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Summary Of: Zenobia

Zenobia appeared in golden chains in Aurelian... Zenobia in literature and the theatre... Zenobia was born with the name... Zenobia would put on official documents... Zenobia and her mother were called Al... Zenobia was born and raised in Palmyra... was Egyptian is based on the fact that Zenobia knew the ancient Egyptian language very well and had a strong predisposition toward the ancient... Zenobia claimed to be a descendant of... Zenobia is descended from the three above named figures through... Zenobia was described as beautiful and intelligent... Zenobia had a strong and melodic voice and many charms... Zenobia was well educated and knew Greek... Zenobia married King of Palmyra Septimius... Zenobia coin reporting her title... Zenobia coin reporting her title... Zenobia and Odaenathus had a son... Zenobia bestowed upon herself and her son the honorific titles of... Zenobia conquered new territories and increased the Palmyrene Empire in the memory of her husband and... Zenobia became known as a... Zenobia with her large army made expeditions and conquered... Zenobia took the vital... The forces of Aurelian and Zenobia met and fought near Antioch... Zenobia was unable to remove her treasury at Emesa before Aurelian successfully entered and besieged Emesa... Zenobia and her son escaped from Emesa on camel back with help from the Sassanids... Zenobia and Vaballathus were taken as hostages to Rome by Aurelian... Zenobia appeared in golden chains in Aurelian... Zenobia married a Roman governor and senator whose name is unknown... The evidence of a descendant of Zenobia can be confirmed by an inscription found in Rome... Zenobia in literature and the theatre... Zenobia in literature and the theatre... Zenobia was the heroine of... Zenobia has been the heroine of three operas... a map labelled Zenobia is hanging on the wall of Mr Chasper... Zenobia as a third...

Encyclodia Page On: Zenobia

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Zenobia (disambiguation) | | | Syrian | queen | Palmyrene Empire | Odaenathus | Egypt | Aurelian | Tivoli, Italy | Arabic language | Roman citizenship | Antoninus Pius | Marcus Aurelius | Commodus | Syria | Egypt | Greek | usurper | Royal Family of Emesa | Homs | Syria | Julius Bassianus | Julia Domna | Dido | Carthage | Ptolemaic | Greek | Cleopatra VII | Augustan History | Alexandria | Egypt | Vaballathus | Callinicus | Drusilla of Mauretania | Ptolemy of Mauretania | Julia Urania | Mauretania | Royal Family of Emesa | Cleopatra Selene II | Mark Antony | Juba II | Carthage | Hannibal | Latin | Homer | Plato | Greece | Odaenathus | | | Augusta | Vaballathus | Arabic | Sassanid Empire | Anatolia | Ankara | Chalcedon | Syria | Palestine | Lebanon | trade routes | Aurelian | Gallic Empire | Antioch | Euphrates | Cassius Longinus | Tivoli, Italy | Odaenathus | Zenobius of Florence | bishop | Arthur Murphy | tragedy | Alexander Baron | Louis de Wohl | Bertrice Small | ISBN 0-345-32785-3 | Edith Wharton | Robert A. Heinlein | William Golding | Sinbad and the Eye of the Tiger | Mansour Rahbani | Tomaso Albinoni | Pasquale Anfossi | Rossini | Aureliano in Palmira | P.G. Wodehouse | Joy in the Morning | Anthony Burgess | The Doctor is Sick | Augustan History | Wikimedia Commons | Categories | Syrian people | Women in ancient warfare | Female regents | Crisis of the Third Century | Thirty Tyrants | 3rd century births | 3rd century deaths |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Zenobia".