Parthian Kingdom

Parthian Kingdom

Ancient SILVER COIN Rare Parthian Kingdom King Vardanes II TETRADRACHM 1255 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare Parthian Kingdom King Vardanes II TETRADRACHM 1255 g
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Parthian Kingdom Mithradates II AR drachm
Parthian Kingdom Mithradates II AR drachm
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PARTHIAN KINGDOM VOLOGASES III 105 147 AD AR DRACHM NGC CH XF 001
PARTHIAN KINGDOM VOLOGASES III 105 147 AD AR DRACHM NGC CH XF 001
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Parthian KingdomPhraates IV c 38 2 BC Ar Drachm
Parthian KingdomPhraates IV c 38 2 BC Ar Drachm
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Parthian Kingdom Gotarzes I c90 80 BC AR Drachm
Parthian Kingdom Gotarzes I c90 80 BC AR Drachm
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Parthian Kingdom Mithradates I 171 138 BC AR Drachm
Parthian Kingdom Mithradates I 171 138 BC AR Drachm
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom Drachma 3602 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom Drachma 3602 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom Drachma 4004 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom Drachma 4004 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom Drachma 3998 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom Drachma 3998 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom Drachma 376 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom Drachma 376 g
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Ancient Indo Parthian drachm of Gondophares 20 50 AD Indo Parthian Kingdom
Ancient Indo Parthian drachm of Gondophares 20 50 AD Indo Parthian Kingdom
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Parthian Kingdom Mithradates II AR tetradrachm
Parthian Kingdom Mithradates II AR tetradrachm
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0484 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0484 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0666 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0666 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0542 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0542 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare Parthian Kingdom King Vardanes I TETRADRACHM 1371 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare Parthian Kingdom King Vardanes I TETRADRACHM 1371 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0684 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0684 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 057 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 057 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0668 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0668 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0506 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0506 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0536 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0536 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0598 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0598 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0634 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0634 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0576 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0576 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 048 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 048 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 047 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 047 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0586 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0586 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 063 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 063 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0558 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0558 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 055 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 055 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 051 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 051 g
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 072 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 072 g
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Parthian Kingdom PHRAATES III 55 70BC AR DRHM XF Parthia Rare
Parthian Kingdom PHRAATES III 55 70BC AR DRHM XF Parthia Rare
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PARTHIAN KINGDOM VOLOGASES III 105 147 AD AR DRACHM EKBATANA
PARTHIAN KINGDOM VOLOGASES III 105 147 AD AR DRACHM EKBATANA
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PARTHIAN KINGDOM ORODES I 90 77 BC AR DRACHM
PARTHIAN KINGDOM ORODES I 90 77 BC AR DRACHM
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PARTHIAN KINGDOM MITHRADATES II 123 88 BC AE CHALKOUS PHRATTES IV 38 2 BC
PARTHIAN KINGDOM MITHRADATES II 123 88 BC AE CHALKOUS PHRATTES IV 38 2 BC
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Parthian Kingdom Vologases IV Ca AD 147 191 BI tetradrachm
Parthian Kingdom Vologases IV Ca AD 147 191 BI tetradrachm
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Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0698 g
Ancient SILVER COIN Rare early Indo Parthian Kingdom small Obol Drachma 0698 g
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PARTHIAN KINGDOM MITHRADATES II 123 88 BC AE CHALKOUS
PARTHIAN KINGDOM MITHRADATES II 123 88 BC AE CHALKOUS
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Parthian Kingdom

There's Room for Everybody! A Pentecost Sunday Sermon

In my naivety I had thought until recently that these two elements were natural opposites that cancelled each other out, such as when you blow on a birthday candle and the wind puts the fire out. And then we all experienced those terrible bushfires in Victoria so recently, where wind and fire combined to generate those terrible fire-balls that hurtled down city streets at terrible speeds, consuming everything in their path.

Wind and fire are a volatile combination that can destroy people and property and tear apart entire communities and yet they can also, it seems, give birth to a community! Yes, it is Pentecost Sunday and we are celebrating today the birth of the church. The church as a worldwide community has been living and breathing now for a lot longer than any of us can remember but (believe it or not) it did have a beginning and it’s beginning was here, in the wind and fire of Pentecost.

No one was killed by that particular fiery wind so far as we know - not on that day, at any rate - but the wind and the fire of the Spirit of God certainly did cause a great deal of chaos and confusion on that day. Things happened that people found hard to explain. The disciples started behaving like crazy men, such that most people thought that they were drunk, and then they started speaking in strange tongues ‘such as the Spirit gave them utterance’, and nobody knew quite what was going on.

Such chaos might appear to be remarkably fitting for the start of an organisation that has been characterised by befuddlement and confusion ever since, and yet there was something very serious taking place at the centre of that fire. A new community was being formed, and it was being formed out of a melting pot that combined persons of every race and language and people and nation.

That’s the thing that most stands out, I think, in the way the Luke, the author of the book of Acts, tells the story of Pentecost - the almost tedious list of different nations and states that are represented in the Pentecost crowd.

The list sounds something like a roll call of the countries of the known world: “We are Parthians, Medes, Elamites, people from Mesopotamia, Judea, Cappadocia, Pontus, Asia, Phrygia, Pamphylia, Egypt, the district of Libya near Cyrene, and visitors from Rome. We are Jews, proselytes, Cretans, and Arabs.“ Was there any Ancient Near Eastern nation that wasn’t represented?

It seems strange that the author should go into such detail as to who was there. And yet a point is being made, and it’s a point about the foundation of the church and the nature of the church - that from the very beginning, the church has always been a community that includes everybody!

Of course, technically speaking, they were all Jews - the people who made up that Pentecost crowd, even if they were Jews from a wide variety of backgrounds. And yet the way the author of our story depicts the scene, I think it is clear that he saw Pentecost as the beginning of something much larger and broader still.

The church begins with a group of Galilean Jews and then comes to incorporate Jews from every corner of the globe, and then it starts to incorporate non-Jews.

The church begins as a largely working-class phenomenon, but pretty quickly we see her engaging with people from all classes and backgrounds and from every strata of society.

The church begins by targeting faithful members of the temple community but before long she is drawing in foreign converts to Judaism, and then people who had never darkened the door of a synagogue at all.

What we see at Pentecost is the beginning of a dynamic process of exponential inclusiveness, where both the size and the scope of the Christian community continues to grow and move towards the point where Christ will be all in all!

And this isn’t just a peculiar strategy for organisational growth. From a Biblical point of view there is something of cosmic significance taking place here, and it’s the reversal of an ancient curse.

If you remember the story of the Tower of Babel (as recorded in Genesis 11) it was an account of a terrible curse that came upon all people of the earth in response to their attempt to build an enormous tower, as a testimony to their own greatness.

The sin on view was a lust for power combined with human arrogance, and the punishment was that the people were divided into different language groups so that their power would be limited.

Dividing people up has always been an effective way of limiting a people’s power, and we’ve seen any number of political regimes use the ‘divide an conquer’ strategy since. Even so, division, Biblically speaking, is always a curse, and it seems that at Pentecost God, by His Spirit, began to reverse that curse.

Whereas at Babel human beings had banded together to build a community in which God had no place, at Pentecost God took the initiative of building a new community - the church - which had her creator at her centre.

Whereas the Babel community was built around a common lust for power, the church community would disavow power and centre itself instead on service.

So whereas God came down to Babel to miraculously confuse their language so that they could not understand each other or work together, at Pentecost God came down and miraculously bridged the communication gap, in order to make true human community a possibility again!

What we have with the birth of the church is the birth of a vision - a vision of a truly inclusive community - and I don’t think we can afford to underestimate just how radical that vision is, for such inclusiveness, it seems to me, is almost by definition intrinsically irreligious, for it has always been at the heart of religion - any religion - to discriminate between who is a legitimate member of the religious community and who is not - to include and to exclude.

Religion discriminates between who are the chosen people and those who are not the chosen people, and while different religions come up with different ways of drawing that boundary line so as to determine who is in and who is out, the basic idea of there being a boundary line between the true believers, on the one hand, and the pagans, heretics, infidels, and other ‘unworthies’ on the other, is, I would judge, fundamental, to almost every religious system?

There is an old, and not particularly funny, joke that you will have heard, I suspect, about a guy who is being given his first tour around Heaven, and he notices that right in the centre of Heaven is one large sealed-off area with extraordinarily high brick walls enclosing it on each side, such that you couldn‘t possibly see who or what was on the other side of those walls. The first-timer asks what this massive prison area is for, and is told, “Oh, that’s the area for the Evangelicals. They really like to believe that they are the only ones up here, and God didn’t have the heart to disappoint them by letting them see the rest of us.”

Of course you can substitute whatever group of religious people you like into that joke and it still won’t be particularly funny but it does make an excellent point about how we religious people think. We think in terms of insiders and outsiders, with us on the inside and any number of others on the outside, and it‘s .generally the community of the righteous that are identified as the insiders. The chosen people are those who don’t smoke, drink or chew or go with girls who do.

A lot of us were probably brought up to think that way, whether we were brought up Anglican, Catholic, Baptist or Islamic, it all works roughly the same way. The community of the righteous are those who don’t lie, steal or commit adultery, while liars, thieves and adulterers are excluded from the community.

Perhaps, for some, this is a vision of Heaven - a place where all the wholesome people go. If so, it’s not a Pentecost vision, is it?

Mind you, I think there is an even more sinister form of religious exclusivism running rampant in the church today. It’s not an attempt to build a community of the righteous, but rather to build a community of the theologically correct

Here again there is a clear boundary line drawn between insiders and outsiders, between the saved and the unsaved, between the true believers and those who are destined to eternal shame, and it’s not an ethical distinction between who is morally worthy and who is unworthy, but a distinction between who has their theology exactly right and who has failed the test of orthodoxy.

Of course this is not just a modern phenomenon. Indeed, if you look back at the ancient creeds of the church you will see that the church has regularly tried to draw the boundary line between the saved and the unsaved on the basis of their theological orthodoxy.

And again, perhaps for some this is a vision of Heaven - the fellowship of the theologically correct. And again, if it is, I say to you that it is not a particularly Pentecostal vision.

In truth, I don’t know what your vision of Heaven is, but I do know that the disciples of Jesus had to go through a process of expanding their vision.

For the disciples, in their original vision of Heaven it would have been a place entirely populated by Jews. They had to learn to expand their vision.

For a lot of religious people before and since our vision of Heaven has been of a community of righteous people. If that’s us, we need to expand that vision!

And if we are laden down with a vision of Heaven as the community of the theologically correct then we likewise need to expand that vision and replace it with that vision that comes to birth at Pentecost - a vision of a truly inclusive human community where nobody is excluded - not because of their race or language, not because of their poor theology, not because they are black or white or rich or poor or slave or free or gay or straight or male or female.

For the Kingdom of God that Jesus spoke of is a feast to which everybody is invited, and so the church of Jesus Christ that comes to birth at Pentecost in order to bear witness to that coming Kingdom is likewise a community that welcomes everybody without grilling them first about their beliefs or their culture or their gender or their sexual orientation or even their morality.

This is the vision of Pentecost, born in wind and fire. Oh how much easier it would be if God had appointed us to build a community of like-minded white people! How much easier it would be to work with a homogenous unit, where all the difficult people were excluded.

How much easier it would be if we could send away the mentally ill, the socially inept, and those with poor dress sense so that they could be part of some other community. What an attractive, hip and peaceful community we would have!

The only problem is that it would not be the church of Jesus Christ - born in the fiery wind of Pentecost, always chaotic, always full of surprises, always hard work, but a multi-racial, multi-faceted community that is always testifying to a reality much greater than itself, and is always doing so with joy.

About the Author

Rev. David B. Smith
(the 'Fighting Father')

Parish priest, community worker,
martial arts master, pro boxer, author, father of three
www.fatherdave.org

Get a free preview copy of Dave's book,Sex, the Ring & the Eucharist when you sign up for his free newsletter at www.fatherdave.org


Parthian Warrior, from Shami


Parthian Warrior, from Shami


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Parthian Warrior, from Shami - Giclee Print

Parthian Karma


Parthian Karma


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'Parthian Karma' by Jack Adler is the third book in the trilogy of the story of Kyra and Larius, a brother and sister born in First Century AD who are taken from their Parthian home when their parents are killed in battle by a roman soldier and are then made wards of Rome. Because they are of noble birth, they are not made slaves of Rome and they live a comfortable life until a series of events that thrust them into turmoil causing them to flee the Roman Empire. The saga of Kyra and Larius continues as the brother and sister seek home and sanctuary, experiencing the full flavor of new and different cultures in their search. Parthian Karma is a colorful and exciting tale filled with suspense and intrigue. The other two books in this Jack Adler trilogy are 'Parthian Retreat, The Road To Seres', and 'Seres Sanctuary'. All three books are available in both soft cover and hardcover editions and are Ingram listed.

Parthian Empire


Parthian Empire


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High Quality Content by WIKIPEDIA articles The Parthian Empire (247 BC 224 AD), was a major Iranian political and cultural power in the Ancient Near East,and a counterweight and eastern boundary to the Roman Empire of the Mediterranean Basin.The ruling dynasty came from Parthia ( roughly western Khurasan in Irans northeast) and was established and named after Arsaces, therefore the nation is also called Arsacid Empire.The Arsacids were contemporaries of the Seleucid Empire, and conquered much of its territories; unlike the successors of Alexander the Great, they were an indigenous Iranian dynasty although Seleucus I had married an Iranian princess. Adopting Greek culture, they proclaimed themselves philhellenes friend of Greeks. The Arsacids Hellenism was subsequently portrayed by the Sassanians as a betrayal of Iranian values, and used as a justification to overthrow them. This portrayal as morally and culturally corrupt was followed by academia for decades. Author: Surhone, Lambert M./ Timpledon, Miriam T./ Marseken, Susan F. Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 96 Publication Date: 2010/06/21 Language: English Dimensions: 5.98 x 9.01 x 0.22 inches

Parthian Warrior at the Battle of Carrhae in 53 Bc


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Parthian Shot


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A Marcus Corvinus Roman mystery

Parthian Stations


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This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.

The Parthian Stations


The Parthian Stations


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No Synopsis Available

God, Marble, 1st-2nd century BC Parthian from Hatra


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God, Marble, 1st-2nd century BC Parthian from Hatra - Photographic Print

Parthian Stranger: The Order


Parthian Stranger: The Order


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At the end of the Cold War, Jack Cash finds himself sitting in a prison with no hope of parole. It appears that this super spy and international bounty hunter's days of intelligence gathering are over. Nicknamed Parthian Stranger by his inmates, Jack spends his days trying to figure out how to escape the prison where he has been hidden for the last twenty years. Everything is about to change for Jack when he awakens one morning to discover he is alone in the penitentiary. With no guards in sight, Jack makes his way up the prison walls and out to freedom. Now on the run, Jack is in a fight for his life and will stop at nothing-even if it means murdering anyone who gets in his way. But after he meets Sara Sanders, a victim of a stalker who enlists his help, he has no idea that the CIA is closing in an attempt to help him.Suddenly the life of a "Parthian Stranger" turns in an unexpected direction that leads him straight into a dangerous situation where he must pull out all the stops to not only save his own life, but also the lives of others.

The Kingdom


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The Kingdom

Kingdom


Kingdom


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Kingdom

Parthian Retreat, the Road to Seres


Parthian Retreat, the Road to Seres


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Two young Parthians, brother and sister, are caught up in the great rivalry between Rome and Parthia in Asia Minor during first century A.D.. At that time Parthia was Rome's greatest enemy, fightng over land as well as trade routes to Seres, land of silk. Larius and Kyra become wards of Rome when their father, a Parthian nobleman, is killed in battle. In order to save his sister from slavery and possibly worse, Larius is caught up in political intrigue when he agrees to become a spy for his would-be benefactor, the Roman procurator, Publius. From this point on things become more complicated for both Kyra and Larius. As their lives intertwine with history, they experience the good and the bad. Most of all, they survive, heroic and strong. Jack Adler is a widely published author who teaches UCLA extension classes in Journalism and writing.

Roman Troops Threaten to Use Their Battering Ram Against a Parthian Town


Roman Troops Threaten to Use Their Battering Ram Against a Parthian Town


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Roman Troops Threaten to Use Their Battering Ram Against a Parthian Town - Giclee Print

The Parthian Coinage. (with Eight Plates.)


The Parthian Coinage. (with Eight Plates.)


$18.86


This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book.

Parthian Stations by Isidore [Paperback]


Parthian Stations by Isidore [Paperback]


$22.17


This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923. This book may have occasional imperfections such as missing or blurred pages, poor pictures, errant marks, etc. that were either part of the original artifact, or were introduced by the scanning process. We believe this work is culturally important, and despite the imperfections, have elected to bring it back into print as part of our continuing commitment to the preservation of printed works worldwide. We appreciate your understanding of the imperfections in the preservation process, and hope you enjoy this valuable book. Author: Isidore Binding Type: Paperback Number of Pages: 52 Publication Date: 2010/01/11 Language: English Dimensions: 7.44 x 9.68 x 0.10 inches

Seleucid, Parthian and Sasanid Periods


Seleucid, Parthian and Sasanid Periods


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No Synopsis Available

Parthian Retreat: The Road to Seres


Parthian Retreat: The Road to Seres


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Military History of the Parthian Empire


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No Synopsis Available

Parthian Retreat : The Road to Seres


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Rare Stele Showing Artabanus V, the Last Parthian King, Investing Khwasak, the Satrap of Susa


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Ruins of the Parthian Fortress, Nissa, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Turkmenistan, Central Asia, Asia


Ruins of the Parthian Fortress, Nissa, UNESCO World Heritage Site, Turkmenistan, Central Asia, Asia


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Life-Sized Statue of a Parthian Prince, from Sham-Izeh, Malamir, Iran, circa 50 BC-Ad 150


Life-Sized Statue of a Parthian Prince, from Sham-Izeh, Malamir, Iran, circa 50 BC-Ad 150


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Life-Sized Statue of a Parthian Prince, from Sham-Izeh, Malamir, Iran, circa 50 BC-Ad 150 - Giclee Print
 

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