- The
Battle of
Selinus,
which took
place early in 409 BC, is the
opening battle of the so-called
Second Sicilian War. The ten-day-long
siege and battle...
- [seliˈnunte];
Ancient Gr****: Σελῑνοῦς, romanized: Selīnoûs [
seliːnûːs]; Latin:
Selīnūs [
sɛˈliːnuːs]; Sicilian:
Silinunti [sɪlɪˈnuntɪ]) was a rich and extensive...
-
Selinus, or
celery in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Selinus (Latin for Selinunte) was a city of
ancient Sicily.
Selinus may also
refer to:
Selinus...
-
symbols instead of
cuneiform script.
Selinus or
Selinous (Ancient Gr****: Σελινούς, romanized: Selinous; Latin:
Selinus; Neo-Babylonian Akkadian: 𒌷𒊓𒀠𒇻𒉌𒂊...
-
Longinus of
Selinus (Gr****: Λογγῖνος; Latin:
Longinus Selinuntius; born
early 5th century, died 498) was one of the
Isaurian leaders in the
Isaurian War...
- In Gr**** mythology,
Selinus (/ˈsɛlɪnəs/;
Ancient Gr****: Σελινούς, romanized: Selinoús, Modern: Σελινούντας Selinoúntas) was a
native king of
Aegalea (Ἀιγάλεια...
-
Aristoxenus (Ancient Gr****: Ἀριστόξενος) of
Selinus (modern
Selinunte in Sicily) was a poet of
ancient Greece who is said to have been the
first who wrote...
- The Pont
Serme or Pons
Selinus,
later called the Pons Septimus, was a
Roman bridge of the Via
Domitia in the Aude department,
commune of Coursan, Occitania...
-
Phoenicians in
Sicily and the
Elymians had
united to
defeat the Gr****s of
Selinus and
Rhodes near
Lilybaeum in 580 BC, the
first such
recorded incident in...
-
together with the
metopes of
Temple C at
Selinus.
Triglyphs and
metopes from the
Temple C (
Selinus) at
Selinus, c. 560 BC, in the
Antonino Salinas Regional...