The Battle of Ephesus may refer to Battle of Ephesus498BC , in the Ionian Revolt Battle of Ephesus 406 BC , between Athenians and Peloponnesians Battle of Ephesus 1147 , during the Second Crusade . disambig ... more details
Campaignbox Second Crusade The Battle of Ephesus took place on December 24, 1147, during the Second Crusade . The French crusader army, led by Louis VII of France , successfully fended off an ambush by the Seljuks of Sultanate of Rum Rum just outside the town of Ephesus . Background King Louis VII led the French army on the march across Europe and Asia Minor to Jerusalem . The army decided to march along the coast of Asia Minor, because the defeat of Emperor Conrad III of Germany Conrad of Kingdom of Germany Germany and his army at Battle of Dorylaeum 1147 Dorylaeum had made it clear that marching inland was too dangerous. In early December 1147 the army stopped to rest ref William of Tyre, A History of Deeds Done Beyond the Sea , trans. E.A. Babcock and A.C. Krey Columbia University Press, 1943 , vol. 2, p. 174. ref at the ancient town of Ephesus before continuing through the B y k Menderes River Meander Valley to reach the major port of Antalya Adalia . ref Tyerman, Christopher, God s War A New History of the Crusades , Penguin, 2006 , p. 326. ref Upon arrival at Ephesus, Louis was warned ... force was led by Byzantine Empire Greeks . ref name Odo Aftermath The Battle of Ephesus was a minor battle of the Second Crusade. William of Tyre , who says that the army rested at Ephesus, does not even mention that there was a battle there. The Turks continued to attack, and were able to inflict a devastating defeat on the Crusader army at Battle of Mount Cadmus Mount Cadmus in January ... and led his troops out of Ephesus at the end of the month. ref name Odo Odo of Deuil, De profectione Ludovici VII in Orientem , tr. V.G. Berry New York W.W. Norton and Co., 1948 , p. 109. ref Battle The Turks ambushed the Crusaders in the Decervium Valley, just outside Ephesus, as they were resting. ref name Odo Details of the battle are scarce, but according to the witness Odo of Deuil , the courage ... Ephesus Category History of zmir Province ... more details
Use mdy dates date February 2011 Year nav 498BC year in topic 498 NOTOC Year 498BC was a year of the Roman calendar pre Julian Roman calendar . At the time, it was known as the Year of the Consulship of Siculus and Flavus or, less frequently, year 256 Ab urbe condita . The denomination 498BC for this year has been used since the early medieval period, when the Anno Domini calendar era became the prevalent method in Europe for naming years. Events onlyinclude By place Greece Alexander I of Macedon Alexander I succeeds his father Amyntas I of Macedon Amyntas I as king of Macedon ia. Athens and Eretria respond to the Ionians Ionian plea for help against Persia and send troops. An Athens Athenian and Eretria n fleet transports Athenian troops to Ephesus . There they are joined by a force of Ionians and march upon Sardis , the capital of Artaphernes the satrap of Lydia and brother to Darius .... However, Artaphernes is able to retreat to the citadel and Siege of Sardis 498BC hold it . Although ... and defeated in the Ionian Revolt Battle of EphesusBattle of Ephesus . Kaunos and Caria , followed ... of Macedon ia b. c. 540 BC Cleander of Gela Cleander , tyrant of Gela References Reflist DEFAULTSORT 498Bc Category 498BC ast 498 edC be 498 . . be x old 498 . . bs 498 p.n.e. ca 498 aC cs 498 p . n. l. cy 498 CC da 498 f.Kr. de 498 v. Chr. el 498 . . es 498 a. C. eo 498 eu K. a. 498 fa fr 498 gl 498 ko 498 hy . . . 498 hr 498. pr. Kr. io 498 aK it 498 a.C. ka . . 498 kk . . . 498 la 498 a.C.n. lb 498 lt 498 m. pr. m. e. hu I. e. 498 mk 498 . . . mr . . . ms 498 SM nl 498 v.Chr. ne . . new ja 498 nap 498 AC no 498 f.Kr. oc 498 uz Mil. av. 498 pl 498 p.n.e. pt 498 a.C. ru 498 . . sq 498 p.e.s. sk 498 pred Kr. sl 498 pr. n. t. sr 498. . . . sh 498. pne. su 498 SM fi 498 eaa. sv 498 f.Kr. tl 498BC th . . 46 uk 498 . . vec 498 a.C. war 498 UC zh 498 ... more details
in the Ionian Revolt against Persian rule in the Battle of Ephesus498BC , an event which ... at the Battle of Magnesia in 190 BC. As a result, Ephesus came under the rule of the Attalid king of Pergamon ... Ephesus was already inhabited during the Neolithic Age about 6000 BC , as was revealed by the excavations ... during the 14th and 13th centuries BC. Scholars believe that Ephesus was founded on the settlement ... Ephesus. Ephesus was founded as an Attic Ionian colony in the 10th century BC on the Ayasuluk Hill, three ... About 650 BC, Ephesus was attacked by the Cimmerians who razed the city, including the temple of Artemis ... Soranus and Rufus. About 560 BC, Ephesus was conquered by the Lydians under king Croesus . He ..., Ephesus in 290 BC came under the rule of one of Alexander s generals, Lysimachus . As the river Cayster ... Lysimachus, his last rival, at the Battle of Corupedium in 281 BC. After the death of Lysimachus ... BCEphesus welcomed Archelaus general Archelaus , a general of Mithradates VI of Pontus Mithridates ... Sulla , Ephesus came back under the Roman rule in 86 BC. Sulla imposed a huge indemnity, along with five ... AD ref When Augustus became emperor in 27 BC, he made Ephesus instead of Pergamum the capital of Asia ...About the ancient city in Anatolia the town in the southern United States Ephesus, Georgia homonyms of the Turkish word Efes Efes disambiguation pp move indef Infobox Settlement official name Ephesus other ... relief map caption Location of Ephesus in Turkey Ephesus Ancient Greek polytonic , Ephesos ... of the Ionian League during the Classical Greece Classical Greek era. In the Roman period, Ephesus had a population of more than 250,000 in the 1st century BC, which also made it one of the largest ... Oklahoma Christian University Ephesus ref The city was famed for the Temple of Artemis completed around 550 BC , one of the Wonders of the World Seven Wonders of the Ancient World . Following ... River K k Menderes . Ephesus was one of the seven churches of Asia that are cited in the Book of Revelation ... more details
The Council of Ephesus may refer to The First Council of Ephesus of 431. The Second Council of Ephesus of 449. The Third Council of Ephesus of 475. disambig Category 5th century Christian church councils tr Efes Konsili ... more details
Unsourced image removed Image Mark of Ephesus.jpg right frame St. Mark of Ephesus Infobox saint name Saint Mark of Ephesus birth date 1392 death date June 3, 1444 age 52 feast day January 19 venerated in Eastern Orthodox Church image Mark of Ephesus.jpg imagesize caption birth place Constantinople death place Constantinople titles Archbishop of Ephesus beatified date beatified place beatified by canonized date 1734 canonized place Constantinople canonized by Patriarch Seraphim of Constantinople attributes Long white beard, vested as a bishop , holding a scroll in one hand and Crucifix Cross in the other patronage major shrine suppressed date issues Mark of Ephesus Eugenikos the courteous , Greek language Greek , a 15th century Archbishop of Ephesus , is famous for his defense of Eastern Orthodoxy at the Council of Florence 1438 1445 AD in spite of Byzantine Emperor John VIII ... Death He died peacefully at the age of 52 on June 23, 1444, after an excruciating two week battle ... older ones. There is an account of a posthumous miracle performed by St. Mark of Ephesus. Doctors ... any illness. She asked him who he was and he informed her, I am the Metropolitan of Ephesus, Mark ... 15 years. Legacy The Eastern Orthodox Church Orthodox Church considers Mark of Ephesus a saint ...?SID 4&ID 1&FSID 100228 St Mark of Ephesus Orthodox Icon and Synaxarion January 19 http www.orthodoxinfo.com ecumenism stmark.aspx St. Mark of Ephesus and the False Union of Florence http www.roca.org OA 26 26f.htm St. Mark of Ephesus A True Ecumenist http www.stjohnthebaptist.org.au articles mark.html Address of St. Mark of Ephesus on the Day of His Death http www.impantokratoros.gr BEC11758.en.aspx ... the works of Mark of Ephesus http www.ephesus.com Orthodox St.Mark of Ephesus.txt St. Mark of Ephesus Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Mark Of Ephesus ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT ... Constantinople DEFAULTSORT Mark Of Ephesus Category 1392 births Category 1444 deaths Category ... more details
Menecrates of Ephesus 330 270 BC was an ancient Greek literature ancient Greek didactic poetry didactic poet of the Hellenistic period . ref Oxford Classical Dictionary , ed. Hornblower, Simon, and Antony Spawforth. 3rd ed. Oxford Oxford University Press, 1996. ISBN 9780192687678 p.958 ref He wrote a poem called the Works which was modeled upon Hesiod s Works and Days and included a discussion of bee s based on the work of Aristotle . He was the teacher of the astronomical poet Aratus . ref Philip Thibodeau, Menekrates of Ephesos , p. 545 in The Encyclopedia of Ancient Natural Scientists , ed. Paul T. Keyser and Georgia L. Irby Massie. London & New York Routledge, 2008. ISBN 9780415340205 ref . References edition of his surviving works Supplementum Hellenisticum , ed. Hugh Lloyd Jones P J Parsons H G Nesselrath J U Powell. Berlin & New York W. de Gruyter, 1983 ISBN 9783110081718 Reflist Category Ancient Greek poets Category 3rd century BC Greek people Category 3rd century BC poets Category Ancient Ephesians Category Ancient Greek didactic poets Category 330s BC births Category 270 BC deaths Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata Persondata NAME Ephesus, Menecrates of ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 330 BC PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 270 BC PLACE OF DEATH ... more details
for other meanings of Menander Menander disambiguation Menander of Ephesus c. early 2nd century BC was the historian ...?artid 400&letter E Jewish Encyclopedia Ephesus . ref also seems to have written on the history ... of Ethbaal Ithobaal I , 878 847 BC , king of the Tyrians. In Ant. 9.14.2, after relating that Shalmaneser ... to Shalmaneser III in 841 BC see the Baal Eser II article for details . Against Apion 1.18 also mentions ... in his seventh year, 155 years after the beginning of the reign of Hiram I . A 9th century BC inscription ... to pay tribute to Sennacherib 725 722 BC , whereupon the Assyrians unsuccessfully besieged ... authors gave two years 825 BC as given by Gnaeus Pompeius Trogus Pompeius Trogus , or 814 BC as given ... of Tyre apparently Baal Eser II , grandfather of Pygmalion in 841 BC has caused many scholars such as Frank .... Accepting that 825 BC was Pygmalion s seventh year and the ending point of the 155 years, Hiram s first year becomes 825 155 980 BC. His twelfth year, the year in which Temple construction began, would then be 968 BC. There is some slight uncertainty here because neither Josephus, Menander, or Pompeius ... between the first of Nisan roughly April of 931 BC and the day before Nisan 1 of 930 BC. Thiele s logic in this matter was based on fixed dates for the presence of Ahab at the Battle of Qarqar in 853 BC and Jehu s tribute to Shalmaneser III in 841 BC. Thiele showed that when non accession years ... Judah , the regnal lengths of both kingdoms, as measured back from the Battle of Qarqar, produced the same result of 931 BC for the first year of the divided kingdom. ref Edwin R. Thiele, The Mysterious ... of Jehu 931 841 B.C. , Cambridge Ancient History 3, Part 1, 445 446. For a partial list of other ... based year, could have begun either in Tishri of 932 or Tishri of 931 BC. Thiele assumed the latter ... of Menander s dates for the founding of the Temple, so that they arrived at 968 BC, 36 years before Solomon s death in 932 BC. Also Leslie McFall, a foremost interpreter of Thiele s work ... more details
Gaius of Ephesus also Gaios is numbered among the Seventy Disciples . He was Bishop of Ephesus Epistle to the Romans Romans 16 23 . The Church remembers St. Gaius on January 4 among the Seventy, and on November 5. Source St. Nikolai Velimirovic , The Prologue from Ohrid External links http ocafs.oca.org FeastSaintsViewer.asp?FSID 100060 Apostle Gaius of the Seventy , January 4 OCA http ocafs.oca.org FeastSaintsViewer.asp?FSID 103182 Apostle Gaius of the Seventy , November 5 OCA References Orthodoxwiki source title Apostle Gaius oldid 70621 DEFAULTSORT Gaius Of Ephesus Category Seventy Disciples Category Greek saints Category 1st century Christian saints Category 1st century bishops saint stub ka pt Gaio B blia ru ... more details
Dear Ephesus was an American Christian music Christian Emo music Emo music group from Orlando, Florida . They were voted third favorite new group of 1997 by HM Magazine readers, Fact date May 2007 and went on to release two albums. The band broke up at the end of the 1990s. Several members reformed as Tenderfoot , hoping to fill their Bulletproof Records contract and reach the secular market. They had one release under this name, The Devil And Rock And Roll , in 2000. ref name Powell Fe TF cite book last Powell title Encyclopedia of Contemporary Christian Music year 2002 chapter Tenderfoot page 938 ref Band members Aaron Wiederspahn vocals Brett Levsen guitar Ed Lamoso guitar Louis Defabrizio bass Jeff Irizarry drums Discography A View of Epic Proportions EP 1995, Review http web.archive.org web 20010713013004 www.hmmagazine.com issue75 75Reviews.htm HM Magazine ref name HM 75 cite journal last McGovern first Brian Vincent year 1999 month January February title Indie Album Reviews DEAR EPHESUS A View of Epic Proportions journal HM Magazine issn 1066 6923 issue 75 pages ref , http www.crossrhythms.co.uk products Dear Ephesus A View Of Epic Proportions 11965 Cross Rhythms ref name CM 48 cite journal last Wilson first Jon year 1998 month December title Dear Ephesus A View Of Epic Proportions ... Ephesus The Consolation Of Pianissimo 6633 Cross Rhythms ref name CM 43 cite journal last Wilson first Jon year 1998 month February title Dear Ephesus The Consolation Of Pianissimo journal Cross Rhythms ... Doug year 1998 month November December title Album Reviews DEAR EPHESUS The Absent Sounds Of Me journal ... , Massachusetts isbn 1 56563 679 1 edition First printing chapter Dear Ephesus pages 244 245 cite journal last first title Dear Ephesus month May June year 1998 issue 18 journal 7ball Feature Story ... dear ephesus new band 1997200306 index.php HM Magazine profile http profile.myspace.com index.cfm?fuseaction user.viewprofile&friendid 39894025 Dear Ephesus Myspace Page Category American emo musical ... more details
Apollonius of Ephesus floruit fl. 180 210 was an anti Montanism Montanist Greeks Greek ecclesiology ecclesiastical writer, probably from Anatolia Asia Minor . Image Ac artemisephesus.jpg thumb left 250px Site of the Temple of Artemis in Ephesus. He was thoroughly acquainted with the Christian history of Ephesus and the doings of the Phrygia n Montanists. The unknown author of Praedestinatus says he was a Bishop of Ephesus. ref Unknown Author. Praedestinatus . I, 26, 27, 28 P.L., LIII, 596. ref However, the lack of support from other Christian writers makes this testimony doubtful. He undertook the defense of the Church against Montanus , and followed in the footsteps of Zoticus of Comana, Cappadocia Comanus , Julian of Apamaea, Sotas of Anchialus, and Apollinaris Claudius Apollinaris of Hierapolis . His work is cited by Eusebius of Caesarea Eusebius ref Church History Eusebius Church History , V, 18. ref , and is praised by Jerome St. Jerome , ref Jerome s De Viris Illustribus De Viris Illustribus 40 ref but has been lost, and not even its title is known. It most likely showed the falsity of the Montanist prophecies, recounted the unedifying lives of Montanus and his prophetesses. It also gave currency to the report of their suicide by hanging, and threw light on some of the adepts of the sect, including the apostate Themison of Eretria Themison , and the pseudo martyr Alexander. Themison, having evaded martyrdom by means of money, posed as an innovator, addressing a letter to his ... and the Roman Catholic Church Church . Alexander, a notorious thief, publicly condemned at Ephesus ... to life of a dead man at Ephesus by the Apostle John the Apostle St. John , whose Apocalypse he knew ... cathen 01617d.htm Apollonius of Ephesus at Catholic Encyclopedia References references Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Apollonius of Ephesus ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Apollonius of Ephesus Category Ancient ... more details
Infobox saint name Saint Hermione birth date death date 117 feast day 4 September venerated in Roman Catholic Church image imagesize 150px caption birth place death place titles Martyr beatified date beatified place beatified by canonized date canonized place canonized by attributes patronage major shrine suppressed date issues Saint Hermione of Ephesus died 117 AD is a 2nd century Christian martyr venerated by the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox churches. She was the daughter of Saint Philip the Deacon . She was killed during the persecutions of Christians under the Roman emperor Trajan . In the Acts of the Apostles , Hermione is called a prophet ess. ref http www.catholic.org saints saint.php?saint id 3744 Catholic Online ref Notes reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Ephesus, Hermione Of ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 117 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Ephesus, Hermione Of Category 117 deaths Category Roman Catholic saints Category 2nd century Christian martyr saints Category 2nd century Christian female saints Category Year of birth unknown saint stub de Hermione von Ephesos el ro Hermione din Efes sh Hermiona iz Efeza ... more details
Michael of Ephesus or Michael Ephesius fl. early or mid 12th century AD wrote important commentaries on Aristotle , including the first full commentary on the Sophistical Refutations , which established the regular study of that text. ref A.C. Lloyd, review of S. Ebbesen, Commentators and commentaries on Aristotle s Sophistici elenchi Leiden Brill, 1981 , Journal of Hellenic Studies 106 1986 , pp. 231 233 ref Life Little is known about Michael s life. He worked in the philosophy school of the University of Constantinople . Together with Eustratius of Nicaea , he was part of a circle organized by Anna Comnena . ref name sorabji Richard Sorabji , http www.rep.routledge.com article A021 Aristotle Commentators, Routledge Encyclopedia of Philosophy , 1998, 2002 ref As Michael suggests at the end of his Parva Naturalia commentary, his goal was to provide coverage of texts in the Corpus Aristotelicum that had been neglected by earlier commentators ref CAG XXII.1 http books.google.com books?id 8rhfAAAAMAAJ&pg PA149 p. 149 , cited by Hans B. Gottschalk, The Earliest Aristotelian Commentators, in Sorabji ed. , Aristotle Transformed Ithaca Cornell University Press, 1990 , p. 68 n. 67 ref this was part of a cooperative scholarly undertaking conceived and guided by Anna Comnena. ref R. Browning, An Unpublished Funeral Oration on Anna Comnena, Proceedings of the Cambridge Philological Society n.s. 8 1962 ref The fanciful suggestion that the Aristotelian commentator was none other than Michael VII Doukas , making good on his tuition under Michael Psellos who was apparently not Michael of Ephesus teacher and turning after his abdication to scholarship as the archbishop of Ephesus, is no longer taken seriously. Work Michael s breadth is remarkable, and his interpretive method has been compared ... translations Aristotle and Michael of Ephesus on the Movement and Progression of Animals , trans. Anthony Preus, Hildesheim Georg Olms, 1981 Aspasius, Anonymous, Michael of Ephesus, On Aristotle ... more details
Infobox settlement Basic info official name Ephesus, Georgia other name native name for cities whose native name is not in English nickname settlement type Town motto images and maps image skyline imagesize image caption image flag flag size image seal seal size image shield shield size image blank emblem blank emblem type blank emblem size image map Heard County Georgia Incorporated and Unincorporated areas Ephesus Highlighted.svg mapsize 250px map caption Location in Heard County, Georgia Heard County and the state of Georgia U.S. state Georgia image map1 mapsize1 map caption1 image dot map dot mapsize dot map caption dot x dot y pushpin map the name of a location map as per http en.wikipedia.org wiki Template Location map pushpin label position the position of the pushpin label left, right, top, bottom, none pushpin map caption pushpin mapsize Location subdivision type List of countries Country subdivision name United States subdivision type1 Political divisions of the United States State subdivision name1 Georgia U.S. state Georgia subdivision type2 List of counties in Georgia U.S. state County subdivision name2 Heard County, Georgia Heard subdivision type3 subdivision name3 subdivision type4 subdivision name4 Politics government footnotes government type leader title leader name leader title1 for places with, say, both a mayor and a city manager leader name1 leader title2 leader name2 leader title3 leader name3 leader title4 leader name4 established title Settled established ... GR 3 website footnotes Ephesus is a town in Heard County, Georgia Heard County , Georgia U.S. state Georgia , United States . Originally founded as Lofton, Georgia the name was changed to Ephesus sometime in the mid 1960s. The population was 388 at the 2000 census. Geography Ephesus is located at coord ... County, Georgia Category Towns in Georgia U.S. state ca Ephesus Ge rgia es Ephesus Georgia ht Ephesus, Georgie nl Ephesus Georgia pt Ephesus Ge rgia vo Ephesus ... more details
Eastern Christianity Polycrates of Ephesus flourished c. 130s 130 196 was an Early Christian bishop who resided in Ephesus . Roberts and Donaldson noted that Polycrates belonged to a family in which he was the eighth Christian bishop and he presided over the church of Ephesus, in which the traditions of St. John were yet fresh in men s minds at the date of his birth. He had doubtless known Polycarp , and Irenaeus also. He seems to have presided over a synod of Asiatic bishops A.D. 196 which came together to consider this matter of the Paschal feast. It is surely noteworthy that nobody doubted that it was kept by a Christian and Apostolic ordinance. So Paul of Tarsus St. Paul argues from its Christian observance, in his rebuke of the Corinthians. They were keeping it unleavened ceremonially, and he urges a spiritual unleavening as more important. The Christian hallowing of Pentecost connects with the Paschal Passover over Easter argument. The Sabbath in Christianity Christian Sabbath hinges on these points. sup Notes 1 sup Polycrates is best known for his letter addressed to the Roman Bishop Pope Victor I Victor who was attempting to find a consensus about the proper date to celebrate Easter , see also Quartodecimanism . The Church historian Eusebius of Caesarea Eusebius wrote, A question of no small importance arose at that time. For the parishes of all Asia, as from an older tradition, held that the fourteenth day of the moon, on which day the Jews were commanded to sacrifice the lamb, should be observed as the feast of the Saviour s passover...But it was not the custom of the churches in the rest of the world...But the bishops of Asia, led by Polycrates, decided to hold ... daughter, who lived in the Holy Spirit and now rests at Ephesus and, moreover, John, who was both ... plate. He fell asleep at Ephesus. And Polycarp in Smyrna , who was a bishop and martyr and Thraseas ... Christian saints Category 2nd century Romans da Polykrates fra Efesos de Polykrates von Ephesus ... more details
Maximus of Ephesus c.310 372 was a Neoplatonist philosopher. He is said to have come from a rich family, and exercised great influence over the emperor Julian the Apostate Julian , who was commended to him by Aedesius . He pandered to the emperor s love of magic and theurgy , and by judicious administration of the omens won a high position at court. His overbearing manner made him numerous enemies, and, after being imprisoned after the death of Julian, he was put to death by Valens . Life The most detailed source for the life of Maximus is Eunapius in his Lives of the Sophists , but he is also referred to by Ammianus Marcellinus , the emperor Julian the Apostate Julian , and Libanius . Christian writers also discuss him, albeit in very negative terms. Maximus was born around the beginning of the 4th century. Ammianus Marcellinus calls Ephesus the hometown of Maximus. This is doubted by some scholars, ref Delfim Santos 2005 p. 314. Note also that in the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica , he is listed under Maximus of Smyrna ref but it is certain that he originated from the west of Asia Minor . His parents were wealthy. Maximus had a brother named Claudianus, who also became a philosopher. ref Richard Goulet Claudianus , in Richard Goulet ed. Dictionnaire des philosophes antiques , Bd. 2, Paris 1994, p. 401. ref Another brother, Nymphidianus of Smyrna Nymphidianus , was appointed by emperor ... Sosipatra by one of her relatives. Around 350 Maximus left Pergamon in order to work in Ephesus ... arts practised by Maximus, but his warning had the opposite effect, and Julian went to Ephesus .... The trial, at first, ran favorably for him, but he was sent to his hometown Ephesus, where ... 100 BC 200 AD, Vol. II London, 2007 . ref Notes reflist References Eunapius, http www.tertullian.org ... Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Maximus Of Ephesus ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 372 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Maximus Of Ephesus ... more details
Xenophon of Ephesus fl. 2nd century&ndash 3rd century CE? was a Roman and Byzantine Greece Greek writer. His surviving work is the Ephesian Tale Ephesian Tale of Anthia and Habrocomes , one of the earliest novel s as well as one of the sources for Shakespeare s Romeo and Juliet . He is not to be confused with the earlier and more famous Athenian soldier and historian, Xenophon . See also Other ancient Greek novelists Chariton The Loves of Chaereas and Callirhoe Achilles Tatius Leucippe and Clitophon Heliodorus of Emesa The Aethiopica Longus Daphnis and Chloe Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Greek writer DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH Category Ancient Greek novelists Category Ancient Ephesians Category Year of birth unknown Category Year of death unknown Ancient Greece writer stub MEast writer stub ca Xenofont d Efes cs Xenof n z Efesu de Xenophon von Ephesos es Jenofonte de feso fr X nophon d ph se is Xenofon fr Efesos it Senofonte Efesio la Xenophon Ephesius nl Xenophon van Efese no Xenofon fra Efesos pl Ksenofont z Efezu ru sv Xenofon fr n Efesos uk ... more details
Rufus of Ephesus floruit fl. late 1st century AD was an ancient Ancient Greek medicine Greek physician and author who wrote treatises on dietetics , pathology , anatomy , and patient care. He was to some extent a follower of Hippocrates , although he at times criticized or departed from that author s teachings. His writings dealt with subjects often neglected by other authors, such as the treatment of Slavery in antiquity slaves and the elderly. Some of his works survive to this day. He was particularly influential in the East, and some of his works survive only in Arabic language Arabic . His teachings emphasized the importance of anatomy, and sought pragmatic approaches to diagnosis and treatment. Life Little is known about the life of Rufus. According to the Suda , ref Suda, Rouphos ref he lived in the time of Trajan 98 117 , which is probably correct, as Rufus quotes Zeuxis of Tarentum Zeuxis ref ap. Galen, Comment. in Hippocr. Prorrhet. I. , ii. 58. vol. xvi. p. 636 ref and Dioscorides , ref ap. Mai, Class. Auct. e Vatic. Codic. editi , vol. iv. p. 11 ref and is himself quoted by Galen . He probably studied at Alexandria , for he makes personal comments about the general health of the country and specific diseases. He then established himself at Ephesus , which was at that time a center of the medical profession. Works He wrote several medical works, some of which are still extant. The principal of these is entitled On the Names of the Parts of the Human Body . The work contains valuable information concerning the state of anatomical science before the time of Galen . Rufus .... Ibn al Nadim mentioned his few works, while Husaibia mentioned 58 books by Rufus of Ephesus. Most ... by Rufus of Ephesus. Hakim Syed Zillur Rahman edited the second copy of the manuscript Risalah al ... 3 ref Notes reflist References Ludwig Edelstein , and Vivian Nutton, Rufus of Ephesus , from The Oxford .... . Rufus of Ephesus. On Melancholy . T bingen Mohr Siebeck, 2008, 340 pp. Scripta Antiquitatis Posterioris ... more details
Soranus 1st 2nd century was a Ancient Greek medicine Greek physician from Ephesus . He practiced in Alexandria and subsequently in Rome , and was one of the chief representatives of the Methodic school of medicine. Several of his writings still survive, most notably his four volume treatise on gynaecology , and a Latin translation of his On Acute and Chronic Diseases . Life Little is known about the life of Soranus. According to the Suda which has two entries on him ref Suda, Soranos , 851, 852 ref he was a native of Ephesus , was the son of Menander and Phoebe, and practised medicine at Alexandria and Rome in the reigns of Trajan and Hadrian 98 138 . He lived at least as early as Archigenes , who used one of his medicines ref ap. A t. ii. 2. 55 ref he was tutor to Attalus and he was dead when Galen wrote his work De Methodo Medendi , c. 178. ref Galen, De Meth. Med. , i. 7. vol. x. ref He belonged to the Methodic school , ref Pseudo Galen, Introd. c. 4, vol. xiv. ref and was one of the most eminent physicians of that school. Little else is known about his life, except that he passed some time in Aquitania for the purpose of treating some skin diseases which were very prevalent there at the time. ref Marcellus Empiricus, De Medicam. c. 19 ref Works His treatise Gynaecology is extant first printed in 1838, later by Valentin Rose classicist V. Rose , in http books.google.com books?id 3 CeNbbVox8C 1882 , with a 6th century Latin translation by one Muscio . Also extant are parts of treatises On Signs of Fractures and On Bandages . Of his most important work On Acute and Chronic Diseases only a few fragments in Greek remain, but we possess a complete Latin translation by Caelius ... title Soranus of Ephesus AD 98 138 and the Methodist sect journal Journal of Medical Biography ... of Ephesus journal Hospital & community psychiatry volume 45 issue 5 pages 485 7 publisher location ... of Ephesus journal Bull. Acad. Natl. Med. volume 171 issue 8 pages 1027 32 publisher location pmid ... more details
John of Ephesus or of Asia c. 507 c. 586 was a leader of the Oriental Orthodoxy non Chalcedonian Syriac speaking Church in the sixth century, and one of the earliest and most important of historians who wrote in Syria c. Life Born at Amida Roman city Amida modern Diyarbak r in southern Turkey about 507, he was there ordained as a deacon in 529 by John of Tella but in 534 we find him in Palestine , and in 535 he passed to Constantinople . The cause of his leaving Amida might have been the great pandemic plague which broke out there in 542. However he also had already been traveling the region before in order to collect stories for his collection of saints lives. He was back in Amida at the start of the furious persecution directed against the Monophysites by Ephrem of Amida Ephrem , List of Orthodox Patriarchs of Antioch patriarch of Antioch , and Abraham bishop of Amida c. 520 541 . Around 540 he returned to Constantinople and made it his residence. In Constantinople he seems to have early won the notice of Justinian I , one of the main objects of whose policy was the consolidation of Eastern Christianity as a bulwark against the Zoroastrian power of Sassanid dynasty Persia , through persecution of all the remaining pagans of the empire. John is said by Barhebraeus Chron. eccl. i. 195 to have succeeded Patriarch Anthimus I of Constantinople Anthimus as Monophysite bishop of Constantinople, but this is probably a mistake. In any case, he enjoyed the emperor s favor until the death of the latter in 565 and as he himself tells us was entrusted with the administration of the entire ... account is given in the 4th book of the 3rd part of his History. He was ordained bishop of Ephesus ... Harvey, http ark.cdlib.org ark 13030 ft3d5nb1n1 Asceticism and Society in Crisis John of Ephesus and the Lives of the Eastern Saints . Berkeley, 1990. Jan Jacob van Ginkel, John of Ephesus. A Monophysite ... pearse morefathers files ephesus 0 preface.htm Public domain translation of the Ecclesiastical history ... more details
unreferenced date July 2008 Infobox Military Conflict conflict Battle of Mytilene image caption partof the Peloponnesian War date 406 BC place Mytilene result Sparta n victory combatant1 Athens combatant2 Sparta commander1 Conon commander2 Callicratidas strength1 70 ships strength2 170 ships casualties1 casualties2 The Battle of Mytilene was a battle fought in 406 BC between Athens and Sparta . The Spartans were victorious. For more information see The Historians History of the World , edited by Henry Smith Williams. See also Battle of Arginusae AncientGreece battle stub coord missing Greece Category Battles involving Athens Mytilene 406 BC Category Battles involving Sparta Mytilene 406 BC Category Battles of the Peloponnesian War Mytilene 406 BC Category Ancient Lesbos Category 406 BC ... more details
otheruses Battle of Thermopylae disambiguation Infobox Military Conflict conflict Battle of Thermopylae image caption in rime the colloseum partof the Roman xerrian War date 191 BC place Thermopylae result Decisive Roman victory combatant1 Roman Republic combatant2 Seleucid Empire commander1 Manius Acilius Glabrio consul 191 BC Manius Acilius Glabrio commander2 Antiochus III the Great strength1 22,000 and a few elephants strength2 10,500 and some allies casualties1 According to traditional accounts only 200 Romans killed or wounded casualties2 10,000 killed and prisoners Campaignbox Rome against Antiochus III The Battle of Thermopylae was fought in 191 BC between a Roman Republic Roman army led by consul Manius Acilius Glabrio consul 191 BC Manius Acilius Glabrio and a Seleucid force led by King Antiochus III the Great . The Romans were victorious, and as a result, Antiochus was forced to flee ..., where the Macedonians Battle of Cynoscephalae had been defeated by the Romans, and finding the remains ... emboldened to send Appius Claudius Pulcher consul 185 BC Appius Claudius straightway with 2000 ... the whole winter 191 BC in idleness and luxury. When spring came he made a descent upon Acarnania , where ... elephants, under the command of Manius Acilius Glabrio consul 191 BC Manius Acilius Glabrio . They marched ... Atropos, as Battle of Thermopylae Xerxes had come upon the Spartans under Leonidas , the mountain ... he gave the signal for battle on the morrow and ordered two of his tribunes, Cato the Elder Marcus ... them, on the left near the sea. 19 Battle being joined, the light armed troops assailed Manius first ... forward, the long pikes set densely together in order of battle, with which the Macedonians from ... The Romans lost about 200 in the battle and the pursuit Antiochus about 10,000, including prisoners ... , and from Elateia to Chalcis, and thence to Ephesus with his bride Euboea, as he called her, with his ... ap ark appian appian syriaca 00.html livius.org coord missing Greece Category 191 BC Category ... more details
Infobox Military Conflict image caption conflict Battle of Placentia partof Roman Gaulish wars date 194 BC place Modern day Piacenza , Italy result Roman victory combatant1 Roman Republic combatant2 Boii commander1 Tiberius Sempronius Longus consul 194 BCE Tiberius Sempronius commander2 strength1 strength2 casualties1 casualties2 Campaignbox Roman Gaulish Wars The Battle of Placentia was fought in 194 BC , near Piacenza Placentia , between the Roman Republic and the Boii . The Roman army won the battle. The following year, another battle with the Boii would take place in the same region known as the Battle of Mutina 193 BCE Battle of Mutina , it would end the Boii threat. The battle of Placentia is described by Livy at 34.46 47. See also Roman Republican governors of Gaul AncientRome battle stub coord missing Italy Category 194 BC Category Boii bg 194 . . . ca Batalla de Placentia es Batalla de Mutina 194 a. C. pl Bitwa pod Mutin sh Bitka kod Placentije 194. pne. ... more details
About the 148 BCbattle the 168 BCbattleBattle of Pydna 168 BC Infobox Military Conflict conflict Battle of Pydna 148 BC partof the Fourth Macedonian War image caption date 148 BC place Near ancient Pydna casus territory result Decisive Roman victory combatant1 Roman Republic Rome combatant2 Popular uprising in Macedon commander1 Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus Quintus Caecilius Metellus commander2 Andriscus notes Campaignbox Macedonian Wars Campaignbox Fourth Macedonian War Battles The Battle of Pydna was fought in 148 BC between Rome and the forces of the Macedonian leader Andriscus . The Roman force was led by Quintus Caecilius Metellus Macedonicus Quintus Caecilius Metellus , and was the winner of this engagement. The result of the battle played an important role in deciding the outcome of the Fourth Macedonian War . This battle annihilated the last military political force of Macedon. ref References reflist coord missing Greece Category 148 BC Category 2nd century BC conflicts Category Battles involving the Roman Republic Pydna 148 Category Battles involving Macedon Pydna 148 Category Ancient Pieria Category Roman Macedonia Pydna AncientRome battle stub bg 148 . . . el 148 . . ja 148 pl Bitwa pod Pydn 148 p.n.e. ru 148 . . sh Bitka kod Pidne 148. pne. fi Pydnan taistelu 148 eaa. ... more details