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THE SELEUCID EMPIRE. 358-251 BC. HOUSE OF SELEUCUS
CHAPTER 24.
ANTIOCHUS THE GOD
MANIFEST
While Rome
circumscribed the activity of Antiochus as a conqueror, he had great scope left
him as the radiant champion and patron of Hellenism, both within his own
dominions and abroad. He sustained this character abroad by bestowing
magnificent presents upon the old seats of Hellenism in Asia Minor and Greece,
and by throwing open to their artists and craftsmen lucrative employment in
Syria. We may question whether any principal city did not look on some new
embellishment, a temple, an altar, a colonnade, which declared continually the
glory and the munificence of King Antiochus. The beloved Athens was, of course,
chosen for special honor. To the south-east of the Acropolis stood the noble
beginnings of a temple of Zeus Olympius, which Pisistratus had planned some 360
years before and left unfinished. Antiochus undertook to replace it by a new
and more splendid fane. On his commission the Roman architect Decimus Cossutius
began the construction of a gigantic temple surrounded by a double colonnade of
Corinthian pillars, not in stone, like those of Pisistratus, but in Pentelic
marble—“one of the largest Greek temples in the world”, whose remaining
columns, standing in bare isolation, make even today a principal feature of
Athens. But Antiochus also did not live to finish what he began. His temple too
stood for 300 years incomplete, the marvel of the world, till it was finished
and opened by the Emperor Hadrian (130 AD). Another conspicuous gift of
Antiochus in Athens was the gilt Gorgon's head upon a golden aegis, which
flamed upon the southern wall of the Acropolis above the theatre. In Syria
special privileges were conferred upon Athenian citizens.
Of the gifts of
Antiochus elsewhere the following are recorded; at Delos, some statues about
the altar; at Olympia, a curtain of Oriental embroidery; at Megalopolis, a wall
(not completely carried out) about the city; at Tegea, a marble theatre (also
not finished); at Cyzicus, golden plate for one of the tables in the public
hall.
Within his own
dominions the activity of Antiochus in the cause of Hellenism could be more
various. Besides lavishing his treasure upon the adornment of existing Greek
cities, he could create new ones. He could also adjust the constitutions and
forms of city life more closely to the Hellenic ideal.
The capital
naturally received a great share of his attention. He added a new quarter,
Epiphanea, which climbed the slopes of Mount Silpius behind the older Antioch,
and included within its wall precipitous places and rushing torrents. This made
Antioch to be a complex of four cities, a tetrapolis, each city being divided
off from the rest by an inner wall, while one outer wall embraced the whole complex,
scaling the steep sides of the mountain and spanning the ravines.
The theatre, whose
remains can still be traced, was in this region. It had perhaps existed before
the time of Antiochus Epiphanes, only without the city. Here too was the
Senate-house, erected doubtless by Antiochus, and perhaps already adorned with
the porticoes and pictures described by Libanius. High up in the new city, near
the Citadel, which tradition asserted to be the site of the prehistoric Greek
settlement, Antiochus reared a temple of Jupiter Capitolinus—at once gratifying
his passion for splendor and advancing his policy. It was in keeping with his
other sumptuous works, and had not only the usual gilt ceiling, hut the walls
covered with plates of gold.
There are evidences
that of all the Greek deities it was Zeus Olympius who called forth the most
enthusiasm in Antiochus. Not only was it for him that Antiochus built the vast
temple in Athens, but this god now reappears upon the coins, where he had
ceased to figure since the days of Seleucus I. At Daphne, in the temple of
Apollo, there was an image of him which Antiochus set up. It was a close copy
in form, material and size of the great chryselephantine work of Phidias at
Olympia. The Nike, which it carried in its hand, was of gold. Daphne, of
course, like Olympia, was a place for athletic contests; the stadion seems to have been close under the temple, and it would be as the dispenser of
victory that Zeus would be worshipped.
On the cliffs above
the city one can still trace the outlines of a sculptured colossal bust,
feminine seemingly, with a mystic head-gear and lappets falling over the
shoulders. This is the remains of a group of sculptures which was known as the Charonion. According to Malalas, it was made by Antiochus Epiphanes as a
charm against pestilence. Nothing is left of any of the other works with which
Antiochus embellished his capital—such as the statue of a man quelling a bull,
which represented, according to the local tradition, Antiochus himself subduing
the robber tribes of the Taurus.
Besides adding to
the material splendors of Antioch, Antiochus gave its political institutions,
in accordance with a plan which we shall see extended to other of the cities of
the kingdom, a form which corresponded more nearly to the autonomy required by
Hellenic theory. Now first do bronze coins appear, issued, not in the name of
the King, but of Antioch-near-Daphne. Only the head of Antiochus appears as
that of a patron-deity, invested with rays. It is significant that the Senate-house
was in the new city which owed its origin to him. It may be owing to him
that the Athenian model was copied in Antioch. The people assembled in the
theatre to pass decrees. Antiochus perhaps introduced the names of the Athenian
months. Antioch even had a body of citizen cavalry, like the Athenian knights.
They rode in the procession at Daphne with crowns of gold and silver.
The extension of
the freedom of Antioch appears, it has just been said, as part of a general
scheme by which Antiochus adjusted the status of the cities of the kingdom. In
many cases it involved the adoption by the city of the name of Antioch or
Epiphanea. In Cilicia, Adana becomes Antioch-on-Sarus, and Tarsus
Antioch-on-Cydnus, and both issue coins in their new name. Oeniandus became
Epiphanea. Mopsuestia strikes with the head of Antiochus and the name of
Seleucia-on-Pyramus; Castabala with the head of Antiochus and the name
Hieropolis.
In Syria, not only
the capital, but the other principal cities now strike bronze— Seleucia, Apamea,
Laodicea-on-the- sea, Alexandria (mod. Alexandretta), Hieropolis, all in
their own names, but with the radiate head of Antiochus and a type connected
with Zeus upon the reverse. In all these cases the existing name was safe from
change, but in other places new Antiochs and Epiphaneas appeared. The ancient
Hamath in the Orontes valley (mod. Hamat), the rival of Damascus in the
time of David, became Epiphanea; an Antioch and an Epiphanea are mentioned
close together on the Euphrates. In the country conquered from Ptolemy by
Antiochus III, Gadara bore for a time the names of Antioch and Seleucia. In the
same region there was an Antioch-near -Hippus. Ptolemais strikes bronze of a
similar type to that already mentioned, calling itself Antioch-in-Ptolemais. Lastly,
Jerusalem, when reconstructed as a Greek city, took rank among the Antiochs.
The coins (bronze)
which the Phoenician cities and Ascalon strike with the radiate head of
Antiochus differ from those before mentioned in having not only the image of the
King, but the superscription King Antiochus. Does this correspond to any
difference in their status, any imperfection in their Hellenic character? The
superscription of the city usually appears in addition to that of the King,
sometimes in Greek, sometimes in Phoenician: “(Coin) of Gebal the Holy”, “Of
Tyre, Mother of the Sidonians”, “Of Sidon, Mother of Chamb (Carthage), Hippo,
Cheth (Citium in Csrprus), Tyre”, “Of Laodicea which is in Canaan”.
In Mesopotamia the
two chief cities strike bronze with the head of Antiochus. Nisibis had probably
already the name of Antioch-in-Mygdonia. Even Edessa, where the Aramaean
element was so strong, is now Antioch-on-Callirhoe.
But the Hellenism
which Antiochus propagated went further than political forms, or even real
political privileges. It extended to the sphere of social and private life, to
the manner of thought and speech, to religious practice. “And king Antiochus
wrote to his whole kingdom, that all should be one people, and that each should
forsake his own laws”. Beneath the naïve phrase of the Hebrew writer there lies
the truth that the transformation which he saw going on around him in the life
of the Syrian peoples was forwarded by the active encouragement of the court.
It worked in with a policy deliberately adopted by those that ruled.
Imaginative and sentimental Hellenism was no doubt in part the motive which
governed Antiochus, but there were considerations of policy as well. Some
principle was needed to unite and fuse a realm whose weakness was that it had
no national unity. And Antiochus, like Alexander, of whom indeed he often
reminds us—an Alexander run wild—sees such a principle in a uniform culture,
resting upon a system of Greek cities, and obliterating or softening the old
differences of race and tradition. It was not exactly a new idea, but it no
doubt revived with a new sort of splendor, it stood out more distinctly as an
imposing ideal, in the glow and color it took from the strange fire of
Antiochus the Fourth.
Perhaps we are in
some danger of misconceiving this process of Hellenizing. We think of it
chiefly in connection with the peculiar case of the Jews, or with the opposition
of “Oriental conservatism” to “Western ideas” in our own day, and are inclined
to picture Antiochus as forcing at the point of the sword an alien civilization
upon an unwilling people. Nothing could be further from the truth. There is no
trace of opposition to Hellenism from the Orientals generally. “All the nations
agreed according to the word of the King”. The conversion to Hellenic cities
was not something which the King compelled ancient communities to undergo, it
was something which he conceded as a favor. Envoys from such communities were
seen about the court, petitioning that it might be allowed them “through the King’s
authority to set up a gymnasium and form a body of epheboi, and to
register the inhabitants of the city as Antiochenes”. There was enough force
and attraction in Hellenism itself to render compulsion, had Antiochus
contemplated it, superfluous.
It must be taken
into account that Hellenism, as understood by Antiochus and the Syrian cities,
was not the Hellenism of the great days of Greece. That had implied some
sterner virtues—reverence for the ideal of Law, sacrifice for the ideal of the
City, self-respect, honor, sobriety. Without these qualities perhaps Hellenic
culture had never grown, but, once grown, it yielded certain products, certain
political and religious forms, articulate ideas, intellectual methods, which
might be imparted without the moral strength of the old Hellenic character. The
reception of this easy Hellenism put no demand upon the will and offered
gratifications to self-conceit. Between Hellenic religion and the religion of
the heathen Syrians there was no incompatibility. The Phoenician had no
objection to celebrating fourth-year festivals after the Greek manner, or to
calling Melkarth Heracles when he spoke Greek, and the Seleucid court did not
object to the ancient Phoenician script appearing on the same coin as the head
of the deified Antiochus.
The deified
Antiochus! For this later Hellenism could not only supply the kingdom with a
uniform culture but with a common cult. And here again Antiochus did no more
than accentuate what he inherited from his predecessors. The worship of the
Macedonian kings in the Greek cities goes back, as we saw, to the time of
Alexander. But undoubtedly Antiochus IV lays more stress upon his deity than
former kings. His surname Theos Epiphanes declares him to be an effulgence in
human form of the Divine, a god manifest in flesh. Now first the addition of
Theos is put upon the money, and the head which appears on the new coinage of the
cities is crowned with rays. There is even ground to believe that Antiochus
identified himself with the Supreme God, with Zeus; he sometimes adds to his
surname the epithet Nikephoros, which distinguished the Nike-bearing
Zeus of Olympia. It was no doubt in part his love of theatrical pomp, of what
kindled the imagination, which made Antiochus “magnify himself above all gods”,
but he was also acting consistently with his great plan. It seemed natural to
the ancients that every association—the family, the club, the city, the
nation—should be bound together by some common worship, and when a number of
communities and peoples were brought under a single sceptre, the unorganized
medley of religions presented a serious difficulty. Merely to Hellenize them
superficially by identifying the various deities with this or that Greek god
hardly met the case; the Zeus of this place remained as different from the Zeus
of that place as when they had had no common name. Hellenic religion in itself
was too unorganized to be a means of organization.
But the God-King
gave a fixed object of worship among the chaos of local cults. His worship, regarded
in one way, agreed with the rationalistic tendencies developed in later
Hellenism; while, on the other hand, if there were circles in which it was
mingled with any real faith, it might so far supply the need which, now that
the barriers of the old societies were done away, the world was feeling—the
need of a God. And his worship corresponded with the actual facts, for if, as
has been said, in antiquity “Church and State were one”, and the monarchical
state with no bond of union but the subjection to one man had to find its
religious meeting-place, the identification of God and King was not far to
seek.
Nor do we hear of
any opposition to this worship on the part of the peoples of Syria generally.
Had their national worships been suppressed by it, there might have been
trouble, but their gods were not jealous gods, and tolerated the new deity in
their midst quite comfortably. One may see on a coin of Byblos, the “holy
Gebal”, its ancient Oriental deity, with his six wings and branching
head-dress, on one side, and on the other side Antiochus with his crown of
rays. Even the Samaritans, if the letter in their name is genuine, addressed
him as the Manifest God.
That a point of
union was consciously sought in this worship the new coinage of the cities immediately
suggests, struck in different places from Adana to Ascalon, but all with the
same glorified head. And the uniformity extends beyond the King's head. Nearly
all have for their reverse type a form of Zeus. But if Antiochus identified
himself with Zeus, this further uniformity receives a clear explanation. The
identification, again, with Zeus, over and above the abstract claim to deity,
may have had some motive in policy. We find in Egypt that the Ptolemies turned
their deity to profitable account by diverting religious revenues from the
temples to their own treasury. And although the case of Egypt, where the
deification of kings was traditional and taken seriously, differs from the case
of Hellenistic cities, we may still suspect that the identification of the King
with Zeus in Syria gave him a pretext for appropriating the funds of the
temples. And that this was so is borne out by what we are told of the actual
dealings of Antiochus. He identified the God of the Jews with Zeus Olympius and
he took the treasures of the Temple. At Hieropolis, where the deity was
feminine, but identified with Hera, he claimed the temple treasures as his
wife's dowry. His spendthrift magnificence drove him to perpetual necessity,
and before the end of his reign he had laid hands on the riches of nearly all
the temples in Syria.
The regeneration of
what remained of the Seleucid Empire by means of Hellenism was perhaps joined
in the thought of Antiochus Epiphanes with the restoration of it to something
of its former extent. He knew himself not strong enough, as he was, to break
with Rome, but in the north and east the field was held only by native powers, and,
once conqueror of the East, he might face the western situation with quite
another countenance. Where Rome forbad him he would not yet intrude, but in
Asia Minor at any rate he disappointed Rome of its advantage by his alliance
with the ruling courts.
In Cappadocia his
sister Antiochis was queen, and seems to have had her mild husband, Ariarathes
IV Eusebes, completely in her hands. It was afterwards said (with what truth we
cannot judge) that the two elder sons, with whom she presented him, Ariarathes
and Orophernes, were suppositious; it was at any rate the youngest, called at
first Mithridates, upon whom his parents fixed their affections. The two elder
were sent to be educated away from Cappadocia, Ariarathes at Rome, and
Orophernes in Ionia. Mithridates was designated for the throne. Perhaps it was
already during the life of Antiochus Epiphanes that Antiochis came with one of
her daughters to Syria. Whether it was merely on a visit to her brother that
she came, or to reside in her old home, we do not gather. But that she died in
Antioch we may infer from the fact that her bones were there in 163.
In Armenia, it will
be remembered, Artaxias in the northern country, and Zariadris in Sophene, had
declared themselves independent kings after Magnesia. Later on their example
had been followed in a region as near to the capital as Commagene, whose
governor, Ptolemy, renounced his allegiance to the Seleucid court, and tried to
wrest from Cappadocia the district of Melitene across the Euphrates. In this he
was foiled by Ariarathes Eusebes.
In the summer of
166 or 165 Antiochus marched out from Antioch at the head of an army for the
reconquest of the North and East. He left behind him his child Antiochus
Eupator, who had been associated in the throne since 170, and Lysias to be
guardian and regent. He was propelled not only by the desire of glory, but by
the urgent necessity of money, since neither the savings of Seleucus
Philopator, nor the spoils of Egypt, nor the treasures of the Syrian temples
had been able to meet his reckless expenditure, and it was no longer possible
to do without the tribute from the revolted provinces.
His first attack
seems to have fallen upon Armenia. It was a brilliant success. The defence of
Artaxias collapsed. But Antiochus, in accordance with the policy of his father
in this region, did not remove him. He contented himself with the
acknowledgment of fealty, and, still more important no doubt, the payment of
tribute.
From Armenia
Antiochus moved to Iran. But in doing so he moves, as Seleucus Nicator and
Antiochus III did, out of our field of vision.
The most serious
part of his task would be to try conclusions with the house of Arsaces, now
represented by the able Mithridates I (Arsaces VI, 171-138). Already his father
Phriapatius or his brother Phraates had torn from Media the northern region
about Rhagae before his accession; the southern Media with Ecbatana still
obeyed the Milesian Timarchus who ruled the eastern provinces for King
Antiochus. There were also other princes of lesser power with whom Antiochus
would have to reckon, such as the king of Lesser Media (Atropatene), or the
ruler of Persis, not to speak of the petty chiefs of the hills. Persis had
probably already broken away under a native dynasty on whose coins are emblems
of the Zoroastrian religion and the title “Lord of lords”. Their forces even
set foot on the opposite Arabian coast, and were engaged there by Numenius, the
Seleucid satrap of Mesene.
The attempt of
Antiochus Epiphanes to reconquer the East was one of several attempts made by
the house of Seleucus in the last century of its rule. And it is important to
realize once for all the existence of the element there which gravitated
towards union and gave the Seleucid kings an immense advantage—if they were
able to use it. In the provinces which passed under barbarian rule the Greek
cities planted by Alexander, Seleucus and Antiochus Soter continued to exist;
yes, and to form, we may be sure, the centres of the life, the commerce and the
energy of the lands in which they were. But the barbarian yoke only made them
more passionately Hellenic; they turned with a sort of national sentiment to
the house of Seleucus, the mightiest and most glorious representative of
Hellenic supremacy in the East. We have seen that at the time of Antiochus
III’s invasion of Hyrcania his adversaries had thought it necessary to put the
Greek population of Syrinca to the sword. But the Arsacid kings were too shrewd
to think of exterminating the Greeks; they tried hard to conciliate them. To
what extent Hellenism had penetrated the Parthian court at this time we do not
know, but it is obvious that the Arsacids were fain to present themselves to
their Greek subjects as sympathetic protectors. The money of the kingdom was
stamped exclusively with Greek legends, and from the time of Mithridates I they
commonly added to their other surnames that of “Phil-Hellene”. But they were
unable to make the Greeks overlook the difference between a barbarian and a
western dynasty; the cities of the Parthian kingdom were always ready to make
common cause with a Seleucid, and later on with a Roman, invader. This
condition of things was a conspicuous justification of the colonizing policy of
Alexander and his successors. It made the reconquest of the East by Oriental
dynasties enormously more difficult and slow, and with a stronger Hellenic
power than the later Seleucid, or a nearer than Rome, might have saved Western
Asia for Hellenism.
Bearing all this in
mind, we see that an important part of the task of Antiochus Epiphanes in the
East would he the strengthening of the Greek cities. And in fact there are
indications that he did not neglect it. Ecbatana exchanged even its old and
famous name for Epiphanea, perhaps on receiving a new Greek colony. The
Alexandria on the lagoon between the Tigris and Eulaeus, which had been
destroyed by floods (“an indication that the canal-system of Babylonia had been
allowed again to fall out of repair”) he restored as an Antioch. Antiochus also
resumed the work of Alexander in having a survey made of the coast westward
from this Antioch, and it was not improbably in accomplishing this that Numenius,
the satrap of Mesene, came into collision with the Persians.
In contrast with
measures which have every appearance of wise policy is the fresh attempt of
Antiochus to get the treasures which were heaped up in the Elymaean temples
into his hands. He tried to break into a temple of some native goddess, Istar
or Anaitis, and fared so far better than his father that he escaped with his life.
Against a people filled with religious frenzy the royal mercenaries could not
make head. The same thing was appearing, as we shall shortly see, in other
fields. It was soon after this repulse, in the midst of his hopes and projects,
that Antiochus Epiphanes was seized by a fatal malady—epilepsy, perhaps, or
something which affected the brain. He died at Tabae in Persis in the winter of
165-164.
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