Cotys II (Odrysian)

Cotys II (Ancient Greek: Κότυς, Kotys) was a possible king of the Odrysians in Thrace in the late 4th or early 3rd century BC. His one secure attestation is in an inscription from Athens dated to 330 BC; the inscription honored Reboulas, brother of Cotys and son of Seuthes. This is generally interpreted to mean that Cotys, not yet king, was the son of Seuthes III by a marriage earlier than that to Berenike (since their four sons did not include a Cotys or a Reboulas).[1] Building on this interpretation of the evidence, a certain Gonimase (Gonimasē), wife of a Seuthes, buried in a tomb near Smjadovo,[2] has been proposed as Seuthes III's earlier wife and mother of Cotys and Reboulas.[3] However, the Athenian inscription precedes the first clear attestation of Seuthes III by about seven years, and various scholars have proposed Seuthes I,[4] Seuthes II,[5] and even a non-reigning Seuthes[6] as the father of Cotys and Reboulas. One scholar conjectures that Cotys was an elder son of Seuthes III but did not live to succeed his father, dying during the siege of Callatis (Mangalia) in 310 BC.[7] While it is likely that Cotys II was a Thracian ruler in this period, it is not possible to establish his precise relationship (chronologically and genealogically) to Seuthes III. The overall chronology and the names suggest the possibility that Cotys II may have been the father of Raizdos and grandfather of the latter's son Cotys III.[8]

See also

References

  1. For example, Tačeva 2006: 186-193; Manov 2019: 105.
  2. Dana 2015: 246-247.
  3. Manov 2019: 105.
  4. For example, Delev 1997: n. 21.
  5. For example, Delev 2015: 52.
  6. For example, Beloch 1923: 90-91.
  7. Manov 2019: 106.
  8. Mladjov, Rulers of Thrace, University of Michigan
  • K. J. Beloch, Griechische Geschichte, vol. 3:2, Berlin, 1923.
  • D. Dana, Inscriptions, in: J. Valeva et al. (eds.), A Companion to Ancient Thrace, Wiley, 2015: 243-264.
  • P. Delev, “Filip II i zalezăt na Goljamoto Odrisko carstvo v Trakija,” Šumenski universitet “Episkop Konstantin Preslavski,” Trudove na katedrite po istorija i bogoslovie 1 (1997) 7-40.
  • P. Delev, Thrace from the Assassination of Kotys I to Koroupedion (360-281 BC), in: J. Valeva et al. (eds.), A Companion to Ancient Thrace, Wiley, 2015: 48-58.
  • M. Manov, "The Hellenistic Tomb with Greek Inscription from Smyadovo, Bulgaria - Reconsidered," Journal of Ancient History and Archaeology 6/3 (2019) 99-118.
  • M. Tačeva, The Kings of Ancient Thrace, vol. 1, Sofia, 2006.
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