Statue of the great Assyrian queen Semiramis
Statue of the great Assyrian queen Semiramis 2----46
A picture of the statue of the great Assyrian queen "Semiramis" who ruled (Mesopotamia) three thousand years ago and her rule extended from (the coasts of the Mediterranean Sea) to (Central Asia and China).
She was leading the battles herself. She was called the “Queen of Love” because she loved Prince Ara, King of Armenia. This king was very handsome, and because of her great admiration for him, she asked to marry him, but he rejected her request. She led a great army from Iraq to Armenia to fight that king and his army because he refused to marry her.
The king was killed during the battle, and she was deeply saddened by him, which prompted her to bring his body to her palace in the Kingdom of Assyria and place it in the middle of her palace for a month. She looks at him every day and cries with remorse and laments her grief over her killing the king and her love for him.
"Semuria" or "Semiramis" was an Assyrian queen who owned half the earth at that time when the greatest kingdoms in the world were in Mesopotamia, and Assyria was the largest of the great empires at that time...
The name "Semiramis" has been associated with several monuments in West Asia and Anatolia whose origins have been lost or forgotten, including the Beston Inscription of Darius I. Herodotus credits her with building the artificial banks that confined the Euphrates River. Its name was known because it was written on the gate of Babylon. Many sites throughout Mesopotamia, Media, Persia, the Levant, Anatolia, the Arabian Peninsula, and the Caucasus are named in memory of her.


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