- by Isocrates,
Idrieus is
described as one of the most
wealthy and
powerful of the
princes of Asia and
Demosthenes advises that
Idrieus had
added the important...
-
shows that
Idrieus built many more
buildings at the site than Mausolus. A
monumental fourth-century
built tomb at
Labraunda may
belong to
Idrieus. Ada I became...
- Hecatomnus,
satrap of Caria,
sister of Mausolus, Pixodarus, Artemisia, and
Idrieus.
While Ada's
father is
known to have been Hekatomnos, the
identity of her...
-
Caria (c. 377 – 352 BCE), and also
later by his
successor and
brother Idrieus;
Labranda was the dynasty's
ancestral sacred shrine. The
prosperity of...
-
deputised his
brother Idrieus to
capture the
fortified town of Latmus; later, he
pretended to
return the
Latmian hostages which Idrieus had captured, and...
- help from its
sister city of Tyre and from
Egypt but gets very little.
Idrieus, the
second son of Hecatomnus,
succeeds to the
throne of
Caria on the death...
- and
establishing the
Hekatomnid dynasty. He left
three sons, Mausolus,
Idrieus and Pixodarus—all of whom—in
their turn,
succeeded him in the sovereignty;...
- Artemisia,
Idrieus, Ada, and Pixodarus. The
children of
Hecatomnus practiced monogamous sibling marriage, with
Mausolus marrying Artemisia and
Idrieus marrying...
-
committed responsibility for the
suppression of the
Cyprian rebels to
Idrieus,
prince of Caria, who emplo**** 8,000 Gr****
mercenaries and
forty triremes...
-
became the
prevalent method in
Europe for
naming years. The king of Caria,
Idrieus, dies,
leaving the
Persian satrapy, by his will, to his
sister Ada, to...