Kings Of Macedon

Macedon (also sometimes known as Macedonia) was an ancient kingdom in the present-day territory of northern Greece, inhabited by Dorian Greeks. It emerged into prominence in the 4th Century BC when King Philip II conquered the Greek city-states. Philip's son, Alexander the Great, conquered the Persian Empire a few years later. The Kingdom of Macedon itself soon lost direct control of these vast Asian territories, but it retained its hegemony over Greece itself until defeated by the Romans in the Macedonian Wars (215 - 148 BC).

Argead Dynasty

Antipatrid Dynasty

Antigonid Dynasty

After Perseus's defeat at the Battle of Pydna in 168 BC, Macedon was divided into four republics under Roman domination. In 150 BC, a man named Andriscus claimed to be the son of Perseus, and claimed the throne of Macedon as Philip VI. This led to the Fourth Macedonian War, in which Andriscus was defeated by the Romans, and Macedon annexed to Rome in 148 BC.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
collimated light
flower war
gangster
mary bell
ackermann steering geometry
george carteret
canadian lacrosse association
john berkeley, 1st baron berkeley of stratton
civet
blind guardian
box lacrosse
indoor lacrosse
world indoor lacrosse championships
beatmania
ko magazine
camber angle
battle of mycale
uss pennsylvania (1837)
alternate reality
jai alai
david frawley
viswamitra
the actor's studio
usury
unterseeboot 190
ashikaga yoshitane
medical imaging
leonidas
kings of sparta
chapati
pionus
tui
ashikaga yoshihisa
puri
macpherson strut
virtuosity
denticle herring
governor general in the swedish realm
anchovy
magali febles
recording studio
mikhail tarielovich loris melikov
swedish pomerania
ashikaga yoshimasa