his daughter Cleopatra Thea from Alexander I and married her to Demetrius.[27]
  Antiochus VI Dionysus
(148 BC–142/141 BC)
144–142/141 BC Unmarried
  • Son of Alexander I and Cleopatra Thea.[32] Was proclaimed king against Demetrius II by general Diodotus Tryphon who held actual power and eventually killed Antiochus.[note 6][32]

Non-dynastic edit

Diodotus Tryphon, who opposed Demetrius II by raising Antiochus VI to the throne, killed his protege and declared himself king ruling until 138 when the Seleucids unified Syria again.[27]

Portrait Monarch
(and lifespan)
Reign Consort
(and tenure)
Parents, co-regents, and notes
  Diodotus Tryphon
( –138 BC)
142/141–138 BC
  • Last coins date to 138 BC but his reign might have lasted into early 137 BC.[34]

Seleucid dynasty edit

Portrait Monarch
(and lifespan)
Reign Consort
(and tenure)
Parents, co-regents, and notes
  Antiochus VII Sidetes
( –129 BC)
138–129 BC Cleopatra Thea
(138–129 BC)
  • Son of Demetrius I and possibly Laodice V.[35] Married his brother's wife after Demetrius II was captured by the Parthians.[27]
  Demetrius II Nicator
( –125 BC)
129–125 BC
(second reign)
Cleopatra Thea
(129–125 BC)
  • Was released by the Parthians and regained his throne and wife following Antiochus VII's death in a battle against Parthia.[27]
  Antiochus VIII Grypus
( –96 BC)
128 BC
(first reign)
  • Son of Demetrius II and Cleopatra Thea.[36] He was elevated as king by his mother in an attempt to establish her authority.[37]
  Alexander II Zabinas
( –123 BC)
128–123 BC
  • Claimed to be of Seleucid heritage.[note 7][38] Declared himself king in opposition to Demetrius II.[39]

Ptolemaic dynasty edit

Portrait Monarch
(and lifespan)
Reign Consort
(and tenure)
Parents, co-regents, and notes
  Cleopatra Thea
(c. 165–121 BC)
125–121 BC
  • Daughter of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II of Egypt.[40]
  • Cleopatra Thea assumed power in her own right; she abandoned her husband Demetrius II and arranged his murder in 125 BC.[36]

Seleucid dynasty edit

Portrait Monarch
(and lifespan)
Reign Consort
(and tenure)
Parents, co-regents, and notes
Seleucus V Philometor
( –125 BC)
125 BC
  • Son of Demetrius II and Cleopatra Thea.[41]
  • He declared himself king following his father's murder against the wishes of his mother who killed him.[42]
  Antiochus VIII Grypus
( –96 BC)
125–96 BC
(second reign)
Tryphaena
(124–111 BC)
Cleopatra Selene
(103–96 BC)
  • Due to the discontent arising from her becoming a queen regnant, Cleopatra Thea elevated Antiochus VIII as co-king.[note 8][47]
  Antiochus IX Cyzicenus
( –95 BC)
114–95 BC Cleopatra IV
(114–112 BC)
Cleopatra Selene
(96–95 BC)
  • Son of Antiochus VII and Cleopatra Thea.[45]
  • He rose against Antiochus VIII with the help of Cleopatra IV.[48]
Antiochus VIII died in 96 BC and Antiochus IX followed him in 95 BC;[49] the country became embroiled in a civil war in which Antiochus VIII's five sons and the descendants of Antiochus IX fought between themselves.[50] The chronology of all those monarchs is problematic and is specially vague regarding Seleucus VI's successors.[51]
  Demetrius III Eucaerus
( –88 BC)
96–88 BC
  Seleucus VI Epiphanes
( –94/93 BC)
96–94/93 BC
  • Son of Antiochus VIII and Tryphaena.[23] Defeated Antiochus IX but was soon killed.[53]
  Antiochus X Eusebes
( –92)
95–92 BC Cleopatra Selene
(95–92 BC)
  • Son of Antiochus IX and a first wife whose name is lost.[23]
  • Avenged his father and killed Seleucus VI.[note 9][52] He married his step-mother.[55]
  Antiochus XI Epiphanes
( –93 BC)
94–93 BC
  • Son of Antiochus VIII and Tryphaena.[23] Killed by Antiochus X.[56]
  Philip I Philadelphus
( –83 BC)
94–84/83 BC
  • Son of Antiochus VIII and Tryphaena.[23] Took the throne with his twin Antiochus XI.[note 10][56]
  Antiochus XII Dionysus
( –84 BC)
87–84/83 BC
  • Son of Antiochus VIII and Tryphaena.[23] Ruled only in Damascus.[59]

Ptolemaic dynasty edit

Portrait Monarch
(and lifespan)
Reign Consort
(and tenure)
Parents, co-regents, and notes
  Cleopatra Selene
(c. 135/130–69 BC)
83–69 BC
  • Daughter of Ptolemy VIII and his wife Cleopatra III of Egypt.[60]
  • Cleopatra Selene declared her son Antiochus XIII king following the deaths of both Antiochus XII and Philip I; she seems to have installed herself co-ruler.[61][62]

Seleucid dynasty edit

Portrait Monarch
(and lifespan)
Reign Consort
(and tenure)
Parents, co-regents, and notes
  Antiochus XIII Asiaticus
(c. 94–63 BC)
83 or 83–74 BC
(first reign)

Artaxiad dynasty edit

Portrait Monarch
(and lifespan)
Reign Consort
(and tenure)
Parents, co-regents, and notes
  Tigranes the Great
(140–55 BC)
83/74–69 BC
  • King of Armenia, invaded Syria; the year of the invasion is up to debate and is traditionally given as 83 BC based on the account of Appian.[57] The date of the invasion might actually be later, around 74 BC.[71] The Armenian king captured Cleopatra Selene and killed her in 69 BC,[72] but he was forced by the Romans to evacuate Syria the same year.[73]

Seleucid dynasty edit

Portrait Monarch
(and lifespan)
Reign Consort
(and tenure)
Parents, co-regents, and notes
  Antiochus XIII Asiaticus
(c. 94–63 BC)
69–67 BC
(second reign)
  • The Roman general Pompey confirmed Antiochus as king following Tigranes departure.[72]
Philip II Philoromaeus
( –after 57 BC)
67–65 BC
  Antiochus XIII Asiaticus
(c. 94–63 BC)
65–64 BC
(third reign)
  • Freed by his captor, he ruled for one year before being deposed by Pompey who annexed Syria as a Roman province.[72]

Antonian dynasty edit

Portrait Monarch
(and lifespan)
Reign Consort
(and tenure)
Parents, co-regents, and notes
Ptolemy Philadelphus
(36–after 30 BC)
34–30 BC

Hashemite dynasty edit

On 8 March 1920, prince Faysal of the House of Hashim, supported by the Syrian National Congress, declared himself king of the Arab Kingdom of Syria; the kingdom collapsed on 24 July of the same year.[76]

Portrait Name
(and lifespan)
Reign Consort
(and tenure)
Standard Notes
  Faisal
(20 May 1885 – 8 September 1933)
8 March 1920 – 24 July 1920 Huzaima bint Nasser
(8 March 1920 – 24 July 1920)
 

Biblical usage for Aramean kings edit

In the first translation of the Old Testament into Greek written during the third century BC (called the Septuagint),[79] Aram and Arameans were often translated as Syria and the Syrians;[80][81] hence, the king was referred to as the king of Syria,[82] and this was carried on by many English translations.[80] Aram in the Hebrew Old Testament and Syria in the translation indicated the kingdom of Aram-Damascus most of the times.[80] Occasionally, other Aramean regions were also referred to as Syria.[80] In the view of W. Edward Glenny, the rendering of Aram by Syria might be explained by an anti-Syrian bias, since at the time of the translation, Syria belonged to the Seleucids, the Jews' main enemy; Aram-Damascus was the Jews' enemy during its Iron Age prime in the 9th century BC.[83]

Aramean kings referred to as "kings of Syria" edit

Portrait Name Reign Notes
Rezon 10th century BC
  • Mentioned as "ruling over Syria" in 1 Kings 11:25.[84]
  • Also named "Ezron",[85][86] and known only from the Old Testament.[87]
Hezion 10th century BC
  • The name "Hazib" was also used for him.[86] Known only from the Old Testament.[87]
Ben-Hadad I
  • Known only from the Old Testament.[88]
Ben-Hadad II
  • Equated by many Biblical scholars with Adad-Idri who was mentioned in Assyrian sources.[88]
  Hazael c. 842–800 BC
Ben-Hadad III
  • The only king mentioned by the name "Ben-Hadad" both in the Old Testament and extra-biblical sources.[88]
Rezin 750s–733 BC
  • Known in Assyrian inscription as Raqyan.[91]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Antiochus son of Antiochus III was made co-king in 209 BC and died in 193 BC.[11]
  2. ^ There is no reason to believe that Laodice III fell from grace as she survived her husband and was honoured throughout his and his successors reigns.[12] Seleucid monarchs did not engage in polygamy and even the most hostile accounts, aside from the propagandistic work of Polybius, do not accuse Antiochus III with the act.[12] Paul J. Kosmin suggests a solution for the problem of Antiochus' second wife; according to Polybius, Euboea was a name given by Antiochus to his second wife and it is the name of her island.[12] Hence, in the view of Kosmin, by marrying this girl, Antiochus signified that he was marrying the island which the girl became its symbol.[12]
  3. ^ Antiochus was a child of 4 or 5 years when he ascended the throne.[16] Heliodorus might have killed Seleucus IV,[15] before being removed by Antiochus IV who kept his nephew as co-king before killing him in 170 BC.[17]
  4. ^ Fritz Heichelheim proposed three possibilities: Antiochus was Demetrius I's son Antigonus who assumed the dynastic name Antiochus, a pretender, or Demetrius I's youngest son Antiochus VII.[24] Alfred Raymond Bellinger considered the suggestion of Antiochus VII the most credible.[25]
  5. ^ Appian called Balas Alexandros Nothos (Alexander the bastard); this bastardy could have been the reason for the doubts ancient writers showed regarding Alexander's paternity.[29]
  6. ^ Josephus placed Antiochus' murder after the end of Demetrius II's first reign and Diodorus Siculus placed the usurpation of Diodotus Tryphon in the consular year 138 BC.[33] However, the last coins struk in Antiochus' name date to the year142/141 BC indicating that he was murdered around that time.[33]
  7. ^ Alexander fabricated a genealogy that presented him as the son of Alexander I Balas according to Poseidonius, or the adopted son of Antiochus VII according to Justin.[38]
  8. ^ In 124/123 BC,[43] he married Tryphaena who was murdered in 111 BC by Antiochus IX.[44][45] By 103 BC, he married Tryphaena's sister Cleopatra Selene.[46]
  9. ^ His reign might have actually ended in 89/88 BC.[54]
  10. ^ Philip's death date is unknown but traditionally assumed to be the year 84 or 83 BC.[57] Although there is a possibility that he ruled until 75 BC.[58]
  11. ^ In 2002, numismatist Brian Kritt announced the discovery and decipherment of a coin bearing the portrait of Cleopatra Selene and a co-ruler;[64][65] Kritt read the name of the ruler as Seleucus Philometor and, based on the epithet "Philometor", meaning mother loving, identified him with Cleopatra Selene's son, unnamed by Cicero.[66] Kritt gave the newly discovered ruler the regnal name Seleucus VII, and considered it very likely that he is identical with Kybiosaktes.[67] The reading of "Seleucus VII" was accepted by some scholars such as Lloyd Llewellyn-Jones and Michael Roy Burgess,[68][69] but Oliver D Hoover rejected Kritt's reading, noting that the coin was badly damaged and some letters were unreadable; Hoover read the king's name as Antiochus and identified him with Antiochus XIII.[65]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Bryce 2009, p. 680.
  2. ^ Herodotus 1862, p. 126.
  3. ^ Pipes 1992, p. 13.
  4. ^ Mumford 2013, p. 70.
  5. ^ Mahaffy 2014, p. 493.
  6. ^ Kosmin 2014, p. 122.
  7. ^ Austin 2010, p. 652.
  8. ^ a b Kosmin 2014, p. 112.
  9. ^ Bunbury 1872, p. 719.
  10. ^ Alten 2017, p. 27.
  11. ^ a b Gera 1998, p. 283.
  12. ^ a b c d e Kosmin 2014, p. 137.
  13. ^ Vehlow 2013, p. 145.
  14. ^ a b Ogden 2017, p. 241.
  15. ^ a b c Gera 1998, p. 110.
  16. ^ Cook 2004, p. 220.
  17. ^ a b Gera 1998, p. 115.
  18. ^ Georganas 2016, p. 106.
  19. ^ Iossif & Lorber 2007, p. 68.
  20. ^ Hazel 2002, p. 20.
  21. ^ a b Hoover 2000, p. 107.
  22. ^ Hazel 2002, p. 73.
  23. ^ a b c d e f g Chrubasik 2016, p. XXIV.
  24. ^ Heichelheim 1944, p. 364.
  25. ^ Bellinger 1945, p. 59.
  26. ^ Bellinger 1945, p. 58.
  27. ^ a b c d e Kosmin 2014, p. 22.
  28. ^ Chrubasik 2016, p. 162.
  29. ^ Wright 2011, p. 43.
  30. ^ Ogden 1999, pp. 45–46.
  31. ^ Atkinson 2016, p. 29.
  32. ^ a b Hazel 2002, p. 21.
  33. ^ a b Atkinson 2016, p. 41.
  34. ^ Atkinson 2016, p. 43.
  35. ^ Hoover 2000, p. 108.
  36. ^ a b Atkinson 2012, p. 114.
  37. ^ Houghton 1993, pp. 88.
  38. ^ a b Shayegan 2003, p. 96.
  39. ^ Kosmin 2014, p. 23.
  40. ^ Burstein 2007, p. 78.
  41. ^ Schürer 2014, p. 133.
  42. ^ McAuley 2017, p. 90.
  43. ^ Brijder 2014, p. 60.
  44. ^ Whitehorne 2002, p. 165.
  45. ^ a b Downey 2015, p. 129.
  46. ^ Whitehorne 2002, p. 166.
  47. ^ Atkinson 2012, p. 114, 115.
  48. ^ Whitehorne 2002, p. 165, 167.
  49. ^ Whitehorne 2002, p. 167.
  50. ^ Kosmin 2014, p. 243.
  51. ^ Hoover 2007, pp. 284, 289.
  52. ^ a b Downey 2015, p. 133.
  53. ^ Hoover 2007, pp. 288.
  54. ^ Hoover 2007, pp. 294.
  55. ^ Whitehorne 2002, p. 168.
  56. ^ a b Houghton 1987, pp. 79.
  57. ^ a b Hoover 2007, p. 296.
  58. ^ Hoover 2007, p. 298.
  59. ^ Hoover 2007, pp. 298, 299.
  60. ^ Llewellyn-Jones 2013, p. 1572.
  61. ^ Burgess 2004, p. 20, 21.
  62. ^ Bellinger 1949, p. 79.
  63. ^ Burgess 2004, p. 23, 24.
  64. ^ Kritt 2002, p. 25.
  65. ^ a b Hoover 2005, p. 95.
  66. ^ Kritt 2002, p. 27.
  67. ^ Kritt 2002, p. 28.
  68. ^ Llewellyn-Jones 2013, p. 1573.
  69. ^ Burgess 2004, p. 20.
  70. ^ Kritt 2002, p. 27, 28.
  71. ^ Hoover 2007, p. 297.
  72. ^ a b c d Burgess 2004, p. 24.
  73. ^ a b Hoover 2007, p. 299.
  74. ^ Whitehorne 2002, p. 209.
  75. ^ Spawforth 2006, p. 6.
  76. ^ Moubayed 2012, p. 20.
  77. ^ Schafer 2013, p. 245.
  78. ^ Salibi 2006, p. 68.
  79. ^ Flesher & Chilton 2011, p. 339.
  80. ^ a b c d Greene 1993, p. 44.
  81. ^ McClintock & Strong 1867, p. 353.
  82. ^ Clarke 1851, p. 843.
  83. ^ Glenny 2009, p. 152.
  84. ^ Maxwell Miller & Hayes 1986, p. 214.
  85. ^ Lipiński 2000, p. 369.
  86. ^ a b Galvin 2011, p. 90.
  87. ^ a b Bryce 2012, p. 178.
  88. ^ a b c Nelson 2014, p. 109.
  89. ^ Dever 2012, p. 363.
  90. ^ Suriano 2007, p. 174.
  91. ^ Kah-Jin Kuan 2016, p. 125.

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list, syrian, monarchs, title, king, syria, appeared, second, century, referring, seleucid, kings, ruled, entirety, region, syria, also, used, refer, aramean, kings, greek, translations, testament, mainly, indicating, kings, aram, damascus, following, defeat, . The title King of Syria appeared in the second century BC in referring to the Seleucid kings who ruled the entirety of the region of Syria It was also used to refer to Aramean kings in the Greek translations of the Old Testament mainly indicating the kings of Aram Damascus Following the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in World War I the region came under the rule of France the United Kingdom and Prince Faisal of Hejaz who was proclaimed King of Syria on 8 March 1920 Faisal s reign lasted a few months before he was overthrown by France and the title fell out of use The region of Syria Contents 1 Background 2 List of monarchs 2 1 Seleucid dynasty 2 2 Non dynastic 2 3 Seleucid dynasty 2 4 Ptolemaic dynasty 2 5 Seleucid dynasty 2 6 Ptolemaic dynasty 2 7 Seleucid dynasty 2 8 Artaxiad dynasty 2 9 Seleucid dynasty 2 10 Antonian dynasty 2 11 Hashemite dynasty 3 Biblical usage for Aramean kings 3 1 Aramean kings referred to as kings of Syria 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 6 1 Citations 6 2 SourcesBackground editMain articles Syria region and Name of Syria The term Syria was first applied by Herodotus in the 5th century BC to indicate a region generally extending between Anatolia and Egypt 1 2 With the advent of the Hellenistic period Greeks and their Seleucid dynasty used the term Syria to designate the region between the Mediterranean and the Euphrates 3 The usage of the name in referring to the region during the Iron Age ended 586 BC is a modern practice 1 4 List of monarchs editSeleucid dynasty edit According to Polybius King Antigonus I Monophthalmus established the Syrian kingdom which included Coele Syria 5 The Seleucid king Antiochus III the Great defeated the Ptolemaic Kingdom in the Battle of Panium 200 BC he annexed the Syrian lands controlled by Egypt Coele Syria and united them with his Syrian lands thus gaining control of the entirety of Syria 6 Starting from the 2nd century BC ancient writers such as Polybius and Posidonius began referring to the Seleucid ruler as the king of Syria 7 8 The evidence for this title s usage by the kings is provided by the inscription of Antigonus son of Menophilus who described himself as the admiral of Alexander king of Syria Alexander refers either to Alexander I Balas or Alexander II Zabinas 8 Portrait Monarch and lifespan Reign Consort and tenure Parents co regents and notes nbsp Antiochus III the Great c 241 187 BC 200 187 BC Laodice III 200 187 BC Euboea 191 187 BC Son of Seleucus II Callinicus and Laodice II 9 10 He appointed his eldest son Antiochus who preceded him in death as co king note 1 11 Antiochus III s second wife is attested in the hostile work of Polybius and the story is debated note 2 12 nbsp Seleucus IV Philopator c 218 175 BC 187 175 BC Laodice IV 187 175 BC Son of Antiochus III and Laodice III 13 He married Laodice IV his brother Antiochus widow 14 nbsp Antiochus c 180 170 BC 175 170 BC Unmarried Son of Seleucus IV and Laodice IV 15 The minister Heliodorus held real power 15 then Antiochus was made co king by his uncle Antiochus IV note 3 17 nbsp Antiochus IV Epiphanes c 215 164 BC 175 164 BC Laodice IV c 175 c 164 BC Son of Antiochus III and Laodice III 18 Married his brother s widow 14 Antiochus V Eupator 172 161 BC 164 162 BC Unmarried Son of Antiochus IV Epiphanes and possibly Laodice IV 19 His regent Lysias held actual power 20 nbsp Demetrius I Soter 187 150 BC 162 150 BC Son of Seleucus IV and Laodice IV 21 22 Might have married his sister Laodice V the former wife of Perseus of Macedon 21 23 nbsp Antiochus 150 BC Known from a coin minted in the same year Demetrius I lost his throne his identity is left to speculations note 4 26 nbsp Alexander I Balas 145 BC 150 145 BC Cleopatra Thea 150 145 BC Claimed to be a son of Antiochus IV 27 28 He could have been an illegitimate son of Antiochus by a concubine named Antiochis note 5 30 nbsp Demetrius II Nicator 125 BC 145 138 BC first reign Cleopatra Thea 145 138 BC Son of Demetrius I and possibly Laodice V 31 First reign Ptolemy VI Philometor of Egypt divorced his daughter Cleopatra Thea from Alexander I and married her to Demetrius 27 nbsp Antiochus VI Dionysus 148 BC 142 141 BC 144 142 141 BC Unmarried Son of Alexander I and Cleopatra Thea 32 Was proclaimed king against Demetrius II by general Diodotus Tryphon who held actual power and eventually killed Antiochus note 6 32 Non dynastic edit Diodotus Tryphon who opposed Demetrius II by raising Antiochus VI to the throne killed his protege and declared himself king ruling until 138 when the Seleucids unified Syria again 27 Portrait Monarch and lifespan Reign Consort and tenure Parents co regents and notes nbsp Diodotus Tryphon 138 BC 142 141 138 BC Last coins date to 138 BC but his reign might have lasted into early 137 BC 34 Seleucid dynasty edit Portrait Monarch and lifespan Reign Consort and tenure Parents co regents and notes nbsp Antiochus VII Sidetes 129 BC 138 129 BC Cleopatra Thea 138 129 BC Son of Demetrius I and possibly Laodice V 35 Married his brother s wife after Demetrius II was captured by the Parthians 27 nbsp Demetrius II Nicator 125 BC 129 125 BC second reign Cleopatra Thea 129 125 BC Was released by the Parthians and regained his throne and wife following Antiochus VII s death in a battle against Parthia 27 nbsp Antiochus VIII Grypus 96 BC 128 BC first reign Son of Demetrius II and Cleopatra Thea 36 He was elevated as king by his mother in an attempt to establish her authority 37 nbsp Alexander II Zabinas 123 BC 128 123 BC Claimed to be of Seleucid heritage note 7 38 Declared himself king in opposition to Demetrius II 39 Ptolemaic dynasty edit Portrait Monarch and lifespan Reign Consort and tenure Parents co regents and notes nbsp Cleopatra Thea c 165 121 BC 125 121 BC Daughter of Ptolemy VI and Cleopatra II of Egypt 40 Cleopatra Thea assumed power in her own right she abandoned her husband Demetrius II and arranged his murder in 125 BC 36 Seleucid dynasty edit Portrait Monarch and lifespan Reign Consort and tenure Parents co regents and notes Seleucus V Philometor 125 BC 125 BC Son of Demetrius II and Cleopatra Thea 41 He declared himself king following his father s murder against the wishes of his mother who killed him 42 nbsp Antiochus VIII Grypus 96 BC 125 96 BC second reign Tryphaena 124 111 BC Cleopatra Selene 103 96 BC Due to the discontent arising from her becoming a queen regnant Cleopatra Thea elevated Antiochus VIII as co king note 8 47 nbsp Antiochus IX Cyzicenus 95 BC 114 95 BC Cleopatra IV 114 112 BC Cleopatra Selene 96 95 BC Son of Antiochus VII and Cleopatra Thea 45 He rose against Antiochus VIII with the help of Cleopatra IV 48 Antiochus VIII died in 96 BC and Antiochus IX followed him in 95 BC 49 the country became embroiled in a civil war in which Antiochus VIII s five sons and the descendants of Antiochus IX fought between themselves 50 The chronology of all those monarchs is problematic and is specially vague regarding Seleucus VI s successors 51 nbsp Demetrius III Eucaerus 88 BC 96 88 BC Son of Antiochus VIII and Tryphaena 23 Declared king in Damascus 52 nbsp Seleucus VI Epiphanes 94 93 BC 96 94 93 BC Son of Antiochus VIII and Tryphaena 23 Defeated Antiochus IX but was soon killed 53 nbsp Antiochus X Eusebes 92 95 92 BC Cleopatra Selene 95 92 BC Son of Antiochus IX and a first wife whose name is lost 23 Avenged his father and killed Seleucus VI note 9 52 He married his step mother 55 nbsp Antiochus XI Epiphanes 93 BC 94 93 BC Son of Antiochus VIII and Tryphaena 23 Killed by Antiochus X 56 nbsp Philip I Philadelphus 83 BC 94 84 83 BC Son of Antiochus VIII and Tryphaena 23 Took the throne with his twin Antiochus XI note 10 56 nbsp Antiochus XII Dionysus 84 BC 87 84 83 BC Son of Antiochus VIII and Tryphaena 23 Ruled only in Damascus 59 Ptolemaic dynasty edit Portrait Monarch and lifespan Reign Consort and tenure Parents co regents and notes nbsp Cleopatra Selene c 135 130 69 BC 83 69 BC Daughter of Ptolemy VIII and his wife Cleopatra III of Egypt 60 Cleopatra Selene declared her son Antiochus XIII king following the deaths of both Antiochus XII and Philip I she seems to have installed herself co ruler 61 62 Seleucid dynasty edit Portrait Monarch and lifespan Reign Consort and tenure Parents co regents and notes nbsp Antiochus XIII Asiaticus c 94 63 BC 83 or 83 74 BC first reign Son of Antiochus X and Cleopatra Selene 63 Might have had a brother Seleucus VII Philometer as a co ruler note 11 70 Artaxiad dynasty edit Portrait Monarch and lifespan Reign Consort and tenure Parents co regents and notes nbsp Tigranes the Great 140 55 BC 83 74 69 BC King of Armenia invaded Syria the year of the invasion is up to debate and is traditionally given as 83 BC based on the account of Appian 57 The date of the invasion might actually be later around 74 BC 71 The Armenian king captured Cleopatra Selene and killed her in 69 BC 72 but he was forced by the Romans to evacuate Syria the same year 73 Seleucid dynasty edit Portrait Monarch and lifespan Reign Consort and tenure Parents co regents and notes nbsp Antiochus XIII Asiaticus c 94 63 BC 69 67 BC second reign The Roman general Pompey confirmed Antiochus as king following Tigranes departure 72 Philip II Philoromaeus after 57 BC 67 65 BC Son of Philip I 73 Elevated by the people of Antioch following Antiochus XIII s capture by Sampsiceramus I of Emesa 72 nbsp Antiochus XIII Asiaticus c 94 63 BC 65 64 BC third reign Freed by his captor he ruled for one year before being deposed by Pompey who annexed Syria as a Roman province 72 Antonian dynasty edit Portrait Monarch and lifespan Reign Consort and tenure Parents co regents and notes Ptolemy Philadelphus 36 after 30 BC 34 30 BC Son of Mark Antony and Cleopatra VII of Egypt 74 He was declared king of Syria during the Donations of Alexandria 75 Hashemite dynasty edit On 8 March 1920 prince Faysal of the House of Hashim supported by the Syrian National Congress declared himself king of the Arab Kingdom of Syria the kingdom collapsed on 24 July of the same year 76 Portrait Name and lifespan Reign Consort and tenure Standard Notes nbsp Faisal 20 May 1885 8 September 1933 8 March 1920 24 July 1920 Huzaima bint Nasser 8 March 1920 24 July 1920 nbsp Son of Hussein bin Ali and Abdiyah bint Abdullah of Mecca 77 78 Biblical usage for Aramean kings editIn the first translation of the Old Testament into Greek written during the third century BC called the Septuagint 79 Aram and Arameans were often translated as Syria and the Syrians 80 81 hence the king was referred to as the king of Syria 82 and this was carried on by many English translations 80 Aram in the Hebrew Old Testament and Syria in the translation indicated the kingdom of Aram Damascus most of the times 80 Occasionally other Aramean regions were also referred to as Syria 80 In the view of W Edward Glenny the rendering of Aram by Syria might be explained by an anti Syrian bias since at the time of the translation Syria belonged to the Seleucids the Jews main enemy Aram Damascus was the Jews enemy during its Iron Age prime in the 9th century BC 83 Aramean kings referred to as kings of Syria edit Portrait Name Reign Notes Rezon 10th century BC Mentioned as ruling over Syria in 1 Kings 11 25 84 Also named Ezron 85 86 and known only from the Old Testament 87 Hezion 10th century BC The name Hazib was also used for him 86 Known only from the Old Testament 87 Ben Hadad I Known only from the Old Testament 88 Ben Hadad II Equated by many Biblical scholars with Adad Idri who was mentioned in Assyrian sources 88 nbsp Hazael c 842 800 BC Probably a usurper described in Assyrian records as the son of a nobody 89 90 Ben Hadad III The only king mentioned by the name Ben Hadad both in the Old Testament and extra biblical sources 88 Rezin 750s 733 BC Known in Assyrian inscription as Raqyan 91 See also edit nbsp Asia portal nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Monarchs of Syria List of Seleucid rulers List of Assyrian kings List of Palmyrene monarchs History of Syria Greater Syria Syrian nationalismNotes edit Antiochus son of Antiochus III was made co king in 209 BC and died in 193 BC 11 There is no reason to believe that Laodice III fell from grace as she survived her husband and was honoured throughout his and his successors reigns 12 Seleucid monarchs did not engage in polygamy and even the most hostile accounts aside from the propagandistic work of Polybius do not accuse Antiochus III with the act 12 Paul J Kosmin suggests a solution for the problem of Antiochus second wife according to Polybius Euboea was a name given by Antiochus to his second wife and it is the name of her island 12 Hence in the view of Kosmin by marrying this girl Antiochus signified that he was marrying the island which the girl became its symbol 12 Antiochus was a child of 4 or 5 years when he ascended the throne 16 Heliodorus might have killed Seleucus IV 15 before being removed by Antiochus IV who kept his nephew as co king before killing him in 170 BC 17 Fritz Heichelheim proposed three possibilities Antiochus was Demetrius I s son Antigonus who assumed the dynastic name Antiochus a pretender or Demetrius I s youngest son Antiochus VII 24 Alfred Raymond Bellinger considered the suggestion of Antiochus VII the most credible 25 Appian called Balas Alexandros Nothos Alexander the bastard this bastardy could have been the reason for the doubts ancient writers showed regarding Alexander s paternity 29 Josephus placed Antiochus murder after the end of Demetrius II s first reign and Diodorus Siculus placed the usurpation of Diodotus Tryphon in the consular year 138 BC 33 However the last coins struk in Antiochus name date to the year142 141 BC indicating that he was murdered around that time 33 Alexander fabricated a genealogy that presented him as the son of Alexander I Balas according to Poseidonius or the adopted son of Antiochus VII according to Justin 38 In 124 123 BC 43 he married Tryphaena who was murdered in 111 BC by Antiochus IX 44 45 By 103 BC he married Tryphaena s sister Cleopatra Selene 46 His reign might have actually ended in 89 88 BC 54 Philip s death date is unknown but traditionally assumed to be the year 84 or 83 BC 57 Although there is a possibility that he ruled until 75 BC 58 In 2002 numismatist Brian Kritt announced the discovery and decipherment of a coin bearing the portrait of Cleopatra Selene and a co ruler 64 65 Kritt read the name of the ruler as Seleucus Philometor and based on the epithet Philometor meaning mother loving identified him with Cleopatra Selene s son unnamed by Cicero 66 Kritt gave the newly discovered ruler the regnal name Seleucus VII and considered it very likely that he is identical with Kybiosaktes 67 The reading of Seleucus VII was accepted by some scholars such as Lloyd Llewellyn Jones and Michael Roy Burgess 68 69 but Oliver D Hoover rejected Kritt s reading noting that the coin was badly damaged and some letters were unreadable Hoover read the king s name as Antiochus and identified him with Antiochus XIII 65 References editCitations edit a b Bryce 2009 p 680 Herodotus 1862 p 126 Pipes 1992 p 13 Mumford 2013 p 70 Mahaffy 2014 p 493 Kosmin 2014 p 122 Austin 2010 p 652 a b Kosmin 2014 p 112 Bunbury 1872 p 719 Alten 2017 p 27 a b Gera 1998 p 283 a b c d e Kosmin 2014 p 137 Vehlow 2013 p 145 a b Ogden 2017 p 241 a b c Gera 1998 p 110 Cook 2004 p 220 a b Gera 1998 p 115 Georganas 2016 p 106 Iossif amp Lorber 2007 p 68 Hazel 2002 p 20 a b Hoover 2000 p 107 Hazel 2002 p 73 a b c d e f g Chrubasik 2016 p XXIV Heichelheim 1944 p 364 Bellinger 1945 p 59 Bellinger 1945 p 58 a b c d e Kosmin 2014 p 22 Chrubasik 2016 p 162 Wright 2011 p 43 Ogden 1999 pp 45 46 Atkinson 2016 p 29 a b Hazel 2002 p 21 a b Atkinson 2016 p 41 Atkinson 2016 p 43 Hoover 2000 p 108 a b Atkinson 2012 p 114 Houghton 1993 pp 88 a b Shayegan 2003 p 96 Kosmin 2014 p 23 Burstein 2007 p 78 Schurer 2014 p 133 McAuley 2017 p 90 Brijder 2014 p 60 Whitehorne 2002 p 165 a b Downey 2015 p 129 Whitehorne 2002 p 166 Atkinson 2012 p 114 115 Whitehorne 2002 p 165 167 Whitehorne 2002 p 167 Kosmin 2014 p 243 Hoover 2007 pp 284 289 a b Downey 2015 p 133 Hoover 2007 pp 288 Hoover 2007 pp 294 Whitehorne 2002 p 168 a b Houghton 1987 pp 79 a b Hoover 2007 p 296 Hoover 2007 p 298 Hoover 2007 pp 298 299 Llewellyn Jones 2013 p 1572 Burgess 2004 p 20 21 Bellinger 1949 p 79 Burgess 2004 p 23 24 Kritt 2002 p 25 a b Hoover 2005 p 95 Kritt 2002 p 27 Kritt 2002 p 28 Llewellyn Jones 2013 p 1573 Burgess 2004 p 20 Kritt 2002 p 27 28 Hoover 2007 p 297 a b c d Burgess 2004 p 24 a b Hoover 2007 p 299 Whitehorne 2002 p 209 Spawforth 2006 p 6 Moubayed 2012 p 20 Schafer 2013 p 245 Salibi 2006 p 68 Flesher amp Chilton 2011 p 339 a b c d Greene 1993 p 44 McClintock amp Strong 1867 p 353 Clarke 1851 p 843 Glenny 2009 p 152 Maxwell Miller amp Hayes 1986 p 214 Lipinski 2000 p 369 a b Galvin 2011 p 90 a b Bryce 2012 p 178 a b c Nelson 2014 p 109 Dever 2012 p 363 Suriano 2007 p 174 Kah Jin Kuan 2016 p 125 Sources edit Alten Elif 2017 Revolt of Achaeus Against Antiochus III the Great and the Siege of Sardis Based on Classical Textual Epigraphic and Numismatic Evidence In Lafli Ergun Kan Sahin Gulseren eds Archaeology and History of Lydia from the Early Lydian Period to Late Antiquity 8th century B C 6th century A D An international Symposium May 17 18 2017 Izmir Turkey Abstracts Booklet Colloquia Anatolica et Aegaea Acta Congressus Communis Omnium Gentium Smyrnae Vol IV The Research Center for the Archaeology of Western Anatolia EKVAM OCLC 6848755244 Atkinson Kenneth 2012 Queen Salome Jerusalem s Warrior Monarch of the First Century B C E McFarland amp Company ISBN 978 0 786 49073 8 Atkinson Kenneth 2016 A History of the Hasmonean State Josephus and Beyond T amp T Clark Jewish and Christian Texts Vol 23 Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 0 567 66903 2 Austin Michel 2010 2006 Seleucids Dynasty of Macedonian Kings In Wilson Nigel ed Encyclopedia of Ancient Greece Routledge ISBN 978 1 136 78800 0 Bellinger Alfred Raymond 1945 King Antiochus in 151 0 B C Hesperia The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens 14 1 The American School of Classical Studies at Athens 58 59 doi 10 2307 146752 ISSN 0018 098X JSTOR 146752 Bellinger Alfred R 1949 The End of the Seleucids Transactions of the Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences 38 Connecticut Academy of Arts and Sciences OCLC 4520682 Brijder Herman A G 2014 Nemrud Dagi Recent Archaeological Research and Preservation and Restoration Activities in the Tomb Sanctuary on Mount Nemrud Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 1 614 51622 4 Bryce Trevor 2009 The Routledge Handbook of the Peoples and Places of Ancient Western Asia Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 15908 6 Bryce Trevor 2012 The World of The Neo Hittite Kingdoms A Political and Military History Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 191 50502 7 Bunbury Edward Herbert 1872 Laodice In Smith William ed A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology Vol II John Murray OCLC 9176630 Burgess Michael Roy 2004 The Moon Is A Harsh Mistress The Rise and Fall of Cleopatra II Selene Seleukid Queen of Syria The Celator 18 3 Kerry K Wetterstrom ISSN 1048 0986 Burstein Stanley Mayer 2007 2004 The Reign of Cleopatra University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 806 13871 8 Clarke Adam 1851 1831 The Holy Bible Containing the Old and New Testaments the Text Printed from the Most Correct Copies of the Present Authorized Translation Including the Marginal Readings and Parallel Texts With a Commentary and Critical Notes Designed as a Help to a Better Understanding of the Sacred Writings Vol 1 Genesis to Esther H S amp J Applegate amp Company OCLC 312892775 Cook John Granger 2004 The Interpretation of the Old Testament in Greco Roman Paganism Studien und Texte zu Antike und Christentum Vol 23 Mohr Siebeck ISBN 978 1 107 16478 9 ISSN 1436 3003 Dever William G 2012 The Lives of Ordinary People in Ancient Israel When Archaeology and the Bible Intersect William B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 978 0 802 86701 8 Downey Glanville 2015 1961 History of Antioch Princeton University Press ISBN 978 1 4008 7773 7 Flesher Paul V M Chilton Bruce D 2011 The Targums A Critical Introduction Studies in the Aramaic Interpretation of Scripture Vol 12 Brill ISBN 978 9 004 21769 0 ISSN 1570 1336 Galvin Garrett 2011 Egypt as a Place of Refuge Forschungen zum Alten Testament 2 Reihe Vol 51 Mohr Siebeck ISBN 978 3 161 50816 5 ISSN 1611 4914 Georganas Ioannis 2016 Antiochus IV Epiphanes In Phang Sara E Spence Iain Kelly Douglas Londey Peter eds Conflict in Ancient Greece and Rome The Definitive Political Social and Military Encyclopedia ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1 610 69020 1 Gera Dov 1998 Judaea and Mediterranean Politics 219 to 161 B C E Brill s Series in Jewish Studies Vol 8 Brill ISBN 978 9 004 09441 3 ISSN 0926 2261 Glenny W Edward 2009 Finding Meaning in the Text Translation Technique and Theology in the Septuagint of Amos Vetus Testamentum Supplements Vol 126 Brill ISBN 978 9 047 42982 1 ISSN 0083 5889 Greene Joseph A 1993 Aram In Metzger Bruce M Coogan Michael David eds The Oxford Companion to the Bible Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 199 74391 9 Hazel John 2002 2000 Who s Who in the Greek World Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 80224 1 Heichelheim Fritz Moritz 1944 Numismatic Comments Hesperia The Journal of the American School of Classical Studies at Athens 13 4 The American School of Classical Studies at Athens 361 364 doi 10 2307 146704 ISSN 0018 098X JSTOR 146704 Herodotus 1862 c 440 BC History of Herodotus A New English Version Edited with Copious Notes and Appendices Illustrating the History and Geography of Herodotus from the Most Recent Sources of Information and Embodying the Chief Results Historical and Ethnographical Which Have Been Obtained in the Progress of Cuneiform and Hieroglyphical Discovery Vol 1 Translated by Rawlinson George John Murray OCLC 833767387 Hoover Oliver D 2000 A Dedication to Aphrodite Epekoos for Demetrius I Soter and His Family Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik 131 Dr Rudolf Habelt GmbH ISSN 0084 5388 Hoover Oliver D 2005 Dethroning Seleucus VII Philometor Cybiosactes Epigraphical Arguments Against a Late Seleucid Monarch Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik 151 Dr Rudolf Habelt GmbH ISSN 0084 5388 Hoover Oliver 2007 A Revised Chronology for the Late Seleucids at Antioch 121 0 64 BC Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 56 3 Franz Steiner Verlag 280 301 doi 10 25162 historia 2007 0021 ISSN 0018 2311 S2CID 159573100 Houghton Arthur 1987 The Double Portrait Coins of Antiochus XI and Philip I a Seleucid Mint at Beroea Schweizerische Numismatische Rundschau 66 Schweizerischen Numismatischen Gesellschaft ISSN 0035 4163 Houghton Arthur 1993 The reigns of Antiochus VIII and Antiochus IX at Antioch and Tarsus Schweizerische Numismatische Rundschau 72 Schweizerischen Numismatischen Gesellschaft ISSN 0035 4163 Iossif Panagiotis Lorber Catharine 2007 Laodikai and the Goddess Nikephoros L Antiquite Classique 76 1 Association L Antiquite Classique ISSN 2295 9076 Kah Jin Kuan Jeffrey 2016 1995 Neo Assyrian Historical Inscriptions and Syria Palestine Israelite Judean Tyrian Damascene Political and Commercial Relations in the Ninth Eighth Centuries BCE Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 498 28143 0 Chrubasik Boris 2016 Kings and Usurpers in the Seleukid Empire The Men who Would be King Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 198 78692 4 Kosmin Paul J 2014 The Land of the Elephant Kings Space Territory and Ideology in the Seleucid Empire Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 72882 0 Kritt Brian 2002 Numismatic Evidence For A New Seleucid King Seleucus VII Philometor The Celator 16 4 Kerry K Wetterstrom ISSN 1048 0986 Lipinski Edward 2000 The Aramaeans Their Ancient History Culture Religion Orientalia Lovaniensia Analecta Vol 100 Peeters Publishers amp Department of Oriental Studies Leuven ISBN 978 9 042 90859 8 ISSN 0777 978X Llewellyn Jones Lloyd 2013 2012 Cleopatra Selene In Bagnall Roger S Brodersen Kai Champion Craige B Erskine Andrew Huebner Sabine R eds The Encyclopedia of Ancient History 13 Vols Vol III Be Co Wiley Blackwell ISBN 978 1 405 17935 5 Mahaffy John Pentland 2014 1895 The Empire of the Ptolemies Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 10807 865 8 Maxwell Miller James Hayes John H 1986 A History of Ancient Israel and Judah Westminster John Knox Press ISBN 978 0 664 21262 9 McAuley Alex 2017 Mother Knows Best Motherhood and Succession in the Seleucid Realm In Cooper Dana Phelan Claire eds Motherhood in Antiquity Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 3 319 48902 5 McClintock John Strong James 1867 Cyclopaedia of Biblical Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature Studies in the Aramaic Interpretation of Scripture Vol 1 Harper amp Brothers Publishers OCLC 174522454 Moubayed Sami 2012 Syria and the USA Washington s Relations with Damascus from Wilson to Eisenhower Library of International Relations Vol 56 I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 780 76768 0 Mumford Gregory D 2013 Egypt and the Levant In Steiner Margreet L Killebrew Ann E eds The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of the Levant c 8000 332 BCE Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 166255 3 Nelson Richard D 2014 Historical Roots of the Old Testament 1200 63 BCE Biblical Encyclopedia Vol 13 Society of Biblical Literature Press ISBN 978 1 628 37006 5 Ogden Daniel 1999 Polygamy Prostitutes and Death The Hellenistic Dynasties Duckworth with the Classical Press of Wales ISBN 978 0 715 62930 7 Ogden Daniel 2017 The Legend of Seleucus Kingship Narrative and Mythmaking in the Ancient World Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 1 107 16478 9 Pipes Daniel 1992 1990 Greater Syria The History of an Ambition Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 195 36304 3 Salibi Kamal S 2006 1993 The Modern History of Jordan I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 860 64331 6 Sartre Maurice 2005 The Middle East Under Rome Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01683 5 Schafer Elizabeth D 2013 1996 Faisal Prince 1885 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doi 10 1086 521754 ISSN 0022 2968 S2CID 162347286 Vehlow Katja 2013 Abraham Ibn Daud s Dorot Olam Generations of the Ages A Critical Edition and Translation of Zikhron Divrey Romi Divrey Malkhey Yisraʾel and the Midrash on Zechariah The Medieval and Early Modern Iberian World Vol 50 Brill ISBN 978 9 004 22790 3 ISSN 1569 1934 Whitehorne John 2002 1994 Cleopatras Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 05806 3 Wright Nicholas L 2011 The Iconography of Succession Under the Late Seleukids Coins from Asia Minor and the East Selections from the Colin E Pitchfork Collection Ancient Coins in Australian Collections Vol 2 Numismatic Association of Australia ISBN 978 0 646 55051 0 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title List of Syrian monarchs amp oldid 1215870162, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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