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tom 20
37–56
EN
The present paper deals with the population of the Seleukid settlements in order to address issues about the settlers’ mobility and ethnic identity. By surveying the available evidence, this study aims in particular to understand the role played by non-Greek populations in the Seleukid Empire, trying to go beyond the thesis of an apartheid-like regime in which those ethnic groups would be socially as well as politically isolated from the Greco-Macedonian settlers.
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2017
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tom 24
93-105
EN
Although posterity knew Strabo only as the “Geographer,” he nonetheless conceived the Geographikà as a complement to his Historikà hypomnemata, a continuation of the Histories of Polybius. Throughout his geographical work, it is possible to find many references concerning the history of the Greek world, and not only. In this framework, the Achaemenid Empire is present in the form of anecdotes on historical, ethnographic as well as linguistic aspects of the Persian world. Particular attention is devoted to those kings who played a prominent role in the confrontation between the Greeks and the barbarians (i.e. Cyrus II, Darius I, Xerxes and Darius III), while the other monarchs are nothing more than shadows. From the analysis of the passages on the Achaemenids, it is possible to argue that, in Strabo’s eyes, the Persians did not have an exclusively negative image when compared to the Parthians, and special emphasis is placed on their capability in shaping and modifying the geographical space through their technical knowledge.
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2018
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tom 25
9-12
EN
This contribution discusses the location of Baiseira, where Seleucos II, during his campaign against the Parthians, gave an audience to a delegation from a group of villages involved in horse breeding. The article challenges the assumption that the epistle comes from Drangiana and suggests that it better fits the context of appeals to the king from Media.
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