Antiochus II Theos (Ancient Greek:Ἀντίοχος ὁ Θεός,Antíochos ho Theós, meaning "Antiochus the God"; 286 – July 246 BC) was a Greek king of theHellenisticSeleucid Empire who reigned from 261 to 246 BC.[2] He succeeded his fatherAntiochus I Soter in the winter of 262–61 BC. He was the younger son of Antiochus I and princessStratonice, the daughter ofDemetrius Poliorcetes.[3]
Antiochus II was a forceful personality who in his lifetime largely succeeded to hold the sprawling Seleucid realm intact. However his fateful decision to repudiate his first wifeLaodice and marry aPtolemaic princessBerenice as part of a peace treaty led to a succession struggle after his death that would shake the empire's foundations and cause large territorial losses.
Antiochus II was the younger son ofAntiochus I Soter and his famous queenStratonice. Antiochus was initially not expected to inherit the throne, but in 267 BC his father had his elder brother Seleucus executed on charges of rebellion.[4]
He inherited lasting tensions withPtolemaic Egypt and soon initiated theSecond Syrian War in alliance withAntigonus II of theAntigonid dynasty. The war was largely fought along the coasts ofAsia Minor and conflated with the constant intrigues of petty despots and restless city-states in Asia Minor. Antiochus II made some gains in Asia Minor and acquired direct access to Aegean Sea by capturingMiletus andEphesus. During the war he assumed the titleTheos (Greek:Θεός, "God"), being such to the Milesians in slaying the tyrantTimarchus.[5] At around the same time Antiochus II also made some attempt to get a footing inThrace which details are largely unknown and a mint in the city ofByzantium briefly issued coins in his name.[6]
In the end the war did little to alter the general balance of power in the Eastern Mediterranean.Coele-Syria in particular, the main disputed territory between the Seleucid empire and the Ptolemaic Kingdom, remained firmly in the hands of the Ptolemies. In 257 BC, the PtolemaicpharaohPtolemy II Philadelphus even invaded the Seleucid-held part of Syria, though the outcome of this invasion is unknown. In 253 BC, with his Antigonid allies knocked out of the war by rebellions, Antiochus II made peace with Ptolemy II. As part of the settlement, Antiochus II divorcedLaodice and married Ptolemy II's daughterBerenice, with the understanding that any children born from their union would inherit the Seleucid throne.[7] Laodice was well provided for in the divorce arrangement. Antiochus II gave her various land grants throughout Anatolia which are known through inscriptions;[8] such as large estates in theHellespont,[9] other properties nearCyzicus,[10]Ilion and inCaria.[9] She was also granted revenues from various territories and tax exemptions.[11] According to a royal record atSardis, her land titles were to be treated as in royal possession.[12]
Laodice remained a very powerful and political influential figure and continued numerous intrigues to become queen again. By 246 BC, possibly at the news of Ptolemy II's death, Antiochus II had left Berenice and their infant son Antiochus inAntioch to live again with Laodice in Asia Minor.[3] Antiochus II soon suddenly died and Laodice was widely accused of having him poisoned. Antiochus was buried in theBelevi Mausoleum.[13]
A succession struggle erupted almost immediately. Berenice initially had the advantage by holding Antioch but her son Antiochus was but an infant. Meanwhile, Laodice proclaimed her eldest son Seleucus as kingSeleucus II and moved in from Asia Minor, claiming that on his deathbed Antiochus II reversed his earlier decision and named Seleucus as his successor.[7] The then-reigning brother of BerenicePtolemy III marched from Egypt to support his sister, only to find her and her son murdered by partisans of Laodice. Enraged Ptolemy continued the war, dubbed theThird Syrian War which proved to be a disaster for the Seleucid empire.[14]
Very little is known about any Antiochus II's activities in regards to the easternUpper Satrapies such asMedia,Parthia,Bactria orPersis. Chiefly preoccupied with conflicts in the Eastern Mediterranean and with family issues, Antiochus II seems to have resorted to appointing independent-minded men such likeDiodotus andAndragoras as satraps in the area. These two appointments eventually resulted in the creation of the independentGreco-Bactrian Kingdom and theParthian Empire respectively. There is also a marked decline in quantity of Antiochus II's coinage in Bactria when compared to that of his father, which had been interpreted variously in scholarship. It has been claimed that ambitious satraps may have taken advantage of Antiochus II's absenteeism to gradually weaken their ties with the central government even in Antiochus II's lifetime without outwardly proclaiming independence. However, posthumous coinage of a popular king was a relatively common practice in theHellenistic Age and Antiochus II may have minted coins in the name of his half-Sogdian father in order to legitimize both himself and his dynasty.[15]
An uncertain Antiochus is mentioned[16] in theEdicts of Ashoka, as one of the recipients of the Indian EmperorAshoka'sBuddhistproselytism. A majority opinion however holds that the Greek king mentioned there is in fact be Antiochus II's father,Antiochus I Soter, who arguably had more proximity with the East.[17][16]
^abJarl Charpentier, "Antiochus, King of the Yavanas"Bulletin of the School of Oriental Studies, University of London6.2 (1931: 303-321) argues that the Antiochus mentioned was unlikely to be Antiochus II, during whose time relations with India were broken by the Parthian intrusion and the independence of Diodotus in Bactria, and suggests instead the half-IranianAntiochus I, with stronger connections in the East.