- Artab**** (Ancient Gr****: Ἁρτάβανος Artabanos;
Middle Persian: ʾltwʾn
Ardawān) may
refer to
various rulers/monarchs of
ancient Persia and Parthia: Artab****...
- Artab**** I (Parthian: 𐭍𐭐𐭕𐭓
Ardawān),
incorrectly known in
older scholarship as Artab**** II, was king of the
Parthian Empire,
ruling briefly from...
- Artab**** II (also
spelled Artabanos II or
Ardawan II; Parthian: 𐭍𐭐𐭕𐭓
Ardawān),
incorrectly known in
older scholarship as Artab**** III, was King of...
- Artab**** III (Parthian: 𐭍𐭐𐭕𐭓
Ardawān),
incorrectly known in
older scholarship as Artab**** IV, was a
Parthian prince who
competed against his brother...
- own life story—his rise to the throne,
battle against the
Parthian king
Ardawān (or Artab****), and
conquest of the
empire by the
scion of the
House of...
- *Arta-bānu ("the
glory of Arta."). The
Parthian and
Middle Persian variant was
Ardawān (𐭓𐭕𐭐𐭍). In c. 208,
Vologases VI
succeeded his
father Vologases V as...
-
During his
exile in Hyrcania, Artab**** III
adopted Gotarzes, son of
Ardawan,
satrap of Hyrcania. Artab**** III
retrieved the
throne and was succeeded...
-
adverbially without any change:
Ardawān saxt awištāft '
Ardawan was in a
great hurry' (ʾldwn sht' ʾwštʾp̄t), lit. '
Ardawan was
hurrying greatly'. However...
-
Elect (Latin: ēlēctī; Syriac: ܡܫܡܫܢܐ /m(ə)ʃamməʃɑne/;
Middle Persian:
ardawan or dēnāwar; Chinese: 阿羅緩; pinyin: āluóhuǎn or Chinese: 電那勿; pinyin: diànnàwù)...
- Olbrycht,
Marek Jan (2012). "The Political-Military
Strategy of Artabanos/
Ardawān II in AD 34–371". Anabasis:
Studia classica et Orientalia. 3: 215–237....