Caption
| - Row 7: Gianna Roussos, John Latsis, Patriarch Matthaios XVI, Emperor Nikolas VI, Andreas Karistinos, Konstantinos Romanos, Panagiotis Andreadis, Despina Panagiotou, Dimitris Rachiotis, Anthimos D'Amboise
- Row 3: Attalos II of Pergamon, Antiochus IV of Isauria, Thodotos I of Kashmir, Mithridates VII of Pontus, Cleopatra IX Philopator, Ptolemy Augustus, Saint Matthaios, Ptolemy V of Iberia, Ptolemy VI of Iberia
- Row 6: Chartophylax Rangavis, Endymion, Eric III the Great, Alexander Agelakos, John Dimitris Karras, Zoe the Great, Eugenios, Earl of Stemnitsa, Alexandros Theodorakis, George VII, Selene Devereaux
- Row 4: Ptolemy the Great, Cassander III and Helena, Nikolas II, Zoe I Porphrogenita, Alexios III, Manuel I, Anna Komnena, Demetrius IV, George III, Nikephoros Choniates
- Row 2: Aristides, Thucydides, Thestor, Pausanias, Alexander I Soter, Seleucus I Nicator, Heliodorus, Aristokles, and Alexander V Philadelphus
- Row 1: Kronos I, Tuthmosis IV, Isetnofret, Amenophis IV, Taia, Amenophis V, Neferatan, Ramose the Great, Nefatari, Herakles I
- Row 5: Theodora the Great, Nicholas Psellos, Theophilus Metochites, Eric I, Philoctetes, Eric II, Helena I, Michael Lambrinos, Constantine IV, Constantine VI
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abstract
| - The Diadochians are a population and ethnic group native to Diadochia with shared cultural, linguistic, and in certain cases, ancestral origins. Experts say that all Diadochians can be traced to a common ancestor. They also form a significant diaspora, with Diadochian communities established around the world. Most ethnic Diadochians live nowadays within the borders of the Diadochian Empire Diadochia having experienced a high rate of inward migration since the 19th century, modern Diadochian society can be considered a melting pot. Diadochia has long been a patchwork of local customs and regional cultures united by its church, its Emperor, and its national language, Greek. Seeing itself as a beacon for other nations to look towards, Diadochia has always valued and strongly advocated assimilation where immigrants were expected to adhere to Diadochian traditional values and cultural norms. Today, most Diadochians are officially registered as members of the Diadochian Orthodox Church. Most Diadochian people speak the Greek language or the Atlantean language as their mother tongue, but certain languages, such as Magarian, Dalmatian, Odrysian, Illyrian, Pannonian, Dacian, Moesian, Sarmatian, Amnionic, and Kolchidian are spoken regionally. Also the French language is widely spoken by the Diadochian nobility and at the Imperial Court of Diadochia. Diadochians have greatly influenced and contributed to culture, arts, exploration, literature, philosophy, politics, architecture, music, mathematics, science and technology, business, cuisine, and sports, both historically and contemporarily.
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