Zariadres
Zariadres | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Satrap and then King of Sophene | |||||
Reign | 212 - 188 BC | ||||
Coronation | 188 BC | ||||
Predecessor | Abdissares | ||||
Burial | Sophene | ||||
Issue | Artaxias I | ||||
| |||||
House | Armavir | ||||
Dynasty | Orontid | ||||
Father | Xerxes |
Zariadres (Armenian: Զարեհ Zareh) was a King of Sophene.
Strabo[1] cites Sophene being taken over by a "general" of king Antiochus III by 200 BC, called Zariadres.
Following the defeat of Antiochus III by the Romans at the Battle of Magnesia in 190 BC, Zariadres and Artaxias* revolted and with Roman consent began to reign as kings at the Treaty of Apamea in 188 BC; Zariadres over Sophene and Artaxias over Armenia.
It is possible that Zariadres (Dsariadres) was the father of Abdissares, although the scant historical records have Abdissares ruling before Zariadres. The name written as Dsariadris might be a Greek corruption of the name Bagdassar. A hypothesis is that king Bagdassar was forced to accept rule by king Antiochus III, but stayed as a Satrap, paying tribute until the Battle of Magnesia allowed him to reassert his independence. Strabo was writing 200 years after these events and may not have been accurate.
- Over a dozen stone boundary markers have been discovered on the territory of modern Armenia from the time of the reign of Artashes with Aramaic inscriptions, before their discovery the existence of these stones was attested by Moses of Chorene. In these inscriptions Artashes claims descent from the Yervanduni (Orontid) Dynasty: King Artaxias, the son of Orontid Zariadres.
- ↑ Geographia. Greece. 24 AD. pp. 336 and 337.
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