-
Argaeus II (Ancient Gr****: Ἀργαῖος, romanized:
Argaios) was a
pretender to the
Macedonian crown. He may have been a
Lynkestian ruler.
Argaeus II was a...
- 'Archelaos'
after Orestes' death.
Theopompus of
Chios wrote that "they call both
Argaios and
Pausanias Archelaos [sic]"
which historian Nicholas Hammond emends...
- Loulon, on the
northern exit of the
Cilician Gates, and
continued with Mt.
Argaios (identified
mostly with Keçikalesı on
Hasan Dağı, but also with Erciyes...
-
Argaeus (Gr****: Ἀργαῖος, romanized:
Argaios; fl. c. 623 BC) was king of the
ancient Gr****
kingdom of Macedon. He was a
member of the
Argead dynasty and...
-
Cappadocian Gr****
athletic seminary team "
Argaios" in
Kayseri (1907). The team was
named after Mt.
Argaios, a
famous volcano in Cappadocia....
-
Argaeus II and Amyntas.
Theopompus of
Chios wrote that "they call both
Argaios and
Pausanias Archelaos [sic]"
which Hammond emends to read, "they call...
-
Argeus (Gr****: Ἀργαῖος,
Argaios, Latin: Argaeus) was a Gr****
general who
claimed the
right to the
throne of
ancient Macedon during the rule of Philip...
- of
Moryllus are two
Delphic theorodokoi,
Hadymos and
Seleukos sons of
Argaios (c. 230-220 BCE). The site of
Moryllus is
located near
modern Ano Apostoli...
- but is receding.
Erciyes is the
adoption into
Turkish of the Gr**** name
Argaios (Gr****: Ἀργαῖος). The
Latinized form is Argaeus; a
rarely encountered alternative...
-
pretender to the
Macedonian throne in the 360s BC
Hadymos and
Seleukos son of
Argaios Naopoios (Temple-builder), an
elected Archon by Hieromnemones, responsible...