seleucus i การใช้
- Drangiana fell to Seleucus I Nicator, the founder of the Seleucid empire.
- Bactria became part of Seleucus I, the founder of the Seleucid Empire.
- Most of them were founded by Seleucus I and his son Antiochus I.
- In 305 BC, Seleucus I led an army to the Indus, where he encountered Chandragupta.
- Eumenes II and Stratonice were distantly related, as they were direct descendants of Seleucus I Nicator.
- In 303 BCE, Seleucus I led an army to the Indus in India, where he encountered Chandragupta.
- Founded by Seleucus I Nicator or Antiochus I Soter to protect the military road across northern Pisidia.
- He succeeded his father Seleucus I Nicator in 281 BC and reigned until his death in 261 BC.
- Antigonus remained in charge of Asia Minor, Ptolemy retained Egypt, Lysimachus retained Thrace and Seleucus I controlled Babylon.
- In the Hellenistic period the city was renamed Seleucia, for Seleucus I Nicator or one of his successors.
- The Greek ethnographer and explorer of the Hellenistic period, Megasthenes was the ambassador of Seleucus I at India.
- Alexander and Seleucus I both settled Greeks in Bactria, while preferring to keep their Macedonian settlers farther west.
- Laodicea was one of the five cities built by Seleucus I Nicator and named after his mother Laodice.
- Seleucus I joined him in 301 BC, and at the Battle of Ipsus Antigonus I was defeated and slain.
- Alexander's empire broke up shortly after his death and the town came under the rule of Seleucus I Nicator.
- The most noted is the one by Megasthenes, an ambassador of Seleucus I Nicator to the court of Chandragupta Maurya.
- Arsinoe I married Ptolemy II as part of an alliance between her father and Ptolemy II, against Seleucus I Nicator.
- Chandragupta then defeated the Seleucus I, a Macedonian general from Alexander's army, gaining additional territory west of the Indus River.
- The largest of these, which held sway over the Iranian plateau, was Seleucid Empire, ruled by Alexander's general Seleucus I Nicator.
- Antioch was founded near the end of the 4th century BC by Seleucus I Nicator, one of Alexander the Great's generals.
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