. . . . . . . . "Sagala, Sakala (en s\u00E1nscrito, \u0938\u093E\u0915\u0932\u093E), or Sangala (en griego antiguo, \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1) fue una ciudad de la antigua India,\u200B\u200B que fue la predecesora de la moderna ciudad de Sialkot que se encuentra en la actual provincia del norte de Punjab.\u200B\u200B\u200B\u200B La ciudad fue la capital del y fue arrasada en el 326 a.C. durante la .\u200BEn el siglo II a.C., Sagala fue nombrada capital del reino indogriego por Menandro I. Menandro abraz\u00F3 el budismo despu\u00E9s de un extenso debate con un monje budista, como se recoge en el texto budista Milinda Panha.\u200B Bajo su reinado, Sagala se convirti\u00F3 en un importante centro del budismo y prosper\u00F3 como un importante centro comercial.\u200B\u200B"@es . "\u5962\u7FAF\u7F57\u4E5F\u4F5C\u820D\u7AED\uFF0C\u662F\u53E4\u5370\u5EA6\u4E00\u5EA7\u57CE\u5E02\uFF0C\u4F4D\u4E8E\u4ECA\u5DF4\u57FA\u65AF\u5766\u65C1\u906E\u666E\u7701\u9521\u4E9A\u5C14\u79D1\u7279\u9644\u8FD1\u3002\u5EFA\u4E8E\u4E9A\u5386\u5C71\u5927\u5927\u5E1D\u4E1C\u5F81\u65F6\u671F\uFF0C\u540E\u4E3A\u5370\u5EA6-\u5E0C\u814A\u738B\u56FD\u7684\u91CD\u8981\u57CE\u5E02\u3002\u66FE\u4E3A\u5F25\u5170\u9640\u738B\u7684\u9996\u90FD\u3002\u516C\u51436\u4E16\u7EAA\u4E3A\u5688\u54D2\u7EDF\u6CBB\u8005\u6469\u9170\u903B\u77E9\u7F57\u7684\u90FD\u57CE\u3002\u5510\u4EE3\u7384\u5958\u53D6\u7ECF\u9014\u4E2D\uFF0C\u66FE\u8DEF\u8FC7\u6B64\u5730\u3002"@zh . "Sagala, Sakala (Sanskrit: \u0938\u093E\u0915\u0932\u093E), or Sangala (Ancient Greek: \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1) was a city in ancient India, which was the predecessor of the modern city of Sialkot that is located in what is now Pakistan's northern Punjab province. The city was the capital of the Madra Kingdom and it was razed in 326 BC during the Indian campaign of Alexander the Great. In the 2nd century BC, Sagala was made capital of the Indo-Greek kingdom by Menander I. Menander embraced Buddhism after extensive debating with a Buddhist monk, as recorded in the Buddhist text Milinda Panha. Sagala became a major centre for Buddhism under his reign, and prospered as a major trading centre."@en . . . . "POINT(74.534164428711 32.505279541016)"^^ . "74.53416442871094"^^ . . . . "32.50527777777778 74.53416666666666" . . . . "591210"^^ . . . "S\u00E2gal\u00E2, Sakala (sanskrit : \u0938\u093E\u0915\u0932\u093E), ou Sangala (grec ancien : \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1) \u00E9tait une ville de l'Inde ancienne qui se trouvait probablement \u00E0 l'emplacement de l'actuelle ville de Sialkot, situ\u00E9e dans ce qui est maintenant la province du nord du Punjab au Pakistan. La ville \u00E9tait la capitale du royaume de Madra et elle a \u00E9t\u00E9 ras\u00E9e en 326 av. J.-C. pendant la campagne indienne d'Alexandre le Grand. Au IIe si\u00E8cle av. J.-C., Sagala est devenue la capitale du royaume indo-grec de M\u00E9nandre Ier. M\u00E9nandre aurait embrass\u00E9 le bouddhisme \u00E0 la suite de ses \u00E9changes avec un moine bouddhiste, r\u00E9unis dans le Milindapanha, un trait\u00E9 bouddhique qui mentionne sa conversion. Sagala est devenu un centre majeur du bouddhisme sous son r\u00E8gne et a prosp\u00E9r\u00E9 en tant que centre commercial important."@fr . . . . . "32.50527954101562"^^ . . . . . . . . . "Sagala, Sakala (en s\u00E1nscrito, \u0938\u093E\u0915\u0932\u093E), or Sangala (en griego antiguo, \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1) fue una ciudad de la antigua India,\u200B\u200B que fue la predecesora de la moderna ciudad de Sialkot que se encuentra en la actual provincia del norte de Punjab.\u200B\u200B\u200B\u200B La ciudad fue la capital del y fue arrasada en el 326 a.C. durante la .\u200BEn el siglo II a.C., Sagala fue nombrada capital del reino indogriego por Menandro I. Menandro abraz\u00F3 el budismo despu\u00E9s de un extenso debate con un monje budista, como se recoge en el texto budista Milinda Panha.\u200B Bajo su reinado, Sagala se convirti\u00F3 en un importante centro del budismo y prosper\u00F3 como un importante centro comercial.\u200B\u200B"@es . . . . . "\u5962\u7FAF\u7F57"@zh . . . "1109295513"^^ . "\uC0AC\uAC08\uB77C(\uACE0\uB300 \uADF8\uB9AC\uC2A4\uC5B4: \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1)\uB294 \uD604\uC7AC \uD30C\uD0A4\uC2A4\uD0C4\uC758 \uC0EC\uCF54\uD2B8\uB85C \uD47C\uC790\uBE0C \uBD81\uBD80\uC5D0 \uC704\uCE58\uD55C \uB3C4\uC2DC\uC774\uB2E4. \uC0AC\uAC08\uB77C\uB294 \uADF8\uB9AC\uC2A4 \uACC4\uC2B9 \uC655\uAD6D\uC758 \uBA54\uB09C\uB354 1\uC138\uC758 \uC218\uB3C4\uC600\uB2E4."@ko . . "\uC0AC\uAC08\uB77C(\uACE0\uB300 \uADF8\uB9AC\uC2A4\uC5B4: \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1)\uB294 \uD604\uC7AC \uD30C\uD0A4\uC2A4\uD0C4\uC758 \uC0EC\uCF54\uD2B8\uB85C \uD47C\uC790\uBE0C \uBD81\uBD80\uC5D0 \uC704\uCE58\uD55C \uB3C4\uC2DC\uC774\uB2E4. \uC0AC\uAC08\uB77C\uB294 \uADF8\uB9AC\uC2A4 \uACC4\uC2B9 \uC655\uAD6D\uC758 \uBA54\uB09C\uB354 1\uC138\uC758 \uC218\uB3C4\uC600\uB2E4."@ko . "32.5"^^ . . "Sagala (Pakistan)"@fr . . . . "Sagala"@es . . . . . "Sagala (anche Sangala o Sakala, o Euthydemia) \u00E8 il nome greco della citt\u00E0 pakistana di Sialkot."@it . . . . . . . . . . "Sagala (em grego cl\u00E1ssico: \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1; romaniz.: S\u00E1gala), Sangala (em grego cl\u00E1ssico: \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1; romaniz.: S\u00E1ngala) ou Sacala (em s\u00E2nscrito: \u0938\u093E\u0915\u0932\u093E; romaniz.: Sakala) foi uma cidade da \u00CDndia Antiga, a predecessora da moderna Sialcote, que se situava no que \u00E9 hoje a prov\u00EDncia paquistanesa no Punjabe. Anteriormente ela foi identificada com a moderna Laore."@pt . . "Sagala"@en . . . . "\u5962\u7FAF\u7F57\u4E5F\u4F5C\u820D\u7AED\uFF0C\u662F\u53E4\u5370\u5EA6\u4E00\u5EA7\u57CE\u5E02\uFF0C\u4F4D\u4E8E\u4ECA\u5DF4\u57FA\u65AF\u5766\u65C1\u906E\u666E\u7701\u9521\u4E9A\u5C14\u79D1\u7279\u9644\u8FD1\u3002\u5EFA\u4E8E\u4E9A\u5386\u5C71\u5927\u5927\u5E1D\u4E1C\u5F81\u65F6\u671F\uFF0C\u540E\u4E3A\u5370\u5EA6-\u5E0C\u814A\u738B\u56FD\u7684\u91CD\u8981\u57CE\u5E02\u3002\u66FE\u4E3A\u5F25\u5170\u9640\u738B\u7684\u9996\u90FD\u3002\u516C\u51436\u4E16\u7EAA\u4E3A\u5688\u54D2\u7EDF\u6CBB\u8005\u6469\u9170\u903B\u77E9\u7F57\u7684\u90FD\u57CE\u3002\u5510\u4EE3\u7384\u5958\u53D6\u7ECF\u9014\u4E2D\uFF0C\u66FE\u8DEF\u8FC7\u6B64\u5730\u3002"@zh . . "74.51000000000001"^^ . . "\uC0AC\uAC08\uB77C"@ko . . . . . . . . . . . . . "Location of Sagala in the Punjab region of what is now Pakistan"@en . . . . . "Sagala (em grego cl\u00E1ssico: \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1; romaniz.: S\u00E1gala), Sangala (em grego cl\u00E1ssico: \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1; romaniz.: S\u00E1ngala) ou Sacala (em s\u00E2nscrito: \u0938\u093E\u0915\u0932\u093E; romaniz.: Sakala) foi uma cidade da \u00CDndia Antiga, a predecessora da moderna Sialcote, que se situava no que \u00E9 hoje a prov\u00EDncia paquistanesa no Punjabe. Anteriormente ela foi identificada com a moderna Laore."@pt . . . . . . "13074"^^ . . . . . . "Sagala, Sakala (Sanskrit: \u0938\u093E\u0915\u0932\u093E), or Sangala (Ancient Greek: \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1) was a city in ancient India, which was the predecessor of the modern city of Sialkot that is located in what is now Pakistan's northern Punjab province. The city was the capital of the Madra Kingdom and it was razed in 326 BC during the Indian campaign of Alexander the Great. In the 2nd century BC, Sagala was made capital of the Indo-Greek kingdom by Menander I. Menander embraced Buddhism after extensive debating with a Buddhist monk, as recorded in the Buddhist text Milinda Panha. Sagala became a major centre for Buddhism under his reign, and prospered as a major trading centre."@en . . "300"^^ . . . . . . "Sagala"@it . . . . . . "Sagala"@pt . . . "S\u00E2gal\u00E2, Sakala (sanskrit : \u0938\u093E\u0915\u0932\u093E), ou Sangala (grec ancien : \u03A3\u03AC\u03B3\u03B3\u03B1\u03BB\u03B1) \u00E9tait une ville de l'Inde ancienne qui se trouvait probablement \u00E0 l'emplacement de l'actuelle ville de Sialkot, situ\u00E9e dans ce qui est maintenant la province du nord du Punjab au Pakistan. La ville \u00E9tait la capitale du royaume de Madra et elle a \u00E9t\u00E9 ras\u00E9e en 326 av. J.-C. pendant la campagne indienne d'Alexandre le Grand. Au IIe si\u00E8cle av. J.-C., Sagala est devenue la capitale du royaume indo-grec de M\u00E9nandre Ier. M\u00E9nandre aurait embrass\u00E9 le bouddhisme \u00E0 la suite de ses \u00E9changes avec un moine bouddhiste, r\u00E9unis dans le Milindapanha, un trait\u00E9 bouddhique qui mentionne sa conversion. Sagala est devenu un centre majeur du bouddhisme sous son r\u00E8gne et a prosp\u00E9r\u00E9 en tant que centre commercial important."@fr . . "Sagala"@en . . "Sagala (anche Sangala o Sakala, o Euthydemia) \u00E8 il nome greco della citt\u00E0 pakistana di Sialkot."@it . . . . . "yes"@en . . . . . . . .