Everything about Polemon I Of Pontus totally explained
Polemon Pythodoros, also known as
Polemon I or
Polemon I of Pontus (
Greek:
ο Πολέμων Πυθόδωρος, flourished
1st century BC, died
8 BC) was the Roman Client King of
Cilicia,
Pontus,
Colchis and the
Bosporan Kingdom.
Polemon was the son and heir of Zenon and possibly Tryphaena. He was
Anatolian
Greek. Polemon’s father, Zenon was an orator and a prominent aristocrat from
Laodicea on the Lycus Anatolia. Zenon encouraged the locals to resist the Roman General
Titus Labienus and King
Pacorus I of Parthia, when their armies invaded
Syria and Anatolia. Zenon was a friend and ally to Roman Triumvir
Mark Antony and played a leading role during the
Parthian invasion in 40 BC.
For Zenon’s service to the Parthian Campaign, Antony appointed Polemon in 39 BC, as Roman Client King of
Cilicia and then in 37 BC, Antony appointed him as Roman Client King of Pontus. In 36 BC, Polemon assisted Antony in his military campaign against
Parthia. The Parthians defeated Antony and Polemon. Polemon was captured and taken prisoner by the Parthian King. After a ransom was allowed, Polemon was released. By this time, Polemon was ruling from Iconium (modern
Konya) in
Lycaonia.
In 35 BC, Polemon assisted Antony in making an alliance with King Artavasdes I of
Media with Rome, whom the Median King was an ally to
Parthia. Both Antony and Polemon, succeeded in this alliance to happen.
During the naval
Battle of Actium in 31 BC, Polemon had sent Antony an auxiliary force. Before Actium, Polemon made peace with the triumvir Octavian and became his ally. After the death of Antony, Octavian became the
Roman Emperor Augustus. Augustus early in his reign had acknowledged and recognised Polemon as a Roman Client King and the Client Kingdoms he ruled. Augustus awarded Polemon with an ivory sceptre; an embroidered triumphal robe and he greeted Polemon as
king, ally and friend. This recognition was a tradition, which recognises and awards the allies to Rome.
In 16 BC the Roman statesman
Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, had intervened with the monarchy of the Bosporan Kingdom. Agrippa had discovered, a usurper called Scribonius had pretended be to a relative of the ruling Queen Dynamis, who was previously widowed by her husband, King
Asander. Scribonius wanted to marry Dynamis, so he could rule the Bosporan, however Agrippa discovered his treachery and ordered his death. After Scribonius’ death, Agrippa had asked Polemon to take Scribonius’ place.
Polemon had married Dynamis as his first wife and Polemon became Dynamis' second husband. He left Iconium to rule the Bosporan Kingdom. Polemon and Dynamis married in 16 BC. Through his first wife, Polemon became a stepfather to
Tiberius Julius Aspurgus, who was Dynamis’ son and child from her first marriage. Dynamis died in 14 BC and he became the sole ruler of the Bosporan.
Later in 14 BC, Polemon had married
Pythodorida of Pontus as his second wife. She was a noblewoman who was half
Anatolian Greek and
Roman, who was the first granddaughter and grandchild of Antony. Pythodorida bore Polemon two sons and one daughter, who were:
As King of the Bosporan, he extended the Kingdom as far to the river
Tanais. Polemon reigned as a long and prosperous king. In 8 BC, Polemon engaged in a military campaign against the Aspurgians, a
nomad tribe that lived above mountains of
Phanagoria. Polemon was defeated by them, taken as their prisoner and was put to death. After his death, Aspurgus succeeded Polemon as a King of the Bosporan, while his widow, ruled as the sole ruler of
Cilicia,
Pontus and
Colchis.
==
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