- form Aršan- and is used in
multiple Old
Persian compound-names, such as
Aršaka, Aršāma, and Xšayaaršan. The term is
linguistically related to Gr**** arsēn...
-
Parthian kings in
Babylonian do****ents was "ar-ša-kâ LUGAL.LUGAL.MEŠ" (
Aršakâ šar šarrāni, "Arsaces, king of kings").
Several tablets from the Parthian...
-
which is
attested in
several Gr****
forms including Arsikas (Plutarch),
Arsakas and
Arsaces (Persica). From
Arsaces also
derives the name of the Arsacid...
-
standard royal title of the
Arsacid (Parthian)
kings while in
Babylon was
Aršaka šarru ("Arsacid king"), King of
Kings (recorded as šar šarrāni by contemporary...
-
given name of
Iranian origin. It also
appears as Old Persian: 𐎠𐎼𐏁𐎣
Aršaka, Parthian: 𐭀𐭓𐭔𐭊 Aršak, Armenian: Արշակ, or
Arsaces (Ancient Gr****: Ἀρσάκης)...
- (Ἀρσάκης),
itself from
Parthian Aršak (𐭀𐭓𐭔𐭊). The Old
Persian equivalent is
Aršaka- (𐎠𐎼𐏁𐎣).
Arsaces II
succeeded his
father Arsaces I in 217 BC. In 209...
- Børge
Enoksen at
mannen både i går og i dag har
nekta å
stille til avhøyr.
Årsaka er at
mannen har
stilt krav til
korleis avhøyret skal bli utført. ... –...
- clan of Sakastan.
Orodes I, for example, was
recorded in
cuneiforms as
Aršakā / Aršakam (šarru/šar šarrāni) ša ițțarridu Urudā (šarru); "Arsaces (king/king...