-
Andragoras is the name of two ****enistic satraps:
Andragoras (Seleucid satrap) (died 238 BCE), also
known as
Narisanka Andragoras (4th
century BC), also...
- Not to be
mistaken for
Andragoras, a
satrap of
Alexander from 331 BC, also in the area of Parthia.
Andragoras (Gr****: Ἀνδραγόρας; died 238 BC) was an Iranian...
- in question."
Taking advantage of the
uncertain political situation,
Andragoras, the
Seleucid governor of Parthia,
proclaimed his
independence and began...
- In 245 BC,
Andragoras, the
Seleucid governor (satrap) of
Parthia ("roughly
western Khurasan")
proclaimed independence from the Seleucids, when - following...
-
successor Antiochus II in c. 245 BC.
Andragoras may have
founded the city of Dehestān
during his
tenure as satrap.
Andragoras was
killed in 238 BC
during the...
- the
satrapy of
Parthia (now
shared between Turkmenistan and Iran) from
Andragoras, who had
rebelled against the
Seleucid Empire. He
spent the rest of his...
- Not to be
mistaken for
Andragoras, a
Seleucid satrap of
around 250 BC.
Andragoras the
Parthian (Gr****: Ανδραγόρας)
seems to have been a
satrap of Alexander...
-
Sogdiana under Diodotus,
Cappadocia under Ariarathes III, and
Parthia under Andragoras. A few
years later, the last was
defeated and
killed by the
invading Parni...
- case of
questionable veracity given the
ambiguity of names. In 247 BCE,
Andragoras, the
Seleucid governor (satrap) of
Parthia ("roughly
western Khurasan")...
-
invades and
conquers Parthia killing, in the process, the
local ruler Andragoras. Asia
Minor A
joint Seleucid-Galatian
invasion of
Pergamon is defeated...