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Tryphena [a] and Tryphosa are Christian women briefly mentioned by name in the Bible in Romans 16:12, in which St. Paul writes: "Greet those workers in the Lord, ...
In 112 BC Antiochus VIII defeated his stepbrother and rival Antiochus IX Cyzicenus, and took Antioch, where Cleopatra IV, the wife of Antiochus IX, stayed.Tryphaena hated her sister Cleopatra IV, who had taken refuge in the temple of Apollo, and wanted her to be killed.
Tryphena and Tryphosa, women mentioned in Romans 16; Tryphena Anderson (born 1933), Jamaican-British nurse, the first black health visitor in the United Kingdom; Tryphena Sparks (1851–1890), a cousin and possible lover of Thomas Hardy; Tryphena, New Zealand, a town in New Zealand
A likely sculpture of Cleopatra V Tryphaena (likely also Cleopatra VI), 1st century BC, from Lower Egypt, now in the Musée Saint-Raymond [1]. Cleopatra VI Tryphaena (Greek: Κλεοπάτρα Τρύφαινα, romanized: Trýphaina, lit.
Tryphaena was the only known daughter and the youngest child of Roman client rulers Polemon Pythodoros and Pythodorida of Pontus. [2] Her elder brothers were Zenon, also known as Artaxias III, who became Roman client king of Armenia and Polemon II of Pontus, who would succeed her mother and became the last Roman client ruler of Pontus.
Excavation photograph of the doll's kit in Crepereia Tryphaena's sarcophagus, described by goldsmith and antiquarian Augusto Castellani [1] [2]. During the excavation, several archaeological finds came to light, including a group of five sarcophagi buried between the middle of the 2nd and the 3rd centuries AD; of these, two still sealed were named after members from the same family: Crepereia ...
Tryphena is a beach settlement on the southern coast of Great Barrier Island in the Hauraki Gulf of New Zealand's Auckland Region. The township has a walkway, shops and public facilities. [ 3 ] It was one of the only areas in Great Barrier Island with good mobile and internet connectivity.
Tryphena Hubbard soon married Henry Seymour, a young man in the community. [45] Early in 1849, Tryphena's father, Noahdiah Hubbard, learned of the Association's open marriages and demanded his daughter's return. Tryphena refused, and for two years, Noahdiah "made a sulking nuisance of himself at the Mansion House." [45]