-
thought to be a
potential Mannaean site. More recently,
another branch of Ziwiyeh, the site of
Qalaichi has been
linked to the
Mannaeans based on a
stela with...
-
Armenia in
southeastern Anatolia c. 300–800, of Caspio-Median or Matianian-
Mannaean origin.
About 451 were
rulers Pharsman Mandakuni and
Sahak Mandakuni. List...
- Elam (3200–539 BC), and
later with
other peoples such as the K****ites,
Mannaeans, and Gutians.
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel called the
Persians the "first...
-
Iranian Archaeology: North-western Region, Tehran, 2004, 229–45(in Persian).
Mannaean glazed bricks from
Bukan Mannaean glazed bricks from
Bukan v t e v t e...
- them the Guti, Hurrians,
Mannai (
Mannaeans), and Armenians,
lived in this
region in antiquity. The
original Mannaean homeland was
situated east and south...
-
Scythian Kingdom 678–550 BC: Part of
Median Empire 850–616 BC:
Inhabited by
Mannaeans 2700–539 BC:
Inhabited by
Elamites 3200–2700 BC:
Inhabited by Proto-Elamites...
- of the
Caspian and Aral Seas.
Following the
defeat of a
joint ****yrian-
Mannaean force at
Gablinu by the new
Babylonian rebel king and
founder of the Neo-Babylonian...
-
Sarduri I, who
moved the
capital to
Tushpa (Van).
Ishpuini conquered the
Mannaean city of Musasir,
which was then made the
religious center of the empire...
- 2021). H****anzadeh,
Yousef (2023-01-25). "An
Archaeological View to the
Mannaean Kingdom". Asia
Anteriore Antica.
Journal of
Ancient Near
Eastern Cultures...
- Neo-****yrian power,
while the
Mannaeans themselves saw the Neo-****yrian
imperial demands as a now
unneeded burden. Therefore, the
Mannaean king Aḫšēri (r. c. 675 – c...