List of kings of the Cimmerian Bosporus explained

The Bosporan kings were the rulers of the Bosporan Kingdom, an ancient Hellenistic Greco-Scythian state centered on the Kerch Strait (the Cimmerian Bosporus) and ruled from the city of Panticapaeum. Panticapaeum was founded in the 7th or 6th century BC; the earliest known king of the Bosporus is Archaeanax, who seized control of the city 480 BC as a usurper.[1] The Archaeanactid dynasty ruled the city until it was displaced by the more long-lived Spartocid dynasty in 438 BC. After ruling for over three centuries, the Spartocids were then displaced by the Mithridatic dynasty of Pontus and then its offshoot the Tiberian-Julian dynasty. The Tiberian-Julian kings ruled as client kings of the Roman Empire until late antiquity.

After several successive periods of rule by groups such as the Sarmatians, Alans, Goths and Huns, the remnants of the Bosporan Kingdom were finally absorbed into the Roman Empire by Justinian I in the 6th century AD following a revolt against the Hunnic ruler Gordas.[2] [3]

List of kings

Joint rulers are indicated with indentation.

Archaeanactid dynasty (c. 480–438 BC)

See main article: Archaeanactid dynasty.

The number of successors of Archaenax and their names are not known. His family ruled until c. 438 BC.

Spartocid dynasty (438–111 BC)

See main article: Spartocid dynasty.

Scythian rule (111–110 BC)

Mithridatic dynasty (110 BC–AD 8)

See main article: Mithridatic dynasty.

Tiberian-Julian dynasty (8–341)

Later rulers (341–527)

The end of Rhescuporis VI's reign is believed to have marked the end of the Tiberian-Julian dynasty. Details of the Bosporan Kingdom are scant thereafter but it appears to have undergone several successive periods of rule by Sarmatians, Alans, Goths and Huns. There was probably a continuous sequence of rulers but few names are known.

Mugel's rule in the Bosporus was brief; shortly after Gordas's death Justinian I sent an army to place the Bosporus under Roman rule. Mugel thereafter ruled only Patria Onoguria in the north.

Family tree

This family tree covers the rulers of the Mithridatic and Tiberian-Julian dynasties. Owing to much of the sequence of Tiberian-Julian rulers being based on coinage, the relationships within the Tiberian-Julian dynasty (especially for later rulers) are largely conjectural and speculative. Conjectural and speculative lines of descent are marked with dotted lines. Though genealogical information is completely unknown for kings after Cotys III, the repeating names lead most researchers to believe that the later kings until at least 341 were part of the same continuous dynasty.

See also

References

  1. Book: Schneider, Helmuth . Brill's New Pauly: Chronologies of the ancient world : names, dates and dynasties . 2007 . Brill . 978-90-04-15320-2 . 112 . en.
  2. Frolova . N. . 1999 . The Question of Continuity in the Late Classical Bosporus On the Basis of Numismatic Data . Ancient Civilizations from Scythia to Siberia . en . 5 . 3 . 179–205 . 10.1163/157005799X00188 . 0929-077X.
  3. Book: Lawler, Jennifer . Encyclopedia of the Byzantine Empire . 2015 . McFarland . 978-1-4766-0929-4 . 137 . en.
  4. Book: Rostovtzeff, Michael Ivanovitch . Skythien und der Bosporus, Band II: wiederentdeckte Kapitel und Verwandtes . 1993 . Franz Steiner Verlag . 978-3-515-06399-9 . 223 . de.
  5. Book: Kinzl . Konrad H. . A Companion to the Classical Greek World . 11 January 2010 . Wiley . 9781444334128 . 145.
  6. Mayor, A., (2009), The Poison King: the life and legend of Mithradates, Rome’s deadliest enemy, Princeton University Press, p. 345
  7. Web site: Barclay Head . Ancient coins of Pontus . 2015-03-19 . Digital Historia Numorum: A manual of Greek numismatics.
  8. Rostovtzeff, M., Queen Dynamis of Bosporus, JHS, pp. 100-105
  9. Minns, E., H., Scythians and Greeks, A Survey of Ancient History and Archaeology p. 592 https://books.google.com/books?id=ijJ4o2iorhkC&dq=coins+of+dynamis&pg=PA592
  10. Book: Numismatic Literature . 1979 . American Numismatic Society . 28 . en.
  11. Choref . Michael . 2020 . К истории правления Хедосбия . To the History of the Reign of Chedosbios . Stratum Plus Journal . Russian . 6 . 231–240.
  12. Yartsev . Sergey V. . 2019 . The Invasion of the Borans into the Bosporus in the 3rd Century AD . Humanities & Social Sciences Reviews . 7 . 6.
  13. Beydin . G. V. . 2016 . Готы на Боспоре: находки монет царя Фарсанза в ареале черняховской культуры . Goths in the Bosporus: finds of coins of King Farsanz in the area of the Chernyakhov culture . Древности. Харьковский историко-археологический ежегодник . 13 . 138–149.
  14. Book: Mitchiner, Michael . The Ancient & Classical World, 600 B.C.-A.D. 650 . 1978 . Hawkins Publications . 978-0-904173-16-1 . 69 . en.
  15. Astakhov . Ivan Alekseevich . 2021 . Changes in the Ethnic Pictures and its Impact on the Internal Political Situation in the Bosporus after Rheskuporis VI . Laplage em Revista (International) . 7 . 3A . 245–252 . 10.24115/S2446-6220202173A1397p.245-252 . 239216873 . free . 2022-05-07 . 2022-09-10 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220910210727/https://laplageemrevista.editorialaar.com/index.php/lpg1/article/download/1397/1229/2384 . dead .
  16. Frolova . Nina . Ireland . Stanley . 1995 . A Hoard of Bosporan Coins in the Period Third Century BC to AD 238 from Ancient Gorgippia (Anapa) 1987 . The Numismatic Chronicle . 155 . 21–42 . 42668787 . 0078-2696.
  17. Smekalova . T. N. . 2018 . Evolution of the Composition of Monetary Alloys of Ancient Greek States on the Black Sea Shores Based on the Data of X-Ray Fluorescent Spectroscopy with the Example of Bosporos Cimmerian . Crystallography Reports . en . 63 . 6 . 1043–1050 . 10.1134/S1063774518060299 . 104376080 . 1562-689X.
  18. Book: Stevenson, Walter . The Origins of Roman Christian Diplomacy: Constantius II and John Chrysostom as Innovators . 2020 . Routledge . 978-1-315-41500-0 . 190 . en.