Emesene dynasty

Emesene dynasty
آل شمسيغرام
Āl Shamsīghirām

Sampsigeramids
The Kingdom of Emesa at its greatest extent
CountryKingdom of Emesa (Roman client kingdom)
Foundedby 46 BC
FounderSampsigeramus I
Final rulerlikely Gaius Julius Alexion or, before him, Sohaemus of Emesa[1]
Titlesthought to have been priest-kings
Traditionscult of Elagabalus[2]
Depositionas kings, likely between 72 and 78/79, at latest by 161[1]

The Emesene (or Emesan) dynasty, also called the Sampsigeramids[3] or the Sampsigerami[4] or the House of Sampsigeramus[5][6] (Arabic: آل شمسيغرام, romanizedʾĀl Šamsīġirām),[7][8][9] were a Roman client dynasty of Syrian priest-kings known to have ruled by 46 BC from Arethusa and later from Emesa, Syria, until between 72 and 78/79, or at the latest the reign of Emperor Antoninus Pius (138–161). Iamblichus, the famous Neoplatonist philosopher of the third century, was one of their descendants, as was empress Julia Domna, matriarch of the Severan dynasty.

  1. ^ a b Kropp 2010, p. 205.
  2. ^ Fisher 2020.
  3. ^ Edwell 2007, p. 198; Zahran 2001; Sartre 2005, p. 662; Sommer 2017.
  4. ^ Wellesley 1989, p. 123; Stoneman 1992, p. 101; Dudgeon & Lieu 2002.
  5. ^ Michael Ivanovitch Rostovtzeff (1926). The Social and Economic History of the Roman Empire.
  6. ^ Journal of Roman Archaeology. Vol. 9. 1996. p. 524.
  7. ^ مجلة الحوليات الاثارية العربية السورية (in Arabic). 1996.
  8. ^ المرأة العربية (in Arabic). 2004.
  9. ^ بين التراب والتراث: منتخبات من بحوث تاريخية وأثرية (in Arabic). 2005.

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