- (Latin: De
Mulieribus Claris)
follows Josephus in
calling the
Queen of
Sheba Nicaula.
Boccaccio writes she is the
Queen of
Ethiopia and Egypt, and that some...
- Lavinia,
queen of
Laurentum 42. Dido, or Elissa,
queen of
Carthage 43.
Nicaula,
queen of
Ethiopia 44. Pamphile,
daughter of
Platea 45. Rhea Ilia, a Vestal...
- of
death Nerthus Mythical Britain/Germany
Fertile Goddess Earth mother Nicaula c. 980 BC
Ethiopia Hatshepsut Scholar,
queen Nicobule Unknown Ancient Greece...
- Ethiopia:
Nubia and
Abyssinia (Volume I). London:
Methuen & Co. pp. 205–207. "
Nicaula".
Brooklyn Museum.
Retrieved 13
November 2022. Budge, E. A.
Wallis (1928)...
- 98–99. Morié 1904a, p. 386. Morié 1904a, p. 391. Morié 1904a, p. 384. "
Nicaula".
Brooklyn Museum.
Retrieved November 13, 2022.
Giovanni Boccaccio (2001)...
-
referred to as Belkis.
Alternative names given for her have been Nikaule,
Nicaula and
Bilikisu Sungbon. She
supposedly lived in the 10th
century BC. She...