Laodice (?)1

F, #11191

Father*Andromachus (?)1
Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11191|Andromachus (?)||p374.htm#i11192||||Achaeus I. of Syria||p373.htm#i11187||||||||||

Marriage* Principal=Seleucus II Callinicus1 

Family

Seleucus II Callinicus d. BC 226
Children

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-4.
  2. [S356] Selucid Empire, Encyclopædia Britannica,,v. 24, p. 604.
  3. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-5.

Andromachus (?)1

M, #11192

Father*Achaeus I of Syria1
Andromachus (?)||p374.htm#i11192|Achaeus I of Syria||p373.htm#i11187||||Seleucus I. Nicator|b. c BC 344\nd. BC 281|p373.htm#i11181||||||||||

Occupation* a general1 

Family

Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-4.

Antiochus III Megas ("the Great")1

M, #11193, b. BC 241, d. BC 187

 
 

Father*Seleucus II Callinicus1 d. BC 226
Mother*Laodice (?)1
Antiochus III Megas ("the Great")|b. BC 241\nd. BC 187|p374.htm#i11193|Seleucus II Callinicus|d. BC 226|p373.htm#i11188|Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11191|Antiochus I. Theos|d. BC 246|p373.htm#i11185|Laodice (?)||p373.htm#i11186|Andromachus (?)||p374.htm#i11192||||

Birth*BC 241 2 
Marriage* Principal=Laodice (?)1 
Death*BC 187 1 
Biography* As a youth of about eighteen, he succeeded to a disorganized kingdom (223). Not only was Asia Minor detached, but the further eastern provinces had broken away, Bactria under the Greek Diodotus (q.v.), and Parthia under the nomad chieftain Arsaces. Soon after Antiochus's accession, Media and Persis revolted under their governors, the brothers Molon and Alexander. The young king was in the hands of the bad minister Hermeias, and was induced to make an attack on Palestine instead of going in person to face the rebels. The attack on Palestine was a fiasco, and the generals sent against Molon and Alexander met with disaster. Only in Asia Minor, where the Seleucid cause was represented by the king's cousin, the able Achaeus, was its prestige restored and the Pergamene power driven back to its earlier limits. In 221 Antiochus at last went east, and the rebellion of Molon and Alexander collapsed. The submission of Lesser Media, which had asserted its independence under Artabazanes, followed. Antiochus rid himself of Hermeias by assassination and returned to Syria (220). Meanwhile Achaeus himself had revolted and assumed the title of king in Asia Minor. Since, however, his power was not well enough grounded to allow of his attacking Syria, Antiochus considered that he might leave Achaeus for the present and renew his attempt on Palestine. The campaigns of 219 and 218 carried the Seleucid arms almost to the confines of Egypt, but in 217 Ptolemy IV. confronted Antiochus at Raphia and inflicted a defeat upon him which nullified all Antiochus's successes and compelled him to withdraw north of the Lebanon. In 216 Antiochus went north to deal with Achaeus, and had by 214 driven him from the field into Sardis. Antiochus contrived to get possession of the person of Achaeus), but the citadel held out till 213 under Achaeus's widow and then surrendered. Having thus recovered the central part of Asia Minor for the dynasties in Pergamum, Bithynia and Cappadocia, Antiochus turned to recover the outlying provinces of the north and east. Xerxes of Armenia was brought to acknowledge his supremacy in 212. In 209 Antiochus invaded Parthia, occupied the capital Hecatompylus and pushed forward into Hyrcania. The Parthian king was apparently granted peace on his submission. In 209 Antiochus was in Bactria, where the
original rebel had been supplanted by another Greek, Euthydemus. The issue was again favourable to Antiochus. After sustaining a famous siege in his capital, Bactra (Balkh), Euthydemus obtained an honourable peace by which the hand of one of Antiochus's daughters was promised to his son Demetrius. Antiochus next, following in the steps of Alexander, crossed into the Kabul valley, received the homage of the Indian king Sophagasenus and returned west by way of Seistan and Kerman (206/5). From Seleucia on the Tigris he led a short expedition down the Persian Gulf against the Gerrhaeans of the Arabian coast (205/4). Antiochus seemed to have restored the Seleucid empire in the east, and the achievement brought him the title of "the Great King." In 205/4 the infant
Ptolemy V Epiphanes succeeded to the Egyptian throne, and Antiochus concluded a secret pact with Philip of
Macedonia for the partition of the Ptolemaic possessions. Once more Antiochus attacked Palestine, and by 199 he seems to have had possession of it. It was, however, recovered for Ptolemy by the Aetolian Scopas. But the recovery was brief, for in 198 Scopas was defeated by Antiochus at the battle of the Panium, near the sources of the Jordan, a battle which marks the end of Ptolemaic rule in Palestine. In 197 Antiochus moved to Asia Minor to secure the coast towns which had acknowledged Ptolemy and the independent Greek cities. It was this enterprise which brought him into antagonism with Rome, since Smyrna and Lampsacus appealed to the republic of the west, and the tension became greater after Antiochus had in 196 established a footing in Thrace. The evacuation of Greece by the Romans gave Antiochus his opportunity, and he now had the fugitive Hannibal at his court to urge him on. In 192 Antiochus invaded Greece, having the Aetolians and other Greek states as his allies. In 191, however, he was routed at Thermopylae by the Romans under Manius Acilius Glabrio, and obliged to withdraw to Asia. But the Romans followed up their success by attacking Antiochus in Asia Minor, and the decisive victory of L. Cornelius Scipio at Magnesia ad Sipylum (190), following on the defeat of Hannibal at sea off Sidon, gave Asia Minor into their hands. By the peace of Apamea (188) the Seleucid king abandoned all the country north of the Taurus, which was distributed among the friends of Rome. As a consequence of this blow to the Seleucid power, the outlying provinces of the empire, recovered by Antiochus, reasserted their independence. Antiochus perished in a fresh expedition to the east in Luristan (187).2 
Event-MiscBC 200 seized Palestine from Egypt1 
Title*BC 223-187 King of Syria1 
Event-Misc*BC 209-205 recovered territory from Parthia and Bactria1 

Family

Laodice (?)
Children

Last Edited26 May 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-5.
  2. [S356] Selucid Empire, Encyclopædia Britannica,,v. 24, p. 605.
  3. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-6.
  4. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 102-5.
  5. [S348] Wikipedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/, Sub Antiochus IV Epiphanes.

Laodice (?)1

F, #11194

Father*King Mithradates II of Pontus1
Mother*Laodice (?)1
Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11194|King Mithradates II of Pontus||p374.htm#i11195|Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11196|||||||Antiochus I. Theos|d. BC 246|p373.htm#i11185||||

Marriage* Principal=Antiochus III Megas ("the Great")1 

Family

Antiochus III Megas ("the Great") b. BC 241, d. BC 187
Children

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-5.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-6.
  3. [S348] Wikipedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/, Sub Antiochus IV Epiphanes.

King Mithradates II of Pontus1

M, #11195

Marriage* Principal=Laodice (?)1 

Family

Laodice (?)
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-5.

Laodice (?)1

F, #11196

Father*Antiochus II Theos1 d. BC 246
Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11196|Antiochus II Theos|d. BC 246|p373.htm#i11185||||Antiochus I. Soter|b. c BC 323\nd. BC 261|p373.htm#i11182|Stratonice (?)|d. BC 253|p373.htm#i11183|||||||

Marriage* Principal=King Mithradates II of Pontus1 

Family

King Mithradates II of Pontus
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-5.

Seleucus IV Philopator1

M, #11197, d. BC 175

 

Father*Antiochus III Megas ("the Great")1 b. BC 241, d. BC 187
Mother*Laodice (?)1
Seleucus IV Philopator|d. BC 175|p374.htm#i11197|Antiochus III Megas ("the Great")|b. BC 241\nd. BC 187|p374.htm#i11193|Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11194|Seleucus I. Callinicus|d. BC 226|p373.htm#i11188|Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11191|King Mithradates I. of Pontus||p374.htm#i11195|Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11196|

Marriage* Principal=Laodice (?)1 
Death*BC 175 1 
Biography* The Seleucid kingdom as Antiochus left it to his son, SELEUCUS IV. PHILOPATOR (reigned 187-176), consisted of Syria (now including Cilicia and Palestine), Mesopotamia, Babylonia and Nearer Iran (Media and Persis). Seleucus IV. was compelled by financial necessities, created in part by the heavy war-indemnity exacted by Rome, to pursue an unambitious policy, and was assassinated by his minister Heliodorus.2 
Title*BC 187-175 King of Syria2 

Family

Laodice (?)
Child

Last Edited24 May 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-6.
  2. [S356] Selucid Empire, Encyclopædia Britannica,,v. 24, p. 605.
  3. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-7.

Laodice (?)1

F, #11198

Father*King Philip V of Macedonia1 d. BC 179
Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11198|King Philip V of Macedonia|d. BC 179|p374.htm#i11199||||King Demetrius I. of Macedonia|d. BC 229|p376.htm#i11254|Phthia (?)||p376.htm#i11255|||||||

Marriage* Principal=Seleucus IV Philopator1 

Family

Seleucus IV Philopator d. BC 175
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-6.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-7.

King Philip V of Macedonia1

M, #11199, d. BC 179

Father*King Demetrius II of Macedonia2 d. BC 229
Mother*Phthia (?)2
King Philip V of Macedonia|d. BC 179|p374.htm#i11199|King Demetrius II of Macedonia|d. BC 229|p376.htm#i11254|Phthia (?)||p376.htm#i11255|King Alexander I. of Epirus||p376.htm#i11253|Olympias (?)||p376.htm#i11251|||||||

Death*BC 179 2 
Note*BC 197 Cynoscephalae, Thessaly, had some early successes against Rome, by was defeated at Cynoscephalae in Thessaly in 197.2 

Family

Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-6.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 100-14.

Demetrius I Soter1

M, #11200, d. BC 150

 

Father*Seleucus IV Philopator1 d. BC 175
Mother*Laodice (?)1
Demetrius I Soter|d. BC 150|p374.htm#i11200|Seleucus IV Philopator|d. BC 175|p374.htm#i11197|Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11198|Antiochus I. Megas ("the Great")|b. BC 241\nd. BC 187|p374.htm#i11193|Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11194|King Philip V. of Macedonia|d. BC 179|p374.htm#i11199||||

Death*BC 150  
Marriage* was his mistress, but may have been his wife, Principal=Apama (?)1 
Biography* Demetrius, the son of Seleucus IV., escaped from Rome and was received in Syria as the true king. Antiochus Eupator was put to death. DEMETRIUS I. SOTER (reigned 162-150) was a strong and ambitious ruler. He crushed the rebellion of Timarchus in Media and reduced Judaea to new subjection. But he was unpopular at Antioch, and fell before a coalition of the three kings of Egypt, Pergamum and Cappadocia.2 
Note* was raised as a hostage in Rome. He escaped and took control of Syria, only to lose it 12 years later to Alexander Balas1 

Family

Apama (?)
Child

Last Edited24 May 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-7.
  2. [S356] Selucid Empire, Encyclopædia Britannica,,v. 24, p. 605.

Apama (?)1

F, #11201

Marriage* was his mistress, but may have been his wife, Principal=Demetrius I Soter1 

Family

Demetrius I Soter d. BC 150
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-7.

Demetrius II Nicator1

M, #11202, d. BC 125

 

Father*Demetrius I Soter1 d. BC 150
Mother*Apama (?)1
Demetrius II Nicator|d. BC 125|p374.htm#i11202|Demetrius I Soter|d. BC 150|p374.htm#i11200|Apama (?)||p374.htm#i11201|Seleucus I. Philopator|d. BC 175|p374.htm#i11197|Laodice (?)||p374.htm#i11198|||||||

Death*BC 125 1 
Marriage*c BC 148 2nd=Cleopatra Thea2,3,4 
Note* recovered Syria from Alexander Balas, but never fully controlled it. He was a Parthian captive for 10 years.2 
Title*BC 146-125 King of Syria2 

Family

Cleopatra Thea b. c BC 164, d. BC 120
Children

Last Edited19 May 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-7.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-8.
  3. [S348] Wikipedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/, Sub Cleopatra Thea.
  4. [S357] Chris Bennett, The Ptolemaic Dynasty, online http://www.tyndale.cam.ac.uk/Egypt/ptolemies/ptolemies.htm
  5. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-9.

Cleopatra Thea1

F, #11203, b. c BC 164, d. BC 120

 
 

Father*Ptolemy VI Philometor1 b. BC 186, d. BC 145
Mother*Cleopatra II (?)2 d. BC 115
Cleopatra Thea|b. c BC 164\nd. BC 120|p374.htm#i11203|Ptolemy VI Philometor|b. BC 186\nd. BC 145|p376.htm#i11280|Cleopatra II (?)|d. BC 115|p377.htm#i11281|Ptolemy V. Epiphanes|b. BC 210\nd. BC 180|p376.htm#i11278|Cleopatra I. (?)|d. BC 177|p376.htm#i11279|Ptolemy V. Epiphanes|b. BC 210\nd. BC 180|p376.htm#i11278|Cleopatra I. (?)|d. BC 177|p376.htm#i11279|

Birth*c BC 164 3 
Marriage*c BC 148 1st=Demetrius II Nicator1,4,3 
Death*BC 120 was forced to drink poison she had prepared for her son, Antiochus1,3 
(Witness) Death He was killed by his mother when he tried to claim the throne, Principal=Saleucus V Philometor4 

Family 1

Child

Family 2

Demetrius II Nicator d. BC 125
Children

Last Edited6 Jun 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-8.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 102-7.
  3. [S357] Chris Bennett, The Ptolemaic Dynasty, online http://www.tyndale.cam.ac.uk/Egypt/ptolemies/ptolemies.htm
  4. [S348] Wikipedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/, Sub Cleopatra Thea.
  5. [S348] Wikipedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/, Sub Antiochus IX Cyzicenus.
  6. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-9.

Antiochus VIII Philometor Grypus "Hook-Nose"1

M, #11204, d. BC 96

 

Father*Demetrius II Nicator1 d. BC 125
Mother*Cleopatra Thea1 b. c BC 164, d. BC 120
Antiochus VIII Philometor Grypus "Hook-Nose"|d. BC 96|p374.htm#i11204|Demetrius II Nicator|d. BC 125|p374.htm#i11202|Cleopatra Thea|b. c BC 164\nd. BC 120|p374.htm#i11203|Demetrius I. Soter|d. BC 150|p374.htm#i11200|Apama (?)||p374.htm#i11201|Ptolemy V. Philometor|b. BC 186\nd. BC 145|p376.htm#i11280|Cleopatra I. (?)|d. BC 115|p377.htm#i11281|

Death*BC 96 1 
Marriage*BC 124 Bride=Tryphaena (?)1,2 
Note* spent much time in the pursuit of pleasure and composing verses about poisonous snakes.1 
Title*BC 125-96 King of Syria1 
Event-Misc*BC 116 When Cyzicenus returned from exile, a civil war began between him and Grypus. Cleopatra Tryphaena had Cyzicenus' wife (also Cleopatra) killed in a dramatic fashion in the temple of Daphne, near Antioch. Out of revenge, Cyzicenus killed Tryphaena. Syria was then divided between Grypus and Cyzicenus (half brothers and cousins)., Principal=Antiochus IX Cyzicenus, Witness=Laodice Thea Philadelphos3 

Family

Tryphaena (?) b. c BC 140, d. c BC 112
Children

Last Edited19 May 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-9.
  2. [S357] Chris Bennett, The Ptolemaic Dynasty, online http://www.tyndale.cam.ac.uk/Egypt/ptolemies/ptolemies.htm
  3. [S348] Wikipedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/, Sub Antiochus VIII Grypus.
  4. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-10.
  5. [S348] Wikipedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/, Sub Seluceus VI Epiphanes.

Tryphaena (?)1

F, #11205, b. c BC 140, d. c BC 112

Father*Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II Tryphon2 b. c BC 184, d. BC 116
Mother*Cleopatra III (?)2 d. BC 101
Tryphaena (?)|b. c BC 140\nd. c BC 112|p374.htm#i11205|Ptolemy VIII Euergetes II Tryphon|b. c BC 184\nd. BC 116|p377.htm#i11282|Cleopatra III (?)|d. BC 101|p377.htm#i11283|Ptolemy V. Epiphanes|b. BC 210\nd. BC 180|p376.htm#i11278|Cleopatra I. (?)|d. BC 177|p376.htm#i11279|Ptolemy V. Philometor|b. BC 186\nd. BC 145|p376.htm#i11280|Cleopatra I. (?)|d. BC 115|p377.htm#i11281|

Birth*c BC 140 3 
Marriage*BC 124 1st=Antiochus VIII Philometor Grypus "Hook-Nose"1,3 
Death*c BC 112 |She was captured and executed by Antiochus IX Cyzicenus, Witness=Antiochus IX Cyzicenus3 
Note* was responsible for the death of her sister, wife of Antiochus IX1 
(Witness) DeathBC 112 Sanctuary of Daphne, Antioch, |Cleopatra IV was murdered by orders of her sister Tryphaena, Principal=Cleopatra IV (?)3 

Family

Antiochus VIII Philometor Grypus "Hook-Nose" d. BC 96
Children

Last Edited26 May 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-9.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 102-7.
  3. [S357] Chris Bennett, The Ptolemaic Dynasty, online http://www.tyndale.cam.ac.uk/Egypt/ptolemies/ptolemies.htm
  4. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-10.
  5. [S348] Wikipedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/, Sub Seluceus VI Epiphanes.

Laodice Thea Philadelphos1

F, #11206

Father*Antiochus VIII Philometor Grypus "Hook-Nose"1 d. BC 96
Mother*Tryphaena (?)1 b. c BC 140, d. c BC 112
Laodice Thea Philadelphos||p374.htm#i11206|Antiochus VIII Philometor Grypus "Hook-Nose"|d. BC 96|p374.htm#i11204|Tryphaena (?)|b. c BC 140\nd. c BC 112|p374.htm#i11205|Demetrius I. Nicator|d. BC 125|p374.htm#i11202|Cleopatra Thea|b. c BC 164\nd. BC 120|p374.htm#i11203|Ptolemy V. Euergetes II Tryphon|b. c BC 184\nd. BC 116|p377.htm#i11282|Cleopatra I. (?)|d. BC 101|p377.htm#i11283|

Marriage* Principal=Mithradates I Kallinikos1 
(Witness) Event-MiscBC 116 When Cyzicenus returned from exile, a civil war began between him and Grypus. Cleopatra Tryphaena had Cyzicenus' wife (also Cleopatra) killed in a dramatic fashion in the temple of Daphne, near Antioch. Out of revenge, Cyzicenus killed Tryphaena. Syria was then divided between Grypus and Cyzicenus (half brothers and cousins)., Principal=Antiochus VIII Philometor Grypus "Hook-Nose", Principal=Antiochus IX Cyzicenus2 

Family

Mithradates I Kallinikos
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-10.
  2. [S348] Wikipedia, online http://en.wikipedia.org/, Sub Antiochus VIII Grypus.
  3. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-11.

Mithradates I Kallinikos1

M, #11207

Marriage* Principal=Laodice Thea Philadelphos1 
HTML* 
Nemrud Foundation
 
Title*c BC 96-70 King of Commagene1 

Family

Laodice Thea Philadelphos
Child

Last Edited24 May 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-10.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-11.

Antiochus I Theos1

M, #11208, d. BC 36

Father*Mithradates I Kallinikos1
Mother*Laodice Thea Philadelphos1
Antiochus I Theos|d. BC 36|p374.htm#i11208|Mithradates I Kallinikos||p374.htm#i11207|Laodice Thea Philadelphos||p374.htm#i11206|||||||Antiochus V. Philometor Grypus "Hook-Nose"|d. BC 96|p374.htm#i11204|Tryphaena (?)|b. c BC 140\nd. c BC 112|p374.htm#i11205|

Marriage* Principal=Isias Philostorgos1 
Death*BC 36 1 
Burial* Nemrud Dagh1 
HTML* 
Nemrud Foundation
 
Note* unsuccessfully attempted to create a new religion, synthesizing the gods of the East with those of the West, adding himself as a deity1 
Title*c BC 70-36 King of Commagene1 

Family

Isias Philostorgos
Child

Last Edited24 May 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-11.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-12.

Isias Philostorgos1

F, #11209

Father*Ariobarzanes I of Cappadocia1
Mother*Athenais I Philostorgos1
Isias Philostorgos||p374.htm#i11209|Ariobarzanes I of Cappadocia||p374.htm#i11210|Athenais I Philostorgos||p374.htm#i11211|||||||||||||

Marriage* Principal=Antiochus I Theos1 

Family

Antiochus I Theos d. BC 36
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-11.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-12.

Ariobarzanes I of Cappadocia1

M, #11210

Marriage* Principal=Athenais I Philostorgos1 

Family

Athenais I Philostorgos
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-11.

Athenais I Philostorgos1

F, #11211

Marriage* Principal=Ariobarzanes I of Cappadocia1 

Family

Ariobarzanes I of Cappadocia
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-11.

Anonyma (?)1

F, #11212

Father*Antiochus I Theos1 d. BC 36
Mother*Isias Philostorgos1
Anonyma (?)||p374.htm#i11212|Antiochus I Theos|d. BC 36|p374.htm#i11208|Isias Philostorgos||p374.htm#i11209|Mithradates I. Kallinikos||p374.htm#i11207|Laodice Thea Philadelphos||p374.htm#i11206|Ariobarzanes I. of Cappadocia||p374.htm#i11210|Athenais I. Philostorgos||p374.htm#i11211|

Marriage* Principal=Artavazdes I (?)1 

Family

Artavazdes I (?)
Child

Last Edited28 May 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-12.

Artavazdes I (?)1

M, #11213

Marriage* Principal=Anonyma (?)1 
Title*BC 56-31 King of Media Atropatene and Lesser Armenia1 

Family

Anonyma (?)
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-12.

Ariobarzanes II (?)1

M, #11214, d. 004

Father*Artavazdes I (?)1
Mother*Anonyma (?)1
Ariobarzanes II (?)|d. 004|p374.htm#i11214|Artavazdes I (?)||p374.htm#i11213|Anonyma (?)||p374.htm#i11212|||||||Antiochus I. Theos|d. BC 36|p374.htm#i11208|Isias Philostorgos||p374.htm#i11209|

Death*004 1 
Marriage* Principal=Princess Anonyma (?)2 
Title*BC 20 - AD 4 King of Media Atropatene2 
TitleAD 2 - AD 4 King of Armenia2 

Family

Princess Anonyma (?)
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-12.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-13.
  3. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-14.

Princess Anonyma (?)1

F, #11215

Father*King Phraates IV of Parthia1
Princess Anonyma (?)||p374.htm#i11215|King Phraates IV of Parthia||p374.htm#i11216||||||||||||||||

Marriage* Principal=Ariobarzanes II (?)1 

Family

Ariobarzanes II (?) d. 004
Child

Last Edited28 May 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-13.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-14.

King Phraates IV of Parthia1

M, #11216

Family

Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-13.

Vonones II (?)1

M, #11217, d. 051

Father*Ariobarzanes II (?)1 d. 004
Mother*Princess Anonyma (?)1
Vonones II (?)|d. 051|p374.htm#i11217|Ariobarzanes II (?)|d. 004|p374.htm#i11214|Princess Anonyma (?)||p374.htm#i11215|Artavazdes I. (?)||p374.htm#i11213|Anonyma (?)||p374.htm#i11212|King Phraates I. of Parthia||p374.htm#i11216||||

Death*051 1 
Marriage* a Greek concubine, Principal=Anonyma (?)1 
Title051 King of Parthia1 
Title*between 0011 and 0051 King of Media Atropatene1 

Family

Anonyma (?)
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-14.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 92-1.

Anonyma (?)1

F, #11218

Marriage* a Greek concubine, Principal=Vonones II (?)1 

Family

Vonones II (?) d. 051
Child

Last Edited28 May 2005

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 91-14.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 92-1.

Vologaeses I (?)1

M, #11219, d. 077

Father*Vonones II (?)1 d. 051
Mother*Anonyma (?)1
Vologaeses I (?)|d. 077|p374.htm#i11219|Vonones II (?)|d. 051|p374.htm#i11217|Anonyma (?)||p374.htm#i11218|Ariobarzanes I. (?)|d. 004|p374.htm#i11214|Princess Anonyma (?)||p374.htm#i11215|||||||

Death*077 1 
Note* fough with Rome over Armenia, and he reacted strongly against Hellenism1 
Title*between 0051 and 0077 Great King of Parthia1 

Family

Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 92-1.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 92-2.

King Mithradates of Armenia1

M, #11220, d. circa 076

Father*Vologaeses I (?)1 d. 077
King Mithradates of Armenia|d. c 076|p374.htm#i11220|Vologaeses I (?)|d. 077|p374.htm#i11219||||Vonones I. (?)|d. 051|p374.htm#i11217|Anonyma (?)||p374.htm#i11218|||||||

Death*circa 076 1 
Marriage* Principal=Adwe (?)1 

Family

Adwe (?)
Child

Last Edited24 Oct 2003

Citations

  1. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 92-2.
  2. [S232] Don Charles Stone, Ancient and Medieval Descents, 92-3.
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