List of rulers of Cappadocia

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The following list gives an overview of the 4th century BC. BC to the 1st century AD ruling satraps , princes and kings of Cappadocia in Anatolia . The formation of the empire of the Hellenistic epoch is only loosely linked geographically, chronologically and genealogically with the satrapy of the Achaemenid period . Most of the rulers of Cappadocia lived in the city of Mazaka (also called Eusebeia ), today's Kayseri .

Achaemenid satraps

  • Pharnakes (ruled at the time of Cyrus II )
  • Otanes (ruled around 521/20 BC)
  • Ariaramnes (ruled around 515 BC)
  • Cyrus (ruled approx. 407–401 BC; son of Darius II )
  • Mithradates (ruled approx. 401–363 BC; Mithradates' great-grandfather I. )
  • Kamisares (ruled approx. 404-380 BC in southern Cappadocia)
  • Datames (ruled approx. 380–362 BC; son of Kamisares')
  • Ariamnes (ruled approx. 362-350 BC in southern Cappadocia)
  • Mithrobouzanes (ruled approx. 350–334 BC in southern Cappadocia)

The Ariarathids / Otanids

The dynasty of the Ariarathids or Otanids traced its origin back to Otanes , one of the conspirators around Darius I , in which a later court legend can certainly be seen. While the kingdom of Pontos was established in northern Cappadocia , the Ariarathids came to power in the south of the country and ruled an independent kingdom from around 255. The dynasty was eliminated by Mithridates VI. who tried several times to gain control of Cappadocia.

  • Ariarathes I (ruled approx. 350–322 BC, first as satrap of the Achaemenids and then factually independent in Northern Cappadocia)
  • Sabiktas (ruled 333–332 as satrap of Alexander the Great in southern Cappadocia and thus did not belong to the dynasty)
  • Eumenes of Kardia (ruled from 323 as Macedonian satrap; did not belong to the dynasty)
  • Nikanor (ruled around 321/20 as a Macedonian satrap; did not belong to the dynasty)
  • Ariarathes IX. Eusebes Philopator (reigned several times between 100 and 86 BC, initially under the tutelage of Gordius ; was the stepson and vassal of Mithridates VI and therefore did not belong to the dynasty)
  • Ariarathes VIII (ruled around 95 BC; powerless brother of Ariarathes VII, appointed king by Nicomedes III , with whose death the dynasty ended)

The Ariobarzanids

The Ariobarzanids dependent on Rome , the second royal dynasty of Cappadocia, descended from Ariobarzanes (I.), who at the instigation of Nicomedes III. by Laodike, the widow of Ariarathes VI., as her third son (and thus brother of Ariarathes VII. and Ariarathes VIII.) and then with the help of Rome several times as an antagonist to the Pontic favorite Ariarathes IX. was put on the throne. The Cappadocian kingship came to an end when Archelaos died in AD 17 and his empire was converted into a Roman province (Cappadocia).

literature

  • Martin Schottky: Border states of Asia Minor in Hellenistic-Roman times , VI.6 Kappadokia, in: Walter Eder / Johannes Renger (ed.): Ruler Chronologies in the ancient world. Names, dates, dynasties , DNP Suppl. 1, Stattgart-Weimar 2004
  • Pierre Debord: L'Asie Mineure au IV e siècle (412–323 aC). Pouvoirs et jeux politiques , Bordeaux 1999
  • Sviatoslav Dmitriev: Cappadocian Dynastic Rearrangements on the Eve of the First Mithridatic War , in: Historia 55 (2006)
  • Christian Marek and Peter Frei : History of Asia Minor in Antiquity , Munich 2010, ISBN 978-3-406-59853-1
  • Richard D. Sullivan: The Dynasty of Cappadocia , In: Hildegard Temporini and Wolfgang Haase (Eds.): Rise and Decline of the Roman World , Part 2, Volume 7, Berlin 1980

See also