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Semiramis
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Semiramis : ウィキペディア英語版
Semiramis

Semiramis (; (ギリシア語:Σεμίραμις), (アルメニア語:Շամիրամ) ''Shamiram'') was the legendary〔"Semiramis was an invention of Greek legend only" observes Robin Lane Fox (Fox, ''Travelling Heroes in the Epi Age of Homer'', 2008:176)〕 wife of King Ninus, succeeding him to the throne of Assyria.
The legends narrated by Diodorus Siculus, Justin and others from Ctesias of Cnidus describe her and her relationship to King Ninus, himself a mythical king of Assyria, not attested in the Assyrian King List.
The name of Semiramis came to be applied to various monuments in Western Asia and Asia Minor, the origin of which was forgotten or unknown.〔See Strabo xvi. I. 2〕 Nearly every stupendous work of antiquity by the Euphrates or in Iran seems to have ultimately been ascribed to her, even the Behistun Inscription of Darius.〔Diodorus Siculus ii. 3〕 Herodotus ascribes to her the artificial banks that confined the Euphrates〔i. 184〕 and knows her name as borne by a gate of Babylon.〔iii. 155〕 However, Diodorus stresses that the Hanging Gardens of Babylon were built long after Semiramis.
Various places in Assyria and throughout Mesopotamia as a whole, Media, Persia, the Levant, Asia Minor, Arabia, and the Caucasus bore the name of Semiramis, but slightly changed, even in the Middle Ages, and an old name of the city of Van was ''Shamiramagerd'' (in Armenian it means ''created by Semiramis'').
A real and historical Shammuramat (the Akkadian and Aramaic form of the name) was the Assyrian wife of Shamshi-Adad V (ruled 824 BC–811 BC), king of Assyria and ruler of the Neo-Assyrian Empire, and its regent for five years until her son Adad-nirari III came of age.
The indigenous Assyrians of Iraq, northeast Syria, southeast Turkey and northwest Iran still use Semiramis as a name for female children.
==Biography according to Diodorus Siculus==

According to the legend as related by Diodorus, Semiramis was of noble parents, the daughter of the fish-goddess Derketo of Ascalon in Syria and a mortal. Derketo abandoned her at birth and drowned herself. Doves fed the child until Simmas, the royal shepherd, found and raised her.
She then married Onnes or Menones, one of Ninus' generals. Ninus was so struck by her bravery at the capture of Bactra that he tried to compel Onnes to "yield her to him of his own accord, offering in return for this favor to give him his own daughter Sonanê to wife." When Onnes refused to exchange his wife for the king's daughter, Ninus "threatened to put out his eyes unless he at once acceded to his commands."
Onnes, out of fear of the king, and out of doomed passion for his wife, "fell into a kind of frenzy and madness," and hanged himself. Ninus then married her. 〔 (''The Library of History by Diodorus Siculus'', Vol. 1, The Loeb Classical Library, 1933, p. 371). http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Diodorus_Siculus/2A
*.html Retrieved 8 March 2015〕
She and Ninus had a son named Ninyas. After King Ninus conquered Asia, including the Bactrians, he was fatally wounded by an arrow. Semiramis then masqueraded as her son and tricked her late husband's army into following her instructions because they thought these came from their new ruler. After Ninus's death she reigned as queen regnant for 42 years, conquering much of Asia.
She restored ancient Babylon and protected it with a high brick wall that completely surrounded the city. Then she built several palaces in Persia, including Ecbatana. Diodorus also attributes the Behistun inscription to her, now known to have been done under Darius I of Persia. She not only reigned Asia effectively but also added Libya and Aethiopia to the empire. She then went to war with king Stabrobates of India, having her artisans create an army of false elephants to deceive the Indians into thinking she had acquired real elephants. This succeeded at first, but then she was wounded in the counterattack and her army again retreated west of the Indus.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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