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See also: queen of See also: Palmyra, one of the heroines of antiquity
.
Her native name was Septimia Bathzabbai, a name also See also: borne by one of her generals, Septimius Zabbai.' This remarkable woman, famed for her beauty, her masculine energy and unusual See also: powers of mind, was well fitted to be the See also: consort of Odainatti (see ODABNATIIUS) in his proud position as See also: Dux Orientis; during his lifetime she actively seconded his policy, and after his See also: death in A.D
.
266—7 she not only succeeded to his position but determined to surpass it and make Palmyra See also: mistress of the See also: Roman See also: Empire in the See also: East
.
Wahab-allath or See also: Athenodorus (as the name was Graecized), her son by Odainath, being still a boy, she took the reins of See also: government into her own hands
.
Under her general-in-chief Zabda, the Palmyrenes occupied See also: Egypt in A.D
.
270, not without a struggle, under the pretext of restoring it to See also: Rome; and Wahab-allath governed Egypt in the reign of See also: Claudius as joint ruler with the title of (3avtXths (See also: king), while
See also: Zenobia herself was styled (3avtXIvvat7 (queen)
.
In See also: Asia Minor Palniyrene garrisons were established as far west as See also: Ancyra in See also: Galatia and See also: Chalcedon opposite See also: Byzantium, and Zenobia still professed to be acting in the interests of the Roman See also: rule
.
In his coins struck at Alexandria in A.D
.
270 Wahab-allath is named along with Aurelian, but the title of See also: Augustus is given only to the latter; a See also: Greek inscription from Byblos, however, mentions Aurelian (or his predecessor Claudius) and Zenobia together as ZE$avros and EE(3aOrr7 (i.e
.
Augustus and See also: Augusta, C.I
.
G
.
4503 b)
.
When Aurelian became emperor in 270 he quickly realized that the policy of the Palmyrene queen was endangering the unity of the empire . It was not long before all disguises were thrown off; in Egypt Wahab-allath began to issue coins without theSee also: head of Aurelian and bearing the imperial title, and Zenobia's coins bear the same
.
The See also: assumption marked the rejection of all allegiance to Rome
.
Aurelian instantly took See also: measures; Egypt was recovered for the Empire by Probus (close of 270), and the emperor himself prepared a See also: great expedition into Asia Minor and See also: Syria
.
Towards the end of 271 he marched through Asia Minor and, overthrowing the Palmyrene garrisons in Chalcedon, Ancyra and Tyana, he reached See also: Antioch, where the See also: main Palmyrene army under Zabda and Zabbai, with Zenobia herself, attempted to oppose his way
.
The at-tempt, however, proved unsuccessful, and after suffering considerable losses the Palmyrenes retired in the direction of Emesa (now See also: Homs), whence the road See also: lay open to their native city
.
The queen refused to yield to Aurelian's demand for surrender, and See also: drew up her army at Emesa for the See also: battle which was to decide her See also: fate
.
In the end she was defeated, and there was nothing for it but to fall back upon Palmyra across the See also: desert
.
Thither Aurelian followed her in spite of the difficulties of transport, and laid siege to the well-fortified and provisioned city
.
At the critical moment the queen's courage seems to have failed her; she and her son fled from the city to seek
See the Palmyrene inscriptions given in Vogue, Syrie centrale, Nos
.
28, 29=Cooke, See also: North-Semitic Inscriptions, Nos
.
130, 131
.
Zabbai, an See also: abbreviation of some such See also: form as Zabd-ila=dowry of See also: God, was a See also: 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 See also: bank of the See also: Euphrates, and the Palmyrenes, losing See also: heart at this disaster, capitulated (A.D
.
272)
.
Aurelian seized the See also: wealth of the city but spared the inhabitants; to Zenobia he granted See also: life; while her See also: officers and advisers, among whom was the celebrated See also: scholar See also: Longinus, were put to death
.
Zenobia figured in the conqueror's splendid See also: triumph at Rome, and by the most probable account accepted her fall with dignity and closed her days at See also: Tibur, where she lived with her sons the life of a Roman matron
.
A few months after the fall of Zenobia, Palmyra revolted again; Aurelian unexpectedly returned, destroyed the city, and this See also: time showed no mercy to the population (spring, 273)
.
Among the traditions See also: relating to Zenobia may be mentioned that of her discussions with the Archbishop See also: Paul of Samosata on matters of See also: religion
.
It is probable that she treated the Jews in Palmyra with favour; she is referred to in the See also: Talmud, as protecting Jewish rabbis (Talm
.
Jer
.
Ter. viii
.
46 b)
.
The well-known account of Zenobia by See also: Gibbon (Decline and Fall, i. pp
.
302—312 See also: Bury's edition) is based upon the imperial biographers (Historia Augusta) and cannot be regarded as strictly See also: historical in detail
.
An obscure and distorted tradition of Zenobia as an Arab queen survived in the Arabian See also: story of Zabba, daughter of 'Amr b
.
Zarib, whose name is associated with Tadmor and with a See also: town on the right bank of the Euphrates, which is no doubt the Zenobia of which See also: Procopius speaks as founded by the famous queen
.
See C. de See also: Perceval, Essai sur l'hist. See also: des Arabes, ii
.
28 f., 197 f
.
; Tabari, i
.
757 f
.
See further PALMYRA
.
(G
.
A
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C
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