- Look up
ptolemais in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Ptolemais may
refer to:
Ptolemais of Cyrene, a c. 3rd-century BC
mathematician and
musical theorist...
- Alexandria.
Ptolemais was the home of Arius,
after whom the
Arianism condemned at
Nicaea in 325 was named. Secundus, who was
bishop of
Ptolemais and a patron...
-
Ptolemais Theron (Ancient Gr****: Πτολεμαῒς Θηρῶν and Πτολεμαῒς ἡ τῶν θηρῶν) ('
Ptolemais of the Hunts') was a
marketplace on the
African side of the Red...
- the present-day city of Acre, Israel. It was also
called Ptolemais in
Canaan and Ake-
Ptolemais (or Akko, Ake, or Akre in
Canaanite Language). It was an...
-
Caesaris Ptolemais or
Colonia Claudia Felix Ptolemais Garmanica Stabilis after its
imperial sponsor Claudius; it was
known as
Colonia Ptolemais for short...
-
Ptolemais Hermiou, or
Ptolemais in the Thebaid, was a city and
metropolitan archbishopric in Greco-Roman
Egypt and
remains a
Catholic titular see. Today...
- ****adius of
Ptolemais (Gr****: Έλλάδιος) was a
Christian bishop of
Ptolemais (now Acre, Israel). He was
present at the
First Council of
Ephesus (431)...
- (/sɪˈniːsiəs/; Gr****: Συνέσιος; c. 373 – c. 414) was a Gr****
bishop of
Ptolemais in
ancient Libya, a part of the
Western Pentapolis of
Cyrenaica after...
-
Secundus of
Ptolemais was a 4th-century
bishop of
Ptolemais,
excommunicated after the
First Council of
Nicaea for his nontrinitarianism. Secundus, was...
- by two
demes of
Leontis and one from Aigeis. The
Egyptian Phyle XIII.
Ptolemais,
named after Ptolemy III
Euergetes was
created in 224/223 BC and the Boule...