- "... 10. 6. led an army
against . . . Abrupolis, king of the
Sapaeans etc. The
Sapaeans were a
Thracian tribe in the
neighbourhood of Abdera..." Pausanias...
-
tribes were the
Sapaeans; the
latter eventually became Rome's
allies and clients. However, many
Thracians continued to
oppose both the
Sapaeans as well as...
- Diegylis' son Mostis, of the Caeni, king ~130–90 BC
Abrupolis of the
Sapaeans, 2nd
century BC
Rabocentus of the
Bessi mentioned by
Cicero Cosingas, chieftain...
-
Rhescuporis I was the
Sapaean king of
Thrace in 48-41 BC. He was the son of
Cotys I.
Raskuporis Cove on
Livingston Island in the
South Shetland Islands...
-
abolished the Asti
dynasty and
established the
Sapaeans in Bizye, the
capital of the former. The
Sapaeans of
Bizye created a
large kingdom loyal to Rome...
-
Cotys I (Ancient Gr****: Κότυς; died 48 BC) was a
Sapaean client king of the
Odrysian kingdom of
Thrace from c. 57 BC to c. 48 BC. He was the son of Rhoemetalces...
-
Cotys II (Ancient Gr****: Κότυς) was a king of the
Sapaean kingdom of
Thrace from 42 to ca. 15 BC,
succeeding his father,
Rhescuporis I.
Thracian Kings...
- half of 1st
century BC and
first half of 1st century, died 18 AD) was the
Sapaean Roman client king of
eastern Thrace from 12 to 18 AD.
Cotys was the son...
-
client state of the late
Roman Republic and
early Roman Empire as the
Sapaean kingdom.
Roman emperor Claudius annexed the
kingdom as a
Roman province...
- page 132: "... led an army
against ... Abrupolis, king of the
Sapaeans etc. The
Sapaeans were a
Thracian tribe in the
neighbourhood of Abdera..." Euripides:...