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THE SELEUCID EMPIRE. 358-251 BC. HOUSE OF SELEUCUS
CHAPTER 31.
THE LAST
CONVULSIONS
His victory made
the Parthian king sorry that he had let Demetrius go, and horsemen were sent in
desperate pursuit to overtake him, but Demetrius was already beyond the reach of
his arm. Phraates meditated an instant move upon Syria itself before the new
government was established. Had he carried it out, the Parthian dominion might
have touched the Mediterranean within the next year. But a mutiny of his
Scythian mercenaries—hordes from the steppes of Central Asia—made him instead
march east. What remained of the army of Antiochus was compelled to go along
with him, but they only waited for the battle with the Scythians to turn their
swords against the Parthian, and by the irony of fate the army which Antiochus
had led against Phraates did thus in the end destroy him.
To the Syrian
cities the disaster in the East came as an appalling calamity. It was not only
to the Greco-Macedonian population a national humiliation. There was hardly a
house without its private bereavement, for nearly 300,000 men were taken away
at a blow. Antioch was filled with the noise of women’s lamentation. For days
it was given up to mourning.
Nor was there
anything about Demetrius to console the people of Syria for the loss of the
well-beloved Antiochus—this foreign figure with the long beard and the manners
of a Parthian. With how much affection Cleopatra returned to her former husband
the event shows. The second surviving son of Antiochus VII, called also Antiochus,
she sent hurriedly out of the country under the charge of the eunuch Craterus
to be reared in Cyzicus, at the other end of Asia Minor.
Demetrius in his
former reign had been in leading-strings. He had now an opportunity of showing
his true quality. The thing most needful for Syria was a period of absolute
rest, a time for recuperation, for filling the empty places of 300,000 men. No
sooner, however, was Demetrius in the seat than he was elaborating plans for
the conquest of Egypt! His mother-in-law, Queen Cleopatra of Egypt, had come to
Syria, driven out of Egypt by her brother, Ptolemy Euergetes. She now urged
Demetrius to restore her, and promised him that, if he did so, he would
certainly add Egypt to his dominions. Demetrius actually marched out to do so,
but he got no farther than Pelusium, for there his way was barred by the forces
of Euergetes, and Syria, the moment his back was turned, sprang into
insurrection behind him. Antioch and Apamea had already renounced Demetrius—the
same regions which had before broken away under Tryphon. The disaffection was
found to extend to the army which Demetrius had with him. He was obliged to
turn back to restore order in his own kingdom.
Nothing save the
rival claimant was wanting to complete the situation; but negotiations on this
subject had already passed between Antioch and the king of Egypt. Euergetes was
only too willing to put in a creature of his own, to counteract the
machinations of his sister in Syria. He chose a youth who was given out to be of
the Seleucid stock and the adopted son of the beloved Antiochus: he was really,
according to the hostile account, the son of Protarchus, some Egyptian Greek of
the commercial class. He was accepted by Antioch, and installed with the
support of an Egyptian force as King Alexander. The people added the nickname,
derived from the native Aramaic, of Zabinas, the “Bought-one”. The situation
was once more very much what it had been before the captivity of Demetrius, the
legitimate king holding the coast, with his base at Seleucia, and the usurper
holding Antioch and the middle Orontes. But although the Jews were adherents of
Alexander, he was not so strong in Coele-Syria as Tryphon had been. Ptolemais,
for instance, Demetrius retained.
In Judaea, of
course, the work of Antiochus VII was immediately undone by his death. Hyrcanus
had returned to Jerusalem before the fatal spring of 129. When the news of the
catastrophe came he once more felt himself an independent prince, and resumed
the schemes of aggrandizement which the Hasmonaeans, their independence once
secured, had come to form. He pushed out the frontiers of the Jewish state in
all directions, across Jordan by conquering from the Nabataeans the plateau
north of the Amon dominated by Medeba, in central Palestine at the expense of
Samaria, taking even the rival sanctuary on Mount Gerizim, whilst in Idumaea he
not only seized fresh territory, but compelled the conquered to embrace Judaism
or go. It was the beginning of that expansion of Israel over Palestine by
forcible proselytism which was one of the great works of the Hasmonaean
princes.
The decisive battle
between Demetrius II and Alexander Zabinas was fought near Damascos—on one of
the roads of communication between the Orontes valley, where Alexander was established,
and Coele-Syria, which seems still to have been held (so far as it was not
independent) by Demetrius. Demetrius was badly beaten and retreated to
Ptolemais, where he had left Cleopatra and his children. But Cleopatra had had
enough of him, and shut the gates in his face. The Seleucid King found himself
an outcast in Syria, not even his life safe. He designed to take sanctuary in
the temple of Heracles (Melkarth) at Tyre, but while on board a ship in the
harbor of Tyre he was cut down by order of the governor of the city. It is
almost certain that the governor was himself acting on the directions of Queen
Cleopatra (126-125).
She had lost all
patience with the wretched creature under whom the Seleucid kingdom was going
to pieces. She herself was the daughter of Ptolemy Philometor and had in her
the blood of the Seleucids, and among the crowd of incapables she aspired to
take the power into her own hands. Seleucus, the elder of her two sons by
Demetrius, assumed the diadem on his father's death without bowing to her
superior authority, and she had him promptly assassinated. From her girlhood
she had been treated as a thing whose heart did not come into consideration, a
mere piece in the political game. What wonder that she became a politician whose
heart was dead?
Whether she reigned
for any time in her own name alone we do not know. But before many months at
any rate from the death of Demetrius were elapsed she had associated with
herself the second of the sons of Demetrius, Antiochus, nick-named Orypos, the
“Hook-nosed”, who had been educated at Athens. His functions, of course, were
to be purely subordinate. His name and hers appear together on the coins, and
her head is sometimes placed with his, and in front. Antiochus YIII was
at this time about sixteen years old.
The war between the
legitimate house and Alexander went on. And, like these later Seleucid wars as
a whole, it was complicated with the family wars of the house of Ptolemy. In
both kingdoms, the last survivors of the Macedonian monarchies, the same
disease of family strife was working doom. Alexander had been the tool of
Euergetes, but after the death of Demetrius, Euergetes was reconciled with his
sister Cleopatra, and allied himself with Cleopatra of Syria. He sent his
daughter Tryphaena to be the young Antiochus' wife, and supported the
legitimate house with his own troops.
That Alexander’s
power after the death of Demetrius extended beyond the Orontes valley is shown
by the coins struck for him between 126 and 123 in Ascalon. We hear of his
capturing a Laodicea, and this may be Laodicea-Berytus, of which coins are
found with his name.
Alexander Zabinas
was a jovial, easy-going youth, the sort of king sure to be popular in the
streets of Antioch. There is a kind of happy gamin impudence in the face
which appears on his coins. Soon after his entry into Antioch the body of
Antiochus Sidetes was sent home by the Parthian king in a silver coffin. It was
received in the cities through which it passed with marks of impassioned
affection. Alexander sought to give credit to his impersonation by paying it
ostentatious honor. The tears which he shed over it publicly much edified the
Antiochene people.
The establishment
of Alexander Zabinas (129-128) was a fresh blow to the unity of the Seleucid
kingdom. The line of Seleucus was indeed fallen from its high estate. Sixty
years before, the battle of Magnesia had reduced the heirs of Seleucus from
being practically emperors of the East to being kings of Syria. The battle in
Media left them not even that. They were now mere captains of mercenary bands,
who, in the anarchy to which the East was fallen, were one moment strong enough
to keep a prodigal court in one of the ancestral palaces and to devour some part
of the country, and the next moment were wandering over-seas to get together
new bands of desperados. They were fighters to the end; in the ceaseless
battles of the rival claimants the remnant of that energy which had once
governed Asia frittered itself away. And the inheritance over which they fought
naturally itself dwindled in the process. All who were strong enough broke away
from connection with any part of the kingdom, and in the absence of any one
central authority, the cities and the numberless local tyrants came more and
more to the front as independent agents. Except for the peculiar character
which the Greek or Hellenistic cities give to the scene, we have the ordinary
phenomena of the break-up of an Oriental Empire.
But with the help
of Ptolemy the legitimate house prevailed. The tide of desertion set in its
favor. In 123-122 Alexander sustained a shattering defeat. He fell back upon
Antioch. There he set about robbing the temples. He first took the golden Nike
which stood upon the outstretched hand of Zeus at Daphne. Zeus, he said to the
Antiochenes jestingly, had given him victory. But when he gave orders for the
image of Zeus itself to be removed, a storm of popular indignation drove him
from the city. He fell into the hands of Antiochus and took poison.
After the
disappearance of Alexander Zabinas, Antiochus became more and more impatient
under his mother’s dictation. Cleopatra saw her supremacy imperilled. On a day
when the King came in heated from exercise, she tendered him a cup. But her designs
had been betrayed, and Antiochus insisted on her drinking the potion herself
(121-120).
Antiochus VIII
(Grypos) was now in sole possession of all that remained to the house of
Seleucus in Syria. He reigned in Antioch, dissipating in gorgeous feasts at
Daphne the scanty treasure of the kingdom, or composing verses on a theme that
had a morbid fascination for the verse-writers of that age—that of poisonous
snakes.
About 116 came the
attack of Antiochus IX, the son of Sidetes and Cleopatra, whom his mother had
sent in 129 to be educated at Cyzicus—whence his nickname, Cyzicenus. He had,
of course, no legal right to the throne, but an attempt of Grypos to have him
poisoned (real or alleged) gave him an excuse to attack his half-brother. In
his favor was the memory of his great father, which his surname of Philopator
put forward. It was the expectations founded on his parentage probably which
inclined the hearts of men to Antiochus Cyzicenus. But the Syrians were soon
disillusioned. He had enough of the physical courage of his race, being a bold
and splendid hunter, but as a ruler he was worthless; far more keenly
interested in mimes, conjuring tricks, and ingenious mechanical toys than the
affairs of state. He had also, without inheriting his father's greatness,
inherited to the full his propensities to hard drinking.
A new dynastic war
now blazed up over the Seleucid realm in Syria and Cilicia. It was again
complicated with the feuds of the Ptolemaic house. Ptolemy Euergetes died in
117, and the power was seized by his widow, Cleopatra III. But like her sister,
Cleopatra of Syria, she was obliged to associate her son, Ptolemy Soter II, in
the throne. There were instantly two parties in Egypt, that which supported the
Queen-mother, and that which was opposed to her, more or less openly. To the
latter the King in his heart belonged, but he was outwardly subjected to his
mother's will. His younger brother, on the other hand, Ptolemy Alexander, who
governed Cyprus, was his mother’s partizan. Ptolemy Euergetes had been allied,
as we have seen, with Grypos against Zabinas, and these relations seem to have
been maintained by Cleopatra. The opposite party in Egypt were therefore on the
side of Cyzicenus.
These dispositions
were expressed in act, when Cleopatra III, detecting antagonism to herself in
her daughter Cleopatra, whom Soter had married, compelled him to divorce her
and marry another of his sisters, Selene. The younger Cleopatra was at once
bent on revenge, and acted in the spirit of her class. She would give her hand
to Cyzicenus, and procure his triumph over the ally of the Alexandrian court,
Grypos. She did not come to him without a “dowry”; she came leading after her a
royal army. They were troops which, by her own boldness and address, she had
succeeded in bringing over from the service of Ptolemy Alexander in Cyprus and
persuading to follow her.
Grypos, it will be
remembered, had married Ptolemy’s daughter, Tryphaena. While, therefore, the
two rival kings in Syria were half-brothers, their wives were now sisters. But
this only increased the ferocity of the strife. Cyzicenus was master of
Antioch, and when he went campaigning, Cleopatra was left in occupation of the
palace there. After some defeat he was driven from the neighborhood, and
Grypos, who had Tryphaena with him, proceeded to lay siege to Antioch. When the
city fell, Tryphaena asked to have Cleopatra put into her hands; she wished to
triumph over her sister in her captivity, and aggravate her humiliation. Grypos
was shocked and demurred. Then Tryphaena suspected him of a guilty passion for
Cleopatra, and her vindictiveness was whetted by a furious jealousy. Cleopatra
had taken sanctuary at Daphne, but Tryphaena on her own authority sent soldiers
to take her life. When they entered the temple to drag her outside the sacred
precinct, Cleopatra grasped the image of Artemis with a determination over
which the ruffians could not prevail. Then they struck through her wrists with
their swords. The princess died, calling curses upon her murderers. Shortly after,
by a turn of fortune, Tryphaena fell into the hands of Cyzicenus, and he did
not spare to avenge.
In 113-112 the
position of Grypos in Syria had become so weakened that he retired to Aspendus,
in Pamphylia, to raise fresh bands. There were places in Syria where his cause
was maintained during his absence, notably the loyal Seleucia. In about two
years he came back (111-110) and recovered some part of the kingdom. It is
curious that he made the year of his return a new era for the official dating.
The war after this seems to have languished, either king acquiescing in his
rival's occupation of a certain sphere, without formally making peace, “like
athletes who give up a trial of strength, but being ashamed to retire, protract
the contest by indolence and repose”. The power of Antiochus Grypos lay in the
north of Syria, and he seems to have won the countenance of Rome; that of
Cyzicenus in Palestine and Phoenicia.
Of course the feud
of the two Seleucid brothers was taken advantage of by all within the realm who
hankered after independence, and all outside of it who wished to cut off
portions for themselves. Even the kings were obliged to further the work of
disruption by conceding independence, where they thought that they could, by so
doing, retain at any rate the good-will of a community. Tyre had been already
given its freedom by Cleopatra in 126-125, perhaps as a reward for the part
taken by the city in the killing of Demetrius II and Balanea in 124. Sidon,
where Cyzicenus coined as late as 113-112, attained its freedom in 111,
Tripolis in 110. In 109-108 Grypos conceded autonomy to Seleucia, as the reward
of its steadfast loyalty to the legitimate king; his letter conveying notice of
it to his ally Ptolemy Alexander is preserved in a Cyprian inscription.
Ascalon, where coins of Cyzicenus were struck in 109-108, dates its freedom
from 104.
The Jewish state
advanced by great strides. Hyrcanus about 108 besieged the great Greek city of
Samaria. This was in the region dominated by Cyzicenus. But his attempts to
relieve Samaria were futile, although in Egypt the party friendly to his cause
was now in the ascendant, and Ptolemy Soter, able at last to show his
inclinations, sent him 6000 men. So strengthened Cyzicenus raided Judaea, but
Samaria fell nevertheless after a year's siege. The Jews effaced all mark of
it, and turned the water-courses over its site. Soon after, by the venality of
Antiochus' general, they acquired Scythopolis. Antiochus on his side was for
the moment strong enough to seize Joppa and put in a garrison, as well as to
wrest some other important places, such as Gezer and Pegae from the Jews. But
the Jews procured from Rome a decree of the Senate, bidding him restore them,
and his occupation was transient.
John Hyrcanus died
in 104, but the advance of the Jewish state in power and dignity did not cease.
Aristobulus, his son (104-103), assumed the title of king — the Jewish monarchy
restored! but not, to the vexation of the Pharisees, in the house of David.
Under Aristobulus the Galilee which we know in the Gospels was created. Inhabited
by the heathen Ituraeans—a people of (perhaps) Arab stock but Aramaic speech—it
was now conquered by the Jews, and the population given the choice of expulsion
or circumcision. The majority seem to have preferred the latter, and became
merged in the community of Israel.
In 103, owing
apparently to a recrudescence of hostilities between Grypos and Cyzicenus, the
Seleucid authority had so far disappeared in Palestine that the Greek cities,
when attacked by Alexander Jannaeus (Jonathan), the king of the Jews, who
succeeded his brother Aristobulus in that year, turned for protection to
Ptolemy Soter. Cleopatra had driven Soter out of Egypt and called Ptolemy
Alexander home. Soter was therefore now in Cyprus, as his brother had been
before. He was induced by the appeal of Ptolemais to intervene on behalf of the
Greek cities, and Cleopatra promptly led an army to the support of the Jews.
The ensuing war in Palestine only concerns the Seleucid house in that it
brought home to Cleopatra how dangerous the alliance which still subsisted
between Ptolemy Soter and Antiochus Cyzicenus might prove. She feared that they
might make a combined attack on Egypt. Accordingly she helped Grypos in a
substantial way, supplying him with the troops which his depleted treasury could
no longer procure. She also sent him Selene, whom she had compelled Soter
nearly twenty years before to marry, but whom he seems on withdrawing from
Egypt to have left behind. These developments must have taken place before
102-101, the year in which Cleopatra falls from power.
It was not the Jews
only who pressed in where the Seleucid power gave way. The Nabataeans became
about this time a considerable power under Erotimus. He is the first ruler of
the Nabataeans, so far as we know, who bore the name of king; and the rise of
the Nabataeans, with whom we found the Jews associated in the days of
Maccabaeus, runs thus closely parallel to that of the Jews. The expeditions
conducted by Erotimus and the 700 (sic) sons, whom his extensive harem brought
him, swept the lands which lay along the desert on the confines of Syria and
Egypt.
In the North the
province which adjoined Armenia, and which we already saw under a rebel dynast
in the days of Antiochus IV, Commagene, now formally took rank as an
independent kingdom. The dynasty which ruled it was of Iranian, and professedly
of Persian origin, like the neighboring houses of Cappadocia and Pontus. But
King Mithridates Kallinikos, who ruled Commagene in the earlier part of the
last century BC, married Laodice the daughter of Antiochus Grypos, and
in this way obtained an affiliation of the dynasty to the Seleucid house. Of
their Macedonian parentage the kings of Commagene were still more proud than of
their Persian; they regarded themselves as continuing the Seleucid line.
Antiochus was adopted as the dynastic name, till the little kingdom was
extinguished in 72 AD by the Romans.
While the peoples
of the East were reasserting themselves in regions which had once obeyed the
Macedonian kings, in the West the outposts of Roman rule already touched the
realm of Antiochus Grypos. Rome had become one of the Asiatic powers in 133 by
taking over, as the province of Asia, the kingdom bequeathed it by the last
Attalus. In 102, some permanent military and naval stations were fixed in
Cilicia, as bases for action against the pirates whose nests were in the
mountains to the west. The command of these stations constituted the Cilician
'province. The Seleucid King did not lose his Cilician territory, with which
the Roman stations on the coast probably interfered little, but their presence
was a sign.
Antiochus Grypos
married Selene about 102. But he was not destined to live with her long. Among
those who stood highest at court was Heracleon of Beroea. From a fragment of
Posidonius we may infer that he was at the head of the war department and a
strict disciplinarian. He made the soldiers take their dinner in divisions of
thousands, lying upon the ground in the open air. Each man’s dinner was a large
loaf and a piece of meat, and the drink, wine of the common sort mixed with
cold water. The serving was done by men with knives, and strict silence was
imposed. Heracleon’s ambition urged him in these unsettled times to look higher
than the office of King’s minister. In 96 he murdered Grypos and seized the
throne. Queen Selene fled, to give herself to Cyzicenus.
Heracleon cannot
long have maintained himself in the place of the King, since Seleucus the son
of Antiochus VIII is spoken of as succeeding, without any interval being
mentioned. But we gather that Heracleon detached the north-eastern region of
Syria, including his native Beroea, Bambyce-Hieropolis and Heraclea, as a
separate principality.
Grypos left five
sons, of whom the eldest succeeded him as Seleucus Epiphanes Nicator. He was a man
of stormy vehemence. He infused a new spirit into the war against Cyzicenus,
and took the field with a strong army. City after city was lost to Cyzicenus.
In the year following Grypos’ death (in 95) Seleucus defeated his uncle in a
pitched battle, and Cyzicenus came to his end.
But Seleucus was
not suffered to take possession undisturbed. Antiochus Cyzicenus had left a
grown-up son, who almost immediately (still in 95) proclaimed himself king in
Aradus, as Antiochus Eusebes Philopator (Antiochus X). He also took over his
father's recent wife, Selene, who, since she married her first husband, her
brother Ptolemy Soter, in 116, must now have been of some years. According to
one account, Seleucus would have succeeded in taking his life, as well as that
of his father, had he not been saved by a courtesan who loved him for the
beauty of his person. So the dreary circle came round again. Seleucus was
beaten, and had to abandon Syria to Antiochus Eusebes, withdrawing to Cilicia.
Here he fixed his temporary capital at Mopsuestia, but had soon fallen foul of
the citizens, who found that unlimited demands were made upon their property by
a king who had sink to be a mere captain of bandits. Insurrection followed, and
Seleucus VI perished in the flames of his residence (95).
Then the remaining
sons of Grypos took up the quarrel. Antiochus XI Epiphanes Philadelphus and
Philip, whose name shows that the Seleucid princes still cherished the memory
of their Antigonid blood, were probably with their brother Seleucus in Cilicia.
They made haste at any rate to avenge his death by letting their bands loose
upon Mopsuestia and pulling down the houses. Perhaps they were twins, as they
were called; Antiochus took precedence, but Philip also had the title of King,
and his head appears behind that of Antiochus on some coins. Together they
crossed the Amanus to attack Antiochus Eusebes in Antioch. But a battle near
the city went against them, and in the flight Antiochus Philadelphus rode his horse
into the Orontes and was drowned. Philip, however, as King Philip Epiphanes
Philadelphus, continued the war. At the same time (in 95) another son of
Grypos, Demetrius III, established himself as Demetrius Theos Philopator Soter
in central Syria. He was living in Cnidus, when Ptolemy Soter, who was still
excluded from Egypt and reigning in Cyprus, offered him troops to try his
fortune in Syria. Demetrius made Damascus his capital. He is generally
distinguished by his nickname Eukairos.
Within a few months,
therefore, of the death of Antiochus Grypos there were three separate Seleucid
kingdoms in Syria. Antiochus Eusebes was pressed both on the north and south by
the two sons of Grypos, Philip and Demetrius, who seem at this time to have
acted in concert. What happened to him in this chaos we cannot make out.
Demetrius before 88-87 had possession of Antioch. But Antiochus Eusebes was
still holding his bands together in some part of Syria or Cilicia and calling
himself Seleucid King.
Demetrius III is
the last Seleucid who interferes in the affairs of the Jews. His help was asked
by the people themselves, who were disaffected to their king, Jannaeus
Alexander. Jannaeus had surrounded himself, like the other princes of the time,
with foreign mercenaries—wild men from the highlands of the Taurus; the Jews
rose against him and sent to Damascus for help. Demetrius came himself with an
army, and at Shechem joined the national army of the Jews. There seemed at that
late date a prospect of the Jews by their own act restoring Seleucid supremacy
to escape from the Hasmonaean king! But when Jannaeus had been driven to the
hills, they thought better of it, and Demetrius was too insecure to entangle
himself in a war with the Jews.
About 88 a war
broke out between Philip and Demetrius. Philip was allied with Strato, who
ruled the little principality which had recently been constituted with its
centre at Beroea. Philip himself was in Beroea when Demetrius laid siege to the
city. Then Strato appealed to a neighboring Arab chief, called Aziz, and to
Mithridates the Parthian governor (of Mesopotamia?). They answered to his call,
and the besieger Demetrius was besieged in his turn. He was cut off from his
water-supply and obliged to capitulate. The Antiochenes in his camp were sent
home without a ransom, but Demetrius was taken a prisoner to the Parthian
court. Mithridates the Great, who then held the Arsacid throne (he died about
86), treated his captive with the respect paid by the Parthians to the other
members of the Seleucid house who had fallen into their hands. In such
honourable captivity Demetrius III ended his days.
Yet a fifth son of
Grypos now appears to wrangle over the fragments of the heritage, Antiochus XII
Dionysus Epiphanes Philopator Kallinikos. Philip got possession of Antioch, and
Antiochus established himself in Damascus. Philip watched his opportunity to
strike him there, and when Antiochus was engaged in an expedition against the
Nabataean Arabs, he suddenly appeared before the city. Milesius, who held the citadel
for Antiochos, opened the gates. Philip, however, had soon given this man
offence, and when he went to see some races in a hippodrome outside the city,
Milesius shut the gates and returned to his old allegiance. Antiochus Dionysus
hurried back on hearing what was on foot, and Philip had to retire. But almost
immediately Antiochus started away again on a fresh expedition against the
Nabataeans. This time he went by way of the Philistine coast, now dominated by
the Jews. Jannaeus tried in vain to stop him by a great line of works from
Chapharsaba (mod. Kafar-Saba) to Joppa. Antiochus broke through, and entered
the country of the Arabs. Here he fell by a chance stroke in an affray when
victory was already inclining to his side.
It was obvious that
chaos could not go on for ever in Syria. The house of Seleucus was on the point
of extinction, self-consumed by its own disordered energies. But what would
take its place? Gradually, ever since the death of Seleucus Nicator, two
hundred years ago, it had been relinquishing to the barbarian dynasties the
territories it had inherited from Alexander the Great. Mesopotamia had been
lost to the Parthian before 88; Commagene had a king Mithridates; southern
Syria had fallen to the Arabs and the Jews. Only its territory beyond the
Taurus the house of Seleucus had ceded a hundred years before, not to a
barbarian power, but to the house of Attalus, from whom it had been inherited
in 133 by Rome.
But between 90 and
80 BC it seemed questionable whether the whole of Asia was not about to
revert to the rule of Orientals. Two of those dynasties, whose first beginnings
we have watched in the days when the Seleucid house was great, were now risen
to an imposing strength—the house of Mithridates in Pontus, and the house of
Artaxias in Armenia. Mithridates Eupator now sat on the Pontic throne. In 88 he
occupied nearly the whole of Asia Minor, and put the resident Romans to the
sword, and in the following year flung his armies upon Greece. True, the
campaigns of Sulla made Mithridates give back, but the peace signed in 84 was
an uneasy one, and left Mithridates in a position to renew the fight. In
Armenia the king of the house of Artaxias was Tigranes, who had first
suppressed the rival dynasty in Sophene, and then extended his conquests
outside Armenia at the expense of the Parthians. Before 83 he had conquered
Mesopotamia, and was ready to cross the Euphrates into Syria.
In 83 the Armenian
armies overflowed Syria. The men who called themselves kings—Philip the son of
Grypos, and Antiochus Eusebes the son of Cyzicenus—are no more heard of. In
utter weariness of the dynastic feuds, the Greek cities of Syria acquiesced
with relief in the rule of the Armenian King of kings. His governor Magadates
now sat in the palace of Antioch, and coins were struck there in his name. The
Cilician plain, as part of the Seleucid realm, Tigranes also took in
possession, and emptied its Greek cities to make the population of the huge
Tigranocerta, which he began to create in Mesopotamia. Only here and there some
stronghold maintained itself against the Armenian, notably Seleucia in Pieria,
so long distinguished for its loyalty to the legitimate Seleucid King, and now
defying all the efforts of Tigranes to enter its walls. About 75 BC the young
sons of Antiochus Eusebes appeared in Rome, and were recognized as the “kings
of Syria”. They stayed nearly two years in Rome, and showed no signs of
impoverishment. They maintained a royal state, and were served with such gold
and silver plate as beseemed a king’s table. It is also stated that they came
from Syria, returned to Syria, and were in possession of the Syrian throne. We
can hardly doubt that it was in Seleucia that they still had a court and
treasury.
The object of the
visit of King Antiochus and his brother to Rome was to ask to be installed as kings
of Egypt. They claimed through their mother Selene, who was still living in
Syria. The Ptolemaic kingdom was also suffering from a confused succession.
They naturally got nothing from Rome, and one of them was robbed of some of his
choice plate by Verres when he stopped in Sicily on his way home.
The arms of
Tigranes did not reach the south of Syria. Queen Selene was still residing in
69 in Ptolemais; but in the land as a whole the Arabs, the Ituraeans of Chalcis,
and the Jews had it all their own way, except in so far as they fought with
each other. Damascus soon after the death of Antiochus Dionysus (about 85) put
itself into the hands of the Nabataean king Haretas III, to escape the worse
fate of falling into the hands of the Ituraean dynast. The Ituraeans overran
the Phoenician coast between Sidon and Theuprosopon, wasting the fields of
Byblos and Berytus. On the seaboard between Phoenicia and Egypt, the cities
where Hellenic culture had lately flourished, Gaza, Strato’s Tower, Dora, were
ruinous solitudes—monuments of the vengeance of the Jews. The peoples of the
desert and its fringes, of regions like Idumaea, drifted into the country to
efface the marks of the Greek, like the desert sand which submerges forsaken
cities. The mixed population, Jewish for the most part in manners though not in
origin, came to be classed indistinguishably under the name of Idumaeans.
Government there was none. Ordered society gave place to bands of robbers and
pirates. The homeless inhabitants of the towns which had been destroyed, the
defeated factions of cities which still stood, took to brigandage as their
living, or joined the great pirate confraternity.
Only a few cities
like Ascalon, which had saved itself from the Jews by a timely subservience,
still nursed in this region the seeds of Hellenic life.
Was the work of
Alexander and the Greek kings undone? was all the land once more from Central
Asia to the Mediterranean to go back to the Oriental? At that moment there
wanted but little for the whole to be once more in the possession of native
races and kings. Yes; but even the conquests of an Oriental house did not bring
about the state of things which had existed before the battle of Granicus. In
the first place, these conquering dynasties had themselves, while retaining
their native names and memories, assimilated to a greater or less degree the
penetrating culture of the Greeks. Macedonian blood ran in the veins of princes
who bore the names of Mithradata or Ariorath. Greek was spoken at their courts;
they prided themselves on being the champions of Hellenism. Even the kings of
the Jews and of the Arabs took the surname of Phil-Hellene.
This consideration
would, no doubt, tend to make the Greeks look upon the return of Oriental rule
more favourably. At Antioch there had existed a party before 83 who were for
calling in Mithridates of Pontus: Tigranes actually came in response to an
invitation. But, with all that, the prevailing feeling among the Greeks was one
of antipathy to the Oriental dynasties. Do what they might to show their
phil-Hellenism, they were in the eyes of the Greeks barbarians still. Tigranes
had been welcomed in Syria, but before long “the rule of the Armenians was
intolerable to the Greeks”. Perhaps the Greeks were right in their feeling that
Hellenic culture and Oriental despotism could not in the long run subsist
together.
In the second
place, the existence of this great Greek population all over the Nearer East
made the situation in 80 BC in reality utterly different from the situation in
333. The Romans found this people, their natural allies, waiting for them when
they came to take possession. It was a true instinct which led Alexander and
his successors to make the foundation of their work a system of Greek cities.
Their dynasties perished, but their cities remained. The Romans had not to
begin the work over again. They had but to carry on a work which the disruption
of the Greek dynasties had brought to a standstill.
It was in 73 that
the Romans put forth their strength a second time to roll back the power of
Mithridates. We may regard that year as the date when the tide of barbarian
advance which since the death of Seleucus I had, with an occasional reflux, yet
increasingly prevailed, turned before the advance of Rome. The last great
general who was a sincere servant of the oligarchy, Lucius Lucullus, drove back
Mithridates from Cyzicus, marched victoriously through Pontus, and in 69
invaded Armenia, where Mithridates had sought refuge.
Tigranes was at the
moment pushing his conquests further south. He was already master of the
Phoenician coast, and had taken Ptolemais, where Queen Selene had held out
against him, when the news reached him that Lucullus was in Armenia. He hastily
retired north, taking Selene with him, who by the fall of Ptolemais had come
into his hands. At Seleucia on the Euphrates opposite Samosata she was
imprisoned, and after some time put to death. The successes of Lucullus in
Armenia brought about that or the following year the complete evacuation of
Syria by the Armenian armies.
Now the dethroned
descendants of Seleucus saw their chance again. The son of Antiochus Eusebes,
he probably whom we saw robbed by Verres some six years before, showed himself
in Syria, and was hailed by Antioch as the lawful king. Lucullus gave his
sanction. So once more a Seleucid king reigned in Antioch, Antiochus XIII,
nicknamed Asiaticus, from some temporary residence in Asia Minor. True to the
character of his race, he was soon fighting, with whom we are not told,
probably the neighboring Arabs. The Arabs had now pushed into the Orontes
valley itself. Emisa (mod. Homs) was the seat of a chieftain called
Shemash-geram (Sampsigeramus), who had also possession of Arethusa (mod.
Arrastan). With him, however, Antiochus was friendly, and it was probably with
the rival chief Aziz that Antiochus had come to blows. About 65 he suffered a
defeat, which so damaged his credit at Antioch that there was a movement to
drive him out again. Antiochus, however, was strong enough to quell it, and the
ringleaders fled. A son of the late King Philip of the other Seleucid line was
living in Cilicia, and the refugee Antiochenes persuaded him to try his chances
in Syria. He made a compact with Aziz, and was set, as a dependant of the Arab
chiefs, upon the Seleucid throne. Antiochus placed all his hopes on the support
of Shemash-geram, and the ruler of Emisa moved in fact down the Orontes with
his bands. He asked Antiochus to come and confer with him in his camp.
Antiochus, of course, went and was instantly made a prisoner. Shemash-geram had
secretly arranged with Aziz that they should each make away with his Seleucid
ally and divide the inheritance between them. Before, however, Aziz had carried
out his part of the undertaking, Philip got wind of it and escaped to Antioch.
When in 64 Pompey,
having hunted Mithridates out of Asia, appeared as conqueror in Syria, to
settle its affairs in the name of Rome, he received an application from
Antiochus XIII, entreating to be restored to his throne. But Pompey had a
consciousness of what Rome was come into Asia to do—to establish a strong
government which would protect the centres of Hellenic life from barbarian
dominion. It was that which the cities expected from Rome, and the restoration of
such Seleucids as were now to be had was the last thing they wanted. According
to one account, Antioch gave Pompey large sums to refuse the application of
Antiochus. The account is probably untrue, but it truly represents the attitude
of Antioch. Pompey gave Antiochus a scornful answer. The man who had lost Syria
to Tigranes was not the man to save it from Arabs and Jews. Syria, except
cities which were given their freedom or the districts left to native dynasts
under Roman influence, was now made a Roman province and put under the direct
rule of a Roman governor. The kingdom of the house of Seleucus was come to an
utter end (64).
What became of the
surviving members of the royal house is lost in darkness. Antiochus XIII was
sooner or later killed by Shemash-geram. Another of them was invited by envoys
from Alexandria in 58 to come to Egypt and marry Berenice, the daughter of
Ptolemy Auletes, who reigned there during a temporary expulsion of her father.
“He, however”, says the account, “fell sick and died”. If he is identical with
the person nicknamed Kybiosaktes by the Alexandrians, what happened is that the
unhappy man accepted the invitation and was incontinently strangled by
Berenice. Philip II, the last Seleucid king, reappears for a moment in 56, when
he also received an invitation from Alexandria to come and be king in Egypt,
but was forbidden by Aulus Gabinius, the proconsul of Syria, to go. Then he,
and with him the house of Seleucus, finally disappears.
There were still
people for many generations who prided themselves on having in their veins the
blood of the imperial house. A priestess of Artemis at Laodicea-on-the-sea, in
the beginning of the second century after Christ, tells us in her funeral
inscription that she is sprung “from King Seleucus Nicator”. The dynasty of
Commagene vaunted it, and after the dynasty was brought down, the last members
of the family. One of them, Gaius Julius Antiochus Philopappus, put up the
well-known monument at Athens about 115 AD with a statue of Seleucus
Nicator, his great ancestor. Another of them, a lady in the train of the
Empress Sabina, the wife of Hadrian, visited the Egyptian Thebes in 130 AD,
and left upon the colossal “Memnon”, the image of King Amenhotep III, some
Greek verses, legible today, which record the praises of her mistress and her
own royal descent. It is as if here, upon this monument of the dead empire of
the Dawn, the powers of later fame would leave a register of their passage, a
remembrance of names which in their hour were great, they also, in the earth.
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