- Gr**** mythology,
Arabius or
Arabus (Ancient Gr****: Ἀράβιος or Ἄραβος) may
refer to the
following distinct or
identical individuals:
Arabius,
eponym of Arabia...
-
after conquering Northwestern India.
Alexander mentions the
river name as
Arabius (Ancient Gr****: Ἀράβιος), and
local people as Oreitans. In 711 CE, the...
-
Arabius Scholasticus (Ancient Gr****: Ἀράβιος Σχολαστικὸς) was a
writer of
classical antiquity who was the
author of
seven epigrams in the Gr**** Anthology...
-
Phrynichus Arabius (/ˈfrɪnɪkəs/;
Ancient Gr****: Φρύνιχος Ἀράβιος, lit. 'Phrynichus “the Arab”') or
Phrynichus of
Bithynia (Ancient Gr****: Φρύνιχος ὁ Βιθυνός)...
- Ibn ʿArabī (Arabic: ابن عربي, ALA-LC: Ibn ʻArabī; full name: أبو عبد الله محـمـد بن عربي الطائي الحاتمي, Abū ʻAbd Allāh Muḥammad ibn ʻArabī al-Ṭāʼī al-Ḥātimī;...
- Abderus, Autolycus, Eudoros, Angelia, Myrtilus, Palaestra, Aethalides,
Arabius, Astacus, Bounos, Cephalus, Cydon, Pharis, Polybus, Prylis, Saon Equivalents...
- 86–160 Helena,
mother of
Constantine the
Great c. 250 – c. 330
Phrynichus Arabius (2nd century),
grammarian Auxentius of
Bithynia (c. 400 – 473), hermit...
-
Dionysius of Halicarn****us, and
grammarians such as
Herodian and
Phrynichus Arabius at Alexandria, this
tendency prevailed from the 1st
century BC onward,...
-
after conquering Northwestern India.
Alexander mentions the
river name as
Arabius, and
local people as Oreitans. The
largest town of them was
called Rhambacia...
-
leading part in
establishing the
oligarchy of the Four
Hundred Phrynichus Arabius or
Phrynichus Atticista (2nd
century AD),
abbreviated in
lexica as [Phryn...