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90:. After the death of the latter, Sampsiceramus I was confirmed in power and his family was left to rule the surrounding region under Roman suzerainty. Client rulers such as Sampsiceramus I could police routes and preserve the integrity of Rome without cost to Roman manpower or to the Roman treasury; they were probably paid for the privilege.
86:. Pompey had installed client kings in the region, who would become allies of Rome. Among these was Sampsiceramus I. At the request of Pompey, Sampsiceramus I captured and killed in 64 BC, the second last Seleucid King
71:. Sampsiceramus I was a son of Aziz (Azizus, c. 94 BC); paternal grandson of Iamblichus (c. 151 BC) and there was a possibility he may have had a brother called Ptolemaeus (c. 41 BC).
111:, a city north of Emesa, along the Orontes River. The kingdom of Sampsiceramus I was the first of Rome's client kingdoms on the desert's fringes. The kingdom's boundaries extended from the
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which the Romans incorporated in the ruled territory. In time, Sampsiceramus I established and formed a powerful ruling dynasty and a leading kingdom in the
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Sampsiceramus I was an ally to the last
Seleucid Greek Monarchs of Syria. By this time, the Seleucid Empire had become very weak and always appealed to the
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Philosophia in der
Konkurrenz von Schulen, Wissenschaften und Religionen: zur Pluralisierung des Philosophiebegriffs in Kaiserzeit und Spätantike
139:. His Priest-King dynasty ruled from 64 BC until at least 254. When Sampsiceramus I died in 48 BC, he was succeeded by son,
143:. In his reign, the prominence of Emesa grew after Iamblichus I established it as the new capital of the Emesene dynasty.
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According to authors, the name 'Sampsiceramus' might mean "The sun had established", or "The sun has decided".
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Füchslin, Regina; Semenzato, Camille; Horn, Christoph; Wyrwa, Dietmar (2017). Christoph
Riedweg (ed.).
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to help solve political or succession problems. Around 64 BC, the Roman
General and Triumvir,
67:. Sampsiceramus I, his family and his ancestors in Syria had lived under the Greek rule of the
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was added to the domains of
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Caesars and Saints: The Rise of the
Christian State AD 180–313
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who lived in the 1st century BC and was a tribal chieftain or
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had reorganised Syria and the surrounding countries into
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on top of an extinct volcano and rebuilt the city of
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39:; died 48 BC) was the founding Priest-King of the
272:Rome in the East: The Transformation of an Empire
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386:1st-century BC monarchs in the Middle East
123:in the South to Arethusa in the North and
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55:The ancestors of Sampsiceramus were
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100:castle, built by Sampsiceramus I
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325:Julia Domna, Syrian Empress
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396:1st-century BC Arab people
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332:Perowne, Stewart (1992).
63:Valley, and south of the
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88:Antiochus XIII Asiaticus
371:People from Roman Syria
327:. Taylor & Francis.
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391:1st-century BC Romans
381:Roman client monarchs
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59:, who settled in the
191:Füchslin et al. 2017
16:Priest King of Emesa
119:in the East, from
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296:. Routledge.
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179:Perowne 1992
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141:Iamblichus I
113:Beqaa Valley
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28:𐡔𐡌𐡔𐡂𐡓𐡌
19:
18:
235:Levick 2007
208:Birley 2002
355:Categories
321:Levick, B.
167:References
137:Roman East
125:Heliopolis
36:Šamšigeram
252:Ball 2000
220:Ball 2000
133:Salamiyah
51:Biography
323:(2007).
292:(2002).
270:(2000).
109:Arethusa
45:Phylarch
261:Sources
129:Shmemis
117:Palmyra
98:Shmemis
61:Orontes
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121:Yabrud
80:Pompey
147:Notes
105:Emesa
57:Arabs
338:ISBN
307:ISBN
276:ISBN
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30:,
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22:(
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