Everything about Pharnaces Ii Of Pontus totally explained
Pharnaces II (in
Greek Φαρνάκης, died
47 BC) was the son of the great
Mithridates VI of Pontus, a famed enemy of the
Roman Republic.
Coup
He was raised as his father's successor and treated with distinction. However, we know little of his youth from writers of the time and find him first mentioned after
Mithridates had taken refuge from the Roman general
Pompey during the
Third Mithridatic War.
Mithridates was keen to wage war with the Romans once more, but his son was less keen, and thus began a plot to remove his father from power. Unfortunately, his plans were discovered, but the army, not wishing to engage Pompey and the Roman armies, supported Pharnaces. They marched on Mithridates and forced their former king to take his own life.
Pharnaces quickly sent an embassy to Pompey with offers of submission and hostages, for he was keen to secure his position. He also sent the body of his father, to be at the disposal of Pompey. The latter readily accepted Pharnaces overtures, for he wished to be back at
Rome having seen to have made peace in the region. Pompey granted Pharnaces the
Bosporan Kingdom, and named him friend and ally of Rome.
Contemporary historians are silent on Pharnaces's early reign, but eventually, on viewing the increasing power struggles between the Romans, and with an eye to recreating the kingdom of his father, he attacked and subjugated the free city of
Phanagoria, violating one of his agreements with Pompey.
War with Caesar
In 49 BC, civil war broke out between
Julius Caesar and Pompey. Whilst the Romans were distracted by this, Pharnaces decided to seize the opportunity and, with the forces under his disposal and against little opposition, made himself the ruler of
Colchis and
Lesser Armenia.
Deiotarus, the king of Lesser Armenia appealed to
Domitius Calvinus, the lieutenant of Caesar in Asia, for support, and soon the Roman forces sought battle with Pharnaces. They met at
Nicopolis in
Anatolia, and Pharnaces so defeated the Romans that he was easily able to use his army to overwhelm
Pontus. He also took the city of
Samsun the late city of Pontus (under his father's rule), sold the inhabitants to slave traders and made all the boys
eunuchs.
After this show of strength against the Romans, Pharnaces drew back to suppress revolt in his new conquests. However, the extremely rapid approach of Caesar in person forced Pharnaces to turn his attention back to the Romans. At first, recognizing the threat, he made offers of submission, with the sole object of gaining time until Caesar's attention fell elsewhere; but Caesar's speed brought war quickly, and battle took place near
Zela (modern Zile in Turkey), where Pharnaces was routed and was able to escape with just a small detachment of cavalry. Caesar himself, in a letter to a friend in Rome, famously said of the short war:“
Veni, vidi, vici” (“I came, I saw, I conquered”).
Pharnaces himself fled quickly back to the Bosporus, where he managed to assemble a small force of
Scythian and
Sarmatians troops, with which he was able to gain control of a few cities. However, a former governor of his, Asandar, attacked his forces and killed him. The historian
Appian states that he died in battle;
Cassius Dio says he was captured and then killed.
Marriage, issue and succession
Pharnaces was about fifty years old when he died, and he'd reigned for nearly sixteen years. He had several sons, one of whom, Darius, whom Roman triumvir
Mark Antony made for a short while king.
Pharnaces’ daughter Dynamis first married the general
Asander, by whom Dynamis had a son called
Tiberius Julius Aspurgus. Asander ruled as Bosporan King in spite of Roman nominees ruled as archon, and later as king, until 17 BC. After the death of Asander, Dynamis was compelled to marry a Roman
usurper called Scribonius but the Romans under statesman
Agrippa interfered and set
Polemon I of Pontus in his place. Dynamis and Polemon married in 16 BC and Dynamis died in 14 BC. Polemon ruled until his death in 8 BC and then after Tiberius Julius Aspurgus, succeeded Polemon.
Sources
This article is partly based on extracts from the book Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, edited by William Smith (published in 1870), and the writings of
Appian, ancient historian.
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