Bactria is the ancient name for the area in northeastern Afghanistan, northwestern Pakistan and southern Uzbekistan.
1) Roxana of Bactria 2) Stateira of Persia It's also of note that he married Parystatis (Stateira's cusin) at the wedding between himself and Stateira.
No, it is most likely Persian. The first references to rice pilaf come from Alexander the Great, speaking of the hospitality he experienced in Bactria (modern day Iran).
Alexander the great conquered these cities. Rhacotis, Memphis, Tyre, Petra, Issus, Lampsacus, Halicarnassus, Byzantium, Epidamnus, Tanais, Sinope, Azara, Amida, Hatra, Babylon, Suza, Persepolis, Carmana, Ectabana, Tabae, Pura, Quetta, Nisa, Balkh, Multan, Bactria, Bannu, Taxila, Chach and Kucha. Hope this helped.
Roxana (Roxanne) was one of the three wives of Alexander the Great, and so was Queen of Macedonia, and by extension of Alexander's empire. She was a Persian princess of Bactria, and married Alexander in 327 BC, four years before his untimely death. Roxana and Alexander's son were killed in 310 BC to eliminate them as rivals.
Bactria do not hide. They exists everywhere, including inside out bodies.
bactria
No they do not have. It is absent in prokariyotes
Bacteria are ubiquitous.
they eat bactria
toxins are bactria's waste.
Bactria in the plaque
sometimes Bactria can kill microbes
Bactria
bacteria eat nothing it is in the air.
bacteria eat nothing it is in the air.
mabe we have not found out yet