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  2. Aram (region) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aram_(region)

    The choronym of the name Aram refers to the geographical region in which they lived and means High(landers). [10] The toponym A-ra-mu appears in an inscription at the East Semitic speaking kingdom of Ebla listing geographical names, and the term Armi, which is the Eblaite term for nearby Idlib, occurs frequently in the Ebla tablets (c. 2300 BCE

  3. List of Syrian monarchs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Syrian_monarchs

    According to Polybius, King Antigonus I Monophthalmus established the Syrian kingdom which included Coele-Syria. [5] The Seleucid king Antiochus III the Great defeated the Ptolemaic Kingdom in the Battle of Panium (200 BC); he annexed the Syrian lands controlled by Egypt (Coele-Syria) and united them with his Syrian lands, thus gaining control of the entirety of Syria. [6]

  4. Middle Assyrian Empire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Middle_Assyrian_Empire

    The Middle Assyrian Empire was the third stage of Assyrian history, covering the history of Assyria from the accession of Ashur-uballit I c. 1363 BC and the rise of Assyria as a territorial kingdom [1] to the death of Ashur-dan II in 912 BC. [a] The Middle Assyrian Empire was Assyria's first period of ascendancy as an empire. Though the empire ...

  5. Assyria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assyria

    Assyria was at its strongest in the Neo-Assyrian period, when the Assyrian army was the strongest military power in the world [7] and the Assyrians ruled the largest empire then yet assembled in world history, [7] [8] [9] spanning from parts of modern-day Iran in the east to Egypt in the west.

  6. List of Assyrian kings - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Assyrian_kings

    For much of its early history, Assyria was little more than a city-state, centered on the city Assur, but from the 14th century BC onwards, Assyria rose under a series of warrior kings to become one of the major political powers of the Ancient Near East, and in its last few centuries it dominated the region as the largest empire the world had ...

  7. Syria (region) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Syria_(region)

    Antoun Saadeh's SSNP map of a "Natural Syria", based on the etymological connection between the name "Syria" and "Assyria" The boundaries of the region have changed throughout history, and were last defined in modern times by the proclamation of the short-lived Arab Kingdom of Syria and subsequent definition by French and British mandatory ...

  8. File:Map of Assyria.png - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Map_of_Assyria.png

    Assyria; Assyrian people; Bit-Istar; Bit Adini; Bit Bahiani; Carchemish; Esarhaddon; Gurgum; History of Anatolia; History of Iraq; History of Israel; History of the Assyrians; Kammanu; Kummuh; List of ancient great powers; List of conflicts in Asia; List of conflicts in Iraq; Luhuti; Medo-Babylonian conquest of the Assyrian Empire; Middle ...

  9. Arameans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arameans

    Since earlier times, ancient Greeks commonly used "Syrian" labels as designations for Arameans and heir lands, but it was during the Hellenistic (Seleucid-Ptolemaic) period that the term "Syria" was finally defined to designate the regions west of the Euphrates, as opposed to the term "Assyria", which designated the regions further east.

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