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| | SFAGN: Articles, Studies and Miscellanea / The End of the Seleucids |
 | | XIII, 13, 4 (366); the latter by Eusebius, pp. |  | | But he was no match for Antiochus, and a compromise was made by which internal affairs were left to the Jews, but the walls of Jerusalem were dismantled, and indemnities and hostages gave the king assurance that Hyrcanus would be a loyal vassal. |  | | XIII, 16, 3 (418) records a Jewish expedition against him as a dangerous neighbor to Damascus. |
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http://www.sfagn.com/miscellanea/bellinger.html
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| | Appian's Roman History: The Mithridatic Wars |
 | | He made war against the Nabataean Arabs, whose king was Aretas, and against the Jews (whose king, Aristobulus, had revolted), until he had captured their holiest city, Jerusalem |  | | He advanced against, and brought under Roman rule without fighting, those parts of Cilicia that were not yet subject to it, and the remainder of Syria which lies along the Euphrates, and the countries called Coele Syria, Phoenicia, a |  | | Pius, who was present and asked for his paternal kingdom, but because he thought that since he |
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http://www.livius.org/ap-ark/appian/appian_mithridatic_22.html
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| | Encyclopedia Search |
 | | Oil...1617 her son Louis XIII asserted his authority, ordering the assassination of the Concini, and... |  | | Pope Pius XIII of the true...that Pope John XXIII had been a freemason, and that thus his election as pope in 1958 had been... |
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http://www.encyclopedian.com/search.php?searWords=XIII
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| | Antiochus X Eusebes - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Beginning his reign in 95 BC his first achievement was to defeat his double half-cousin/second cousin Seleucus VI Epiphanes, thus avenging the recent death of his father Antiochus IX Cyzicenus. |  | | The epithets he took tell much of his story: Eusebes (being a title of his father) and also Philopator (father-loving) both honoured his father. |  | | A son of Antiochus X, by the name of Antiochus XIII Asiaticus, was made client-king in Syria after the Roman general Pompey had defeated Tigranes. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antiochus_X_Eusebes
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| | Middle East Open Encyclopedia: Antiochus |
 | | Antiochus IV of Syria, who ruled during the time of Caligula; |  | | This is a disambiguation page—a list of articles associated with the same title. |  | | Antiochus is also the name of four rulers of the small middle-eastern kingdom of Kommagene: |
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http://www.baghdadmuseum.org/ref/index.php?title=Antiochus
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| | 69 BC |
 | | Pompey installs XIII Asiaticus">Antiochus XIII Asiaticus as King of Syria |  | | Antiochus XIII Asiaticus as King of Syria Tigranes I of Armenia, goes to war against Rome."> |  | | Tigranes I of Armenia, goes to war against Rome. |
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http://www.wordlist.org/69/69-bc.html
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| | Antiochus X Eusebes |
 | | However, Tigranes overran north Syria and Cilicia, and both the Syrian Kings drop out of history. |  | | Antiochus X was ruler of part of the Seleucid Empire, while Philip I Philadelphus, his uncle controlled the remainder. |
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http://www.ancientroute.com/people/Antioc10.htm
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| | Seleucus VII Kybiosaktes at AllExperts |
 | | Seleucus VII Philometor was unknown until recently: from coins issued by him and his mother Kleopatra Selene it is assumed that he was the younger brother of Antiochus XIII Asiaticus and "reigned" during the occupation of Syria by Armenian king Tigranes (83-69 BC). |  | | The last members of the once mighty Seleucid dynasty are shadowy figures; local dynasts with complicated family ties whose identities are hard to ascertain: many of them also bore the same names. |
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http://experts.about.com/e/s/se/Seleucus_VII_Kybiosaktes.htm
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| | Antiochus XIII Asiaticus |
 | | Thus, Antiochus XIII was the last of his line. |  | | After a period of confusion of several kings and pretenders, and split empire, the Seleucid Empire ended. |  | | He was deposed and Pompey added the area to the Roman Empire in 64 |
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http://www.ancientroute.com/people/Antioc13.htm
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| | Selecukid.htm |
 | | Antiochus III the Great 223 - 187 BCE |  | | Antiochus VIII Grypus - (123-114 and 112-111 BCE) |  | | Antiochus IX Cyzicenus - (114-112, 111-108 and 96-95 BCE) |
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http://www.worldcoincatalog.com/AC/C2/Greece/AG/HK/Selecukid/Selecukid.htm
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