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(Later Pokemon Yellow and Blue were released Nationally) The following list details the 151 Pokémon of generation I in order of their National Pokédex number. The first Pokémon, Bulbasaur, is number 0001 and the last, Mew, is number 0151. Alternate forms that result in type changes are included for convenience.
The generation was unveiled at the beginning of the Nintendo Space World '97 event. [1] Gold and Silver were first released on November 21, 1999, in Japan. [2] The games are set in the Johto region, which is based on the real-world Kansai region of Japan. Due to the games acting as a sequel to the first generation of the franchise, the Pokémon ...
Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item ... (Greek: Ἀνακυνδαράξης) was the father of Sardanapalus, king of Assyria. [1] [2] [3] Notes This ...
Sannyrion wrote the following works. Τέλως Telōs ("Finally"); Δανάη Danae; Ιώ Io; Σαρδανάπαλλος Sardanapalus (The title could have been mistaken by Suda; reading a passage of Athenaeus strongly suggests that Suda mistook it for the play by Strattis mentioned above, Psychastae (Ψυχασταί).) [2]
Myrrha made Sardanapalus appear at the head of his armies, but after winning three successive battles in this way he was eventually defeated. A beaten man, Myrrha persuaded Sardanapalus to place himself on a funeral pyre which she would ignite and subsequently leap onto - burning them both alive.
Articles relating to the legendary king Sardanapalus of Assyria and his depictions. He was portrayed as practicing cross-dressing , having both male and female concubines , and choosing suicide by self-immolation over captivity in the hands of his enemies.
Paroyr Skayordi (or i Skayordwoyn Paroyr 'Paroyr, son of Skayordi') [8] is mentioned in the history of Movses Khorenatsi as a descendant of the Armenian patriarch Hayk who helped the Median king "Varbakes" [a] defeat the Assyrian king "Sardanapalus" (a corruption of Ashurbanipal in classical sources, a composite figure of the last Assyrian kings) [10] and received the crown of Armenia in return.
The earliest known reference to Sardanapalus comes from the 5th-century BCE Histories of Herodotus, which includes a reference to the riches of Sardanapalus, king of Nineveh. Legendary tales in Aramaic , based on the civil war between Ashurbanipal ("Sarbanabal") and Shamash-shum-ukin ("Sarmuge"), are attested from the 3rd century BC.