Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Classical_Anatolia> ?p ?o }
- Classical_Anatolia abstract "Anatolia, also known by the Latin name of Asia Minor, is considered to be the westernmost extent of Asia. Geographically it encompasses the central uplands of modern Turkey, from the coastal plain of the Aegean Sea east to the mountains on the Armenian border and from the narrow coast of the Black Sea south to the Taurus mountains and Mediterranean coast.The earliest representations of culture in Anatolia were Stone Age artifacts. The remnants of Bronze Age civilizations such as the Hattian, Akkadian, Assyrian, and Hittite peoples provide us with many examples of the daily lives of its citizens and their trade. After the fall of the Hittites, the new states of Phrygia and Lydia stood strong on the western coast as Greek civilization began to flourish. Only the threat from the emerging Persian kingdom prevented them from advancing past their peak of success.For the next 200 years, all of Anatolia came under Achaemenid Persian rule. Their system of local government divided in satrapies in Anatolia allowed many port cities to grow and to become wealthy. Their governors revolted periodically but did not pose a serious threat. In the aftermath of the Greco-Persian Wars, all of Anatolia still remained under Persian control. The Greek Alexander the Great finally wrested control of the whole region from Persia in successive battles, proving victorious over the Persian Darius III. After Alexander's death, his conquests were split amongst several of his trusted generals, but were under constant threat of invasion from both the Gauls and other powerful rulers in Pergamon, Pontus, and Egypt. The Seleucid Empire, the largest of Alexander's territories, and which included Anatolia, became involved in a disastrous war with Rome culminating in the battles of Thermopylae and Magnesia. The resulting Treaty of Apamea in (188 BC) saw the Seleucids retreat from Anatolia. The Kingdom of Pergamum and the Republic of Rhodes, Rome's allies in the war, were granted the former Seleucid lands in Anatolia. Anatolia subsequently became contested between the neighboring rivalling Romans and the Parthian Empire, which frequently culminated in the Roman-Parthian WarsRoman control of Anatolia was strengthened by a 'hands off' approach by Rome, allowing local control to govern effectively and providing military protection. In the early 4th century, Constantine the Great established a new administrative centre at Constantinople, and by the end of the 4th century a new eastern empire was established with Constantinople as its capital, referred to by historians as the Byzantine Empire from the original name, Byzantium.In the subsequent centuries up to including the advent of the Early Middle Ages, the Parthians were succeeded by the Sassanid Persians, who would continue the centuries long rivalry between Rome and Persia, which again culminated in frequent wars over the soil of what is now Anatolia.".
- Classical_Anatolia thumbnail Map_Anatolia_ancient_regions-en.svg?width=300.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink historical.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink historyantiquit07duncgoog.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink 2010-08-13.html.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink The_Greek_world_after_Alexander_323_30_B.html?id=HPAOAAAAQAAJ.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink books?id=-WC7UgQHQlcC.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink books?id=V5BeCF82gwUC.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink books?id=XWbhmebyhxAC.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink books?id=i_F5e3lnUjsC.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink books?id=lxQ9W6F1oSYC.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink collection?id=set_cambridge_ancient_history.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink ?site_locale=en_CA.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink search010hstancienta.asp.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink dascylium.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink LOGIN?sessionid=dd91b80e0d2f090eec04e7117c80a3a1&authstatuscode=400.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageExternalLink text?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0064.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageID "35273832".
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageLength "157407".
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageOutDegree "1316".
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageRevisionID "682399441".
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Abdera,_Thrace.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Abraham.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Achaemenid.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Achaemenid_Assyria.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Achaemenid_Empire.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Achaeus_(general).
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Acts_of_the_Apostles.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Aegean_Sea.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Aeolis.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Aetolian_League.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Agathocles_(son_of_Lysimachus).
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Akkadian_Empire.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Alaşehir.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_Helios.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_IV_of_Macedon.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_Severus.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Alexander_the_Great.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Alexandria.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Alphabet.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Alyattes_II.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Alyattes_of_Lydia.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Amanus.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Amanus_Mountains.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Amaseia.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Amasya.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Amyntas_(Antigonid_general).
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Amyntas_of_Galatia.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Anatolia.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Anatolian_Plateau.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Anatolianism.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greece.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Greeks.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Macedonians.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Near_East.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Regions_of_Anatolia.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Rome.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_kingdoms_of_Anatolia.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ancyra.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ankara.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antalya.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antigonus_I_Monophthalmus.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antigonus_Monophthalmos.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antioch.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochis.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_(father_of_Seleucus_I_Nicator).
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_(son_of_Antiochus_III_the_Great).
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_Hierax.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_I.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_II.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_III.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_III_the_Great.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_II_Theos.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_IX_Cyzicenus.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_I_Soter.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_I_Theos_of_Commagene.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_VII_Sidetes.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_XII_Dionysus.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_the_Great.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antipater.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antipater_of_Derbe.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antonine_Plague.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antonys_Parthian_War.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Antzitene.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Anzitene.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Apamea_(Phrygia).
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Apostasy.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Apostate.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Appian.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Aras_(river).
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Araxes.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Arcadius.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Archelaus_of_Cappadocia.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ariamnes_of_Cappadocia.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ariarathes_II.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ariarathes_III_of_Cappadocia.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ariarathes_II_of_Cappadocia.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ariarathes_IV.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ariarathes_IV_of_Cappadocia.
- Classical_Anatolia wikiPageWikiLink Ariarathes_IX_of_Cappadocia.