Hellenistic Macedonia, Hellenistic Syria, and Hellenistic Egypt.
Macedonia, Egypt, Syria, Asia Minor, Mainland Greece.
Syria has no king, it has a president called, Bashar-Alassad.
There were several Hellenistic kingdoms carved out of Alexander's empire after he died. The ones which endured for a couple of hundred years or more were Macedonia, Egypt and Syria-Mesopotamia.
In 198 B.C, the Hellenistic king of Syria controlled Judah. Syrian rulers admired Greek culture. The introduced Greek ideas and beliefs to the Jewish people. Some Jews adopted aspects of Greek culture, and some began to worship other gods.
there are not any queens or kings in syria !
When Alexander died he left no clear successor so his generals split it up into what we mow call the Hellenistic kingdoms. These finally settled out into Syria, Egypt and Macedonia.
Antiochus was the name of the king of the Seleucid Empire in Syria.
They resulted from the split up of the Persian Empire - settling down to Egypt, Syria, Pergamon, Macedonia.
No. The Hellenistic period was over a century later when Alexander the Great's empire was split up after his death by his generals into separate kingdoms, which have been given the modern name of Hellenistic Kingdoms - Egypt, Macedonia and Syria, and hence it was the Hellenistic period until they were absorbed into the Roman Empire in the First Century BCE.
S. Butler Murray has written: 'Hellenistic architecture in Syria' -- subject(s): Accessible book
Ancient Greece was bordered by the kingdoms of Paeonia and Illyria and depending on what era, Thrace.*** Macedonia and Epirus were the buffers of Greece in Europe...R. M. Cook, British archaeologist, "The Greeks until Alexander", 1962, p. 23.