-
Sanatruk (Latinized as Sanatruces) was a
member of the
Arsacid dynasty of
Armenia who
succeeded Tiridates I of
Armenia as King of
Armenia at the end of...
- Grecized),
Sanatruk (Old Armenian: Սանատրուկ), or
Sanatruq (Aramaicized), may
refer to:
Sanatruces of
Parthia Sanatruces II of
Parthia Sanatruk, Arsacid...
-
first Armenian woman to
embrace Christianity. Her
father was King
Sanatruk. King
Sanatruk of
Armenia discovered that his
daughter had
converted to Christianity...
- in the 5th century,
Thaddeus suffered martyrdom in
Armenia under King
Sanatruk, and is
revered as an
apostle of the
Armenian Church.
Legend has it that...
- Maecenas,
Roman politician (d. 8 BC)
Mithridates I, king of
Commagene Sanatruces (or
Sanatruk), king of
Parthia Wikimedia Commons has
media related to 70 BC....
- Armenia,
where he
converted King
Sanatruk's daughter, who was
eventually martyred alongside Thaddeus when
Sanatruk later fell into apostasy.
After this...
-
martyrdom name the king as
either Agrippa (identified with
Tigranes VI), or
Sanatruk, king of Armenia. The 13th-century
Saint Bartholomew Monastery was a prominent...
- when
Osroes I of
Parthia (r. c. 109–128 AD)
deposed the
Armenian king
Sanatruk and
replaced him with Axidares, son of
Pacorus II,
without consulting Rome...
- fell into
chaos after the
death of
Tiridates III. An
Arsacid prince named Sanatruk (whom
Faustus of
Byzantium calls Sanesan, king of Maskut, and identifies...
- Nusaybin) was
reconstructed by
Sanatruk,
following the city's
destruction by an earthquake. It is
unclear whether this
Sanatruk was a king of
Armenia or a...