-
Latin Poenī (adj. poenicus,
later pūnicus),
comes from Gr**** Φοινίκη,
Phoiníkē. Poenulus, a
Latin comedic play
written in the
early 2nd
century BC, appears...
-
Byzantine Emperor Constans II led a
fleet in
person to
attack the
Muslims at
Phoinike (off Lycia) but it was defeated: both
sides suffered heavy losses in the...
- ton men ge libanôton
sullegousi tên
sturaka thumiôntes, tên es ****ênas
Phoinikes exagousi: tautên thumiôntes lambanousi: ta gar
dendrea tauta ta libanôtophora...
- Latin: [ˈsʏri.a pʰoe̯ˈniːkeː]; Koinē Gr****: ἡ Φοινίκη Συρία, romanized: hē
Phoinī́kē Syría Koinē Gr****: [(h)e pʰyˈni.ke syˈri.a]) was a
province of the Roman...
- 19-year-old (17 at the
start of the series) son of the
former caesar of
Phoiníkē, Apollodorus, with whom he has a very
estranged relationship.
Kyros has...
- Dionysus : ‘There is a
certain Nysa,
mountain high, with
forests thick, in
Phoinike afar,
close to Aigyptos' (Egypt's) streams.’
Diodorus Siculus, Library...
- 36 Herodotus, Bks. 2:104 (Φοἰνικες δἐ καὶ Σὐριοι οἱ ἑν τᾔ Παλαιστἰνῃ, "
Phoinikes de kaì
Surioi oi en té Palaistinē"); 3:5; 7:89
Kasher 1990, p. 15 Asheri...
- the
Seleucid (c. 178 BC), 2nd-century BC high-priest in Coele-Syria and
Phoinike,
commissioned by
Seleucus IV
Philopator Olympiodorus of
Thebes (fl. 412)...
-
reported use by the
Phoenicians for
navigation at sea were also
named Phoinikē. The
tradition of
naming the
northern constellations "bears"
appears to...
- punicus,
based on the
Ancient Gr**** word Φοῖνιξ (Phoinix), pl. Φοίνικες (
Phoinikes), an
exonym used to
describe the
Canaanite port
towns with
which the Gr****s...