Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Stateira ( Greek: Στάτειρα; died 323 BC), possibly also known as Homa, was the daughter of Stateira and Darius III of Persia. After her father's defeat at the Battle of Issus, Stateira and her sisters became captives of Alexander of Macedon. They were treated well, and she became Alexander's second wife at the Susa weddings in 324 BC.

  2. Stateira (Greek: Στάτειρα; 370 BC – early 332 BC) was a queen of Persia as the wife of Darius III of Persia of the Achaemenid dynasty. She accompanied her husband while he went to war. It was because of this that she was captured by Alexander the Great after the Battle of Issus, in 333 BC, at the town of Issus.

  3. STATEIRA, name attested for several royal women of the Achaemenid period. 1. Stateira , daughter of Hydarnes, descended from one of the men who had put Darius I on the throne (DB 4.84-85: Vidarna), and sister of ( inter aliis) Tissaphernes and Terituchmes (Ctesias, 53-55).

  4. Stateira ( Greek: Στάτειρα; died about 400 BC) was an Achaemenid queen, consort of the Persian king Artaxerxes II and mother of his successor, Artaxerxes III. [1] Biography. Stateira was the daughter of the Persian nobleman Hydarnes. She married Artaxerxes II, the oldest son of Darius II of Persia, and his wife Parysatis. [2] .

  5. Dec 27, 2016 · Sisygambis (Sisigambis) was the mother of Darius III of Persia, and Stateira I was his wife. Stateira II was one of Stateira I and Darius III’s daughters. Thus, the three women were all members of the famous Achaemenid dynasty – which provided them with special characteristics in Alexander’s eyes.

  6. Statira II was the wife and probably half-sister of Darius III, king of the Persian Empire, though many sources claim she was his sister. Like Darius, Statira was likely the daughter of the Persian noble Arsanes, but she was never named as the daughter of Darius' mother Sisygambis .

  7. Stateira (called Barsine in Arr. 7.4.4-8) was the daughter of Darius III. She was also captured after the battle of Issus in 333 BC, along with her sister Drypetis, her mother and her grandmother. (Arr. 2.11.9; Diod. 35f; Pl. Alex. 20.6-21; Curt. 3.11.24-26).

  8. Dec 27, 2016 · Ancient Origins articles related to Stateira in the sections of history, archaeology, human origins, unexplained, artifacts, ancient places and myths and

  9. Stateira (Greek: Στάτειρα; 370 BC – early 332 BC) was a queen of Persia as the wife of Darius III of Persia of the Achaemenid dynasty.

  10. Stateira ( *Sta/teira). 1. Wife of Artaxerxes II., king of Persia, was the daughter of a noble Persian named Idernes.