Matches in DBpedia 2015-10 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Palmyra> ?p ?o }
- Palmyra abstract "Palmyra (/ˌpælˈmaɪrə/; Aramaic: ܬܕܡܘܪܬܐ Tedmurtā ; Arabic: تدمر Tadmor) is an ancient Semitic city in present Homs Governorate, Syria. Archaeological finds date back to the Neolithic, and it was first documented in the early second millennium BC as a caravan stop for travellers crossing the Syrian Desert. The city was noted in the annals of the Assyrian kings, and may have been mentioned in the Hebrew Bible. Palmyra was a part of the Seleucid Empire and prospered after its incorporation into the Roman Empire in the first century.The city's wealth enabled the construction of monumental projects. By the third century AD the city was a prosperous metropolis and regional center. Before 273 it enjoyed autonomy for much of its existence. It was attached to the Roman province of Syria and its political organization was influenced by the Greek city-state model during the first two centuries AD. The city was governed by a senate, which was responsible for public works and the military. After becoming a colonia during the third century, Palmyra incorporated Roman governing institutions before adopting a monarchical system in 260. The city received its wealth from trade caravans; the Palmyrenes, renowned merchants, established colonies along the Silk Road and operated throughout the Roman Empire. The Palmyrenes were primarily a mix of Amorites, Arameans and Arabs, with a Jewish minority. The city's social structure was tribal, and its inhabitants spoke Palmyrene (a dialect of Aramaic); Greek was used for commercial and diplomatic purposes. The culture of Palmyra, influenced by those of the Greco-Roman world and Persia, produced distinctive art and architecture. The city's inhabitants worshiped local deities and Mesopotamian and Arab gods.In 260 the Palmyrene king Odaenathus defeated the Persian emperor Shapur I. He fought several battles against the Persians before his assassination in 267. Odaenathus was succeeded by his two young sons under the regency of Queen Zenobia, who rebelled against Rome and began invading its eastern provinces in 270. The Palmyrene rulers adopted imperial titles in 271; the Roman emperor Aurelian defeated the city in 272, destroying it in 273 after a failed second rebellion.Palmyra was a minor center under the Byzantines, Rashiduns, Ummayads, Abbasids, Mamluks and their vassals. The Palmyrenes converted to Christianity during the fourth century and to Islam in the second half of the first millennium, and the Palmyrene and Greek languages were replaced by Arabic. The city—destroyed by the Timurids in 1400—remained a small village under the Ottomans until 1918, followed by the Syrian kingdom and the French Mandate. In 1929, the French began moving villagers into the new village of Tadmur. The transfer was completed in 1932, with the site abandoned and available for excavations. In 2015, Palmyra came under the control of the militant group Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), which later destroyed a number of the site's buildings.".
- Palmyra thumbnail Palmyra,_Syria_-_2.jpg?width=300.
- Palmyra wikiPageExternalLink syria-roman-palmyra.
- Palmyra wikiPageExternalLink view.aspx?cid=3d3547d1-4815-476f-afb3-19d233e4c23c&m=false&i=0:0:9&c=1.39364:-0.382252:0.0335263&z=431.486629335176&d=1.50229402877142:-2.29472691421206:-2.96261258436263&p=0:0.
- Palmyra wikiPageExternalLink progettopalmira.
- Palmyra wikiPageExternalLink 23.
- Palmyra wikiPageExternalLink ?search=&search_by_country=&type=&media=®ion=&order=region.
- Palmyra wikiPageExternalLink PalmyraTour.
- Palmyra wikiPageExternalLink hd_palm.htm.
- Palmyra wikiPageExternalLink palmyra.
- Palmyra wikiPageExternalLink palmyra.
- Palmyra wikiPageExternalLink palmyrene-portraiture.
- Palmyra wikiPageID "46709309".
- Palmyra wikiPageLength "183165".
- Palmyra wikiPageOutDegree "634".
- Palmyra wikiPageRevisionID "683457455".
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink 2nd_millennium_BC.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink A_&_C_Black.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Abamelek_Lazarew.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Abbasid_Caliphate.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Abbasids.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Abednego_Seller.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Abgal_(god).
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Abu-Muhammad_al-Sufyani.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Aglibol.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Agora.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Ahmad_(Fadl).
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Akitu.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Al-Adil_Kitbugha.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Al-Ashraf_Khalil.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Al-Ashraf_Musa,_Emir_of_Homs.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Al-Mujahid.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Al-Mundhir_III_ibn_al-Numan.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Al-Nasir_Muhammad.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Al-Qaryatayn.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Al-Qubur.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Al-lāt.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Al_Mansur_Qalawun.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Albert_Schultens.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Aleppo.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Aleppo_plateau.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Amorites.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Amphitheatre.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Anah.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Anatolia.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Egyptian_burial_customs.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Egyptian_funerary_practices.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Mesopotamian_religion.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Rome.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Ankara.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Anno_Domini.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Antioch.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_III.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Antiochus_III_the_Great.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Antiquarian.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Antiquities_of_the_Jews.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Antoninus_Pius.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Appian.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arab_Kingdom_of_Syria.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arab_people.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arabia_Petraea.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arabian_Peninsula.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arabian_mythology.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arabic.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arabic_language.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arabs.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arab–Byzantine_wars.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Aramaic_language.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arameans.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Archaeoacoustics.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arecaceae.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Arsu.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Asia_(Roman_province).
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Asia_Minor.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Assyria.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Astarte.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Astarte-Belti.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Atabeg.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Atargatis.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Athena.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Augustan_History.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Augustus.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Augustus_(honorific).
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Aurelian.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Aureliano_in_Palmira.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Aurelius_Heraclianus.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Austrians.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Auxilia.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Ayyubid_dynasty.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Azizos.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Baal.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Baal-hamon.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Baal_Hammon.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Baalshamin.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Babylon.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Bahrain.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Balista.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Banditry.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Banu_Kalb.
- Palmyra wikiPageWikiLink Barley.