-
adopted the
title "
satrap" for the semi-autonomous
princes that
governed one of its
Armenian provinces, the Satrapiae. The
Western Satraps or
Kshatrapas (35–405...
- The
Western Satraps, or
Western Kshatrapas (Brahmi:, Mahakṣatrapa, "Great
Satraps") were Indo-Scythian (Saka)
rulers of the
western and
central parts...
-
Satrapes was a god in the
Palmyrene pantheon, the name
occurring in
Syrian inscriptions from
Palmyra and the Hauran.
Pausanias (vi.25, 26)
mentions 'Satrapes'...
- The
Northern Satraps (Brahmi: , Kṣatrapa, "
Satraps" or , Mahakṣatrapa, "Great
Satraps"), or
sometimes Satraps of Mathura, or
Northern Sakas, are a dynasty...
- The
Sarcophagus of the
Satrap is an
ancient marble funerary monument discovered at the Ayaa
Necropolis in Sidon, present-day Lebanon, and is
believed to...
-
incorrectly called Achaemenides by Ctesias) was an
Achaemenid general and
satrap of
ancient Egypt during the
early 5th
century BC, at the time of the 27th...
-
Imara satrapes is a moth in the
Castniidae family. It is
found in Brazil,
Paraguay and Uruguay. The
wingspan is
about 75 mm.
Imara satrapes catharina...
-
Philotas (Gr****: Φιλώτας;
lived 4th
century BC) was a
Macedonian officer in the
service of
Alexander the Great, who
commanded one
taxis or
division of...
- over
Indian kings around 60 BCE, thus
founding the
Northern Satraps. Some of
their first satraps were
Hagamasha and Hagana, who were in turn
followed by Rajuvula...
- Saka
continued to
govern as satrapies,
forming the
Northern Satraps and
Western Satraps. The
power of the Saka
rulers started to
decline in the 2nd century...