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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Malichus_IIMalichus II - Wikipedia

    Malichus II (Nabataean Aramaic: 𐢓𐢑𐢏𐢈 ‎ Malīḵū or 𐢓𐢑𐢏𐢀 ‎ Malīḵūʾ ‍) was ruler of Nabatea from 40 to 70 AD. Silver drachm of Malichus II with his wife Shaqilat. He was the son of Aretes IV and Huldu.

  2. A significant number of coins, either previously unknown or thought to be extremely rare from approximately nine eastern Mediterranean mints, including Mallos, Tarsos, Soloi, Holmi, Kelenderis, Ura, Side, Aspendos, Phaselis and various Cyprus mints, were represented in the hoard.

  3. 13 de sept. de 2022 · Malichus II (c.A.D. 40-70), the son and successor of Aretas IV, is shown on the obverse of the silver drachm above. The reverse has the bust of his sister-queen Shaqilat II. The fortunes of the kingdom began to decline under his rule.

  4. 5 de mar. de 2018 · He was succeeded by his son Malichus II (c. 40-70 CE) who lost territories to Rome and tried, unsuccessfully, to win Roman respect by sending Nabatean forces to help the Romans put down the Jewish Revolt against Roman rule in 66-70 CE.

  5. Malichus (Malikho) succeeded Aretas III in 60 BCE. He may have been a cousin of King Herod the Great of Judaea (whose mother, Cypros, was a Nabataean princess). He reigned for almost 30 years, but apparently only issued coins during the last few years, probably to pay troops.

  6. 13 de ene. de 2020 · Nabataean coins are commonly found in Israel (a coin of Malichus II was found at Masada, dropped, perhaps, by a Nabataean archer supporting Vespasian’s siege), and in Sinai, Syria, Saudi Arabia...

  7. Mattathias Antigonus was the last king of the Hasmonean-Maccabean Dynasty (37-40 BC' all dates BC). Struggles and uprisings preceded his reign of the Hasmonean state, by his father Aristobulus II and his brother Alexander II for control of the Hasmonean kingdom.