APAME.Daughter of Bartacus, and concubine of Darius I. (1Es_4:29).
Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible
Edited by James Hastings, D.D. Published in 1909
a-pā?mē̇, ap?a-mē (Ἀπάμη, Apámē): A concubine of Darius and a daughter of Bartacus the Illustrious, whose behavior to the king is referred to in a speech of Zerubbabel before the king to prove to him the great power of women (1 Esdras 4:29). See BARTACUS; ILLUSTRIOUS.
International Standard Bible Encyclopedia
PRINTER 1915.
Apame
(Α᾿πάμη, _ appar. from ἀπαμάω, to cut off), the name given in the Apocrypha (1Es_4:29) and by Josephus (Ant. 11, 3, 5) as that of a concubine of Darius (Hystaspis), of whom he was very fond, being the daughter of one of his nobles (Rabsases [? Rab-saris] Themasius, or the admirable Bartacus). Apama was the name of the wives of several of the Seleucid kings (see Smith's Dict. of Class. Biog. s.v.), but none of this name are assigned in history to Darius.
CYCLOPEDIA OF BIBLICAL, THEOLOGICAL AND ECCLESIASTICAL
press 1895.