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- Q4837148 subject Q7205624.
- Q4837148 abstract "Baaltars (combination of "Baal" and "Tarsus") (Aramaic: בעלתרז) was a deity of the Persian Empire, the Baal or Zeus of the city of Tarsus. His depiction appears on coins of the Persian kings or satraps of Cilicia at Tarsus before Alexander the Great in the 5th and 4th century BCE, such as Datames, Pharnabazes or Mazaios, or also on coins of the early Seleucids. The equivalent of Baaltars for the Greeks was Zeus.".
- Q4837148 thumbnail Pharnabazus_silver_stater_as_Satrap_of_Cilicia_379_374_BC.jpg?width=300.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q134287.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q16908821.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q170305.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q34201.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q590467.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q620864.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q7205624.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q8215485.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q83311.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q8409.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q93180.
- Q4837148 wikiPageWikiLink Q963816.
- Q4837148 comment "Baaltars (combination of "Baal" and "Tarsus") (Aramaic: בעלתרז) was a deity of the Persian Empire, the Baal or Zeus of the city of Tarsus. His depiction appears on coins of the Persian kings or satraps of Cilicia at Tarsus before Alexander the Great in the 5th and 4th century BCE, such as Datames, Pharnabazes or Mazaios, or also on coins of the early Seleucids. The equivalent of Baaltars for the Greeks was Zeus.".
- Q4837148 label "Baaltars".
- Q4837148 depiction Pharnabazus_silver_stater_as_Satrap_of_Cilicia_379_374_BC.jpg.