- (520-450 BC) in Caria.
Hecatomnus was the son and
successor of Hyssaldomus, a
dynastic ruler of Mylasa. It is
likely that
Hecatomnus had been a supporter...
- in Labraunda. Mousolus, the
eldest son of
Hecatomnus,
became satrap of
Caria after Hecatomnus died.
Hecatomnus' Tomb
consists of the
Temenos Wall, the Menandros...
- upon
Hecatomnus'
death in 377 BCE. The two may have
shared the rule of
Caria in the
early 370s BCE, though,
shortly before the
death of
Hecatomnus. Their...
- 2024. The Tomb of
Hecatomnus - Milas, Turkey: https://archive.archaeology.org/1101/topten/turkey.html
Golden crown of
Hecatomnus to be
returned to Turkey:...
- (Ancient Gr****: Ἄδα) (fl. 377 – 326 BC) was a
member of the
House of
Hecatomnus (the Hecatomnids) and
ruler of
Caria during the mid-4th
century BC, first...
- the
father of
Hecatomnus,
better known as the
founder of the dynasty, and a
woman named Aba, who may also have been the
mother of
Hecatomnus' children. He...
-
nominal ruler of the region,
Hecatomnus of Milas, died and left
control of the
kingdom to his son, Mausolus.
Hecatomnus, a
local dynast under the Persians...
- doi:10.1086/676285. ISSN 0009-837X. JSTOR 10.1086/676285. S2CID 170273543.
Hecatomnus had
several children, all of whom
would rule at some
point following his...
-
Pixodarus son of
Katomno (
Hecatomnus), the
satrap who is in
Karka (Caria) and
Termmila (Lycia).... When Pixodarus, the son of
Hecatomnus,
became satrap of Lycia...
- the best
known Halicarn****ian, to
leave his
native city (c. 457 BC).
Hecatomnus became king of Caria, at that time part of the
Persian Empire, ruling...