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First monarch of the Media-based Median kingdom.
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First monarch of the Persis-based Achaemenid Empire.
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With regard to the name of Iran: "Persia" was an exonym used by the ancient Greeks to refer to the Achaemenid Empire, de
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There is no archaeological evidence of any Median imperial centers, no documentary archives from Median administrations,
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Ctesias, another ancient Greek historian, also wrote a list of Median rulers though it differs entirely from that of Her
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In Babylonia, the standard title up until the reign of Xerxes I was 'King of Babylon, King of the Lands'. In more elabor
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Enumerated as Alexander III as king of Macedon (after Alexander I and Alexander II).
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The date of Alexander's victory at the Battle of Gaugamela, which opened the way for his conquest of Babylonia and Persi
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Enumerated as Philip III as king of Macedon (after Philip I and Philip II).
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Enumerated as Alexander IV as king of Macedon (after Alexander I, Alexander II, and Alexander the Great).
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Alexander IV's murder by his regent Cassander in 309 BC was not made public knowledge until 306/305 BC and he thus conti
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The Parni was an eastern Iranian tribe established on the Amu Darya in the conferedation of Dahae. To Yarshater, they we
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The Parthian conquest of Babylonia, whereafter Mithridates I assumed the style 'Great King' and firmly established his e
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Sometimes enumerated as Artabanus II since some historians consider the early Arsacid ruler Arsaces II to also be Artaba
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Sometimes enumerated as Mithridates IV, after another supposed Parthian king named Mithridates (based on numismatics) da
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Often enumerated as Tiridates II, after Tiridates I, a supposed Parthian king now believed to be unhistorical.
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The other three were Boran (630), Azarmidokht (630–631), and Sati Beg (1338/1339–1339/1340).
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Sometimes enumerated as Artabanus III, if Artabanus I is considered to be Artabanus II. He is also sometimes referred to
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Sometimes enumerated as Pacorus II, after Pacorus I, a Parthian prince who never ruled in his own right.
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Sometimes enumerated as Artabanus IV or Artabanus V (see note on Artabanus II).
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Sometimes enumerated as Vologases III, after another supposed Parthian king named Vologases (based on numismatics) dated
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Sometimes enumerated as Mithridates V (see note on Mithridates III).
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Sometimes enumerated as Vologases IV (see note on Vologases II).
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Sometimes enumerated as Vologases V (see note on Vologases II).
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Sometimes enumerated as Vologases VI (see note on Vologases II).
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Sometimes enumerated as Artabanus V or Artabanus VI (see note on Artabanus II).
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Khosrow's rule was brief and ephemeral and he is not counted in the numbering of later kings of this name.
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The other three were Musa (2 BC–AD 4), Azarmidokht (630–631), and Sati Beg (1338/1339–1339/1340).
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The other three were Musa (2 BC–AD 4), Boran (630), and Sati Beg (1338/1339–1339/1340).
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Name in Chinese sources. His original name in Persian may have been Pušang.
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Name in Chinese sources. The original Persian name is unknown.
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Mardavij also fashioned a golden throne for himself, in imitation of the ancient throne of the Sasanian rulers.
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Rukn al-Dawla claimed Iranian imperial status by 962, when he minted a medal depicting him similar to a Sasanian ruler w
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The other three were Musa (2 BC–AD 4), Boran (630), and Azarmidokht (630–631).
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Amoretti & Matthee 2009: "Of Kurdish ancestry, the Ṣafavids started as a Sunnī mystical order (...)"
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