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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: YAK-ZYM |
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ZENOBIA (Gr. Zr7vo(3ia) , queen of Palmyra, one of the heroines of antiquity. Her native name was Septimia Bathzabbai, a name also borne by one of her generals, Septimius Zabbai.' This remarkable woman, famed for her beauty, her masculine energy and unusual powers of mind, was well fitted to be the consort of Odainatti (see ODABNATIIUS) in his proud position as Dux Orientis; during his lifetime she actively seconded his policy, and after his death in A.D. 2667 she not only succeeded to his position but determined to surpass it and make Palmyra mistress of the Roman Empire in the East. Wahab-allath or Athenodorus
chief
Claudius
Augustus
Claudius
Augustus
bear the same. The assumption marked the rejection of all allegiance to Rome. Aurelian instantly took measures
critical moment the queen's courage seems to have failed her; she and her son fled from the city to seekSee the Palmyrene inscriptions given in Vogue, Syrie centrale, Nos. 28, 29=Cooke, North-Semitic Inscriptions , Nos. 130, 131. Zabbai, an abbreviation of some such form as Zabd-ila=dowry of God, was a common Palmyrene name; it occurs in the Old Testament, Ezr. x. 28; Neb. iii. 20.help from the Persian king;2 they were captured on the bank of the Euphrates, and the Palmyrenes, losing heart at this disaster, capitulated (A.D. 272). Aurelian seized the wealth of the city but spared the inhabitants; to Zenobia he granted life; while her officers and advisers, among whom was the celebrated scholar Longinus, were put to death. Zenobia figured in the conqueror's splendid triumph
spring , 273).Among the traditions relating to Zenobia may be mentioned that of her discussions with the Archbishop Paul of Samosata on matters of religion. It is probable that she treated the Jews in Palmyra with favour; she is referred to in the Talmud, as protecting Jewish rabbis (Talm. Jer. Ter. viii. 46 b). The well-known account of Zenobia by Gibbon (Decline and Fall, i. pp. 302312 Bury's edition) is based upon the imperial biographers (Historia Augusta) and cannot be regarded as strictly historical in detail. An obscure and distorted tradition of Zenobia as an Arab queen survived in the Arabian story of Zabba, daughter of 'Amr b. Zarib, whose name is associated with Tadmor and with a town on the right bank of the Euphrates, which is no doubt the Zenobia of which Procopius speaks as founded by the famous queen. See C. de Perceval, Essai sur l'hist. des Arabes, ii. 28 f., 197 f. ; Tabari, i. 757 f. See further PALMYRA. (G. A. C. *) End of Article: ZENOBIA (Gr. Zr7vo(3ia) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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