Sunday, June 12, 2016

62=16 B DURING MARCUS AURELIUS THE PATHIANS

The Parthian Empire (247 B.C.–224 A.D.)

http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/part/hd_part.htm

When 
 died in 323 B.C., he had conquered the great
, which stretched from the Mediterranean Sea to India. His successor as ruler of Syria, Mesopotamia, and Iran was one of his generals, Seleucus I, who established the
. Along the trade routes that linked ancient and newly established cities,
, a fusion of the various Near Eastern and classical Greek traditions, permeated the Near Eastern world.
While in the west the Seleucids faced the Ptolemies, Alexander’s successors in Egypt, in the east, a seminomadic confederacy, the Parni, were on the move. From the northeast of Iran they advanced toward the frontier of the Seleucid satrapy (administrative district) of Parthia, near the Caspian Sea. In about 250 B.C., they launched an invasion under their leader Arsaces. Known as the Parthians after their successful conquest of the land, they made their own imperial aspirations clear by instituting a dynastic era in 247 B.C., and subsequent rulers assumed the name Arsaces as a royal title. Under Mithradates I (r. ca. 171–139 B.C.) and his successors, the Parthians grew into the dominant power in the Near East through a series of campaigns against the Seleucids, the Romans, the Greco-Bactrian kingdoms, and the nomads of Central Asia. The Romans, who were ambitious to dominate the Near East in the style of Alexander, underestimated the capabilities of the Parthian kings and had to negotiate peace under 
.
Establishing a primary residence at Ctesiphon, on the Tigris River in southern Mesopotamia, Parthian kings ruled for nearly half a millennium and influenced politics from Asia Minor to northern India, until they were overthrown by 

 from southwest Iran in the early third century A.D.



















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