Theodorus, son of Seleucus

Theodoros (Ancient Greek: Θεόδωρος), son of Seleucus and Artemo I was a Ptolemaic governor of Cyprus and admiral in the second century BC.

Life

Theodorus was named after his maternal grandfather. His mother served in the priestly role of kanephoros ('basket-bearer') of the deified Arsinoe II in Alexandria in 177/6 BC.[1] He was born before 143 BC, since he dedicated a statue of the officers of the Ptolemaic garrison on Cyprus in that year.[2] From 142 to 131 BC, Theodorus commanded the garrison at Salamis.[3] His father served as governor of the island at that time and was followed in that role by Crocus (131–124 BC).

After the end of the Ptolemaic civil war in 124 BC, Theodorus was appointed governor (strategos) of Cyprus and admiral (nauarchos). He is named in these roles repeatedly in the dedicatory inscriptions of many statues set up on Cyprus between 124 and 118 BC by Cypriot dignitaries and Ptolemaic military officials.[4][5][6][7][8] In the first inscription, Theodorus is referred to with the expansive title of strategos autokrator, which suggests the extraordinary military responsibilities of the role, which he received from his predecessor Crocus, as a result of the civil war between Ptolemy VIII and Cleopatra II. In all other inscriptions, the qualification autokrator is absent, since this military power was withdrawn from the role by Ptolemy VIII after the end of the civil war.

In older scholarship, it was claimed that Theodorus died in 118 BC, but then his name was found in a papyrus document dated to 105/4 BC,[9] in which he is named as priest of the "beneficent and mother-loving goddess" (Cleopatra III) for life and as leader of the council of Alexandria (exegetes). In this priestly role he was succeeded by Helenus of Cyrene, who was also his successor as governor of Cyprus.

Family

Theodorus was married to his niece Olympias and had a son and three daughters with her, all of whom held priesthoods:[10]

  • Demetrius, priest of Cleopatra III (hieros polos ='sacred foal'- 107/106 and 105/104 BC).[11]
  • Polycratia, priestess (athlophoros) in 116/115 and 107/106 BC.[12]
  • Artemo III/Ariadne, priestess (stephanephoros ='crown bearer') in 116/115 BC.[13]
  • Theodoris, priestess (phōsphoros='light bearer') of Cleopatra III.[14]

References

  1. British Museum EA 10518. PP III/IX 5038.
  2. Mitford (1961), p. 26, no. 69.
  3. R. Bagnall, The Administration of the Ptolemaic Possessions Outside Egypt (1976), 59.
  4. Mitford (1961), p. 29–30, No. 78. A statue, dedicated by the city of Salamis. The dedicatory inscription is in the Epigraphic Museum in Athens (KM 52).
  5. Mitford (1961), pp. 30–31, No. 79 and 81. Two statues, dedicated by the koinon (military association) of the Lycians.
  6. Mitford (1961), p. 31, no. 83. A statue, dedicated by the koinon of the Cilicians.
  7. Mitford (1961), pp. 31–32, n. 84. A statue, dedicated by the koinon of the Ionians.
  8. Mitford (1961), p. 32, no. 85 and 86. Two statues dedicated by Helenus of Cyrene, a member of the royal court who later served as governor himself.
  9. P. Koeln. 2, 81.
  10. Miltford (1961), pp. 30–31, no. 80 and 82. Olympias and one of her daughters even had a statue dedicated to them on Cyprus. The dedicatory inscription is located in the Epigraphic Museum of Athens (KM 67 and 70).
  11. PP III 5086=5346a.
  12. PP III 5228.
  13. PP III 5014.
  14. PP III 5144.

Bibliography

  • Roger S. Bagnall: The Administration of the Ptolemaic possessions outside Egypt, In: Columbia Studies in the Classical Tradition, Vol. 4 (1976), pp. 259–260.
  • Willy Clarysse, E. van 't Dack: "Prosopographia Ptolemaica III: Le clergé, le notariat, les tribunaux, no. 4984-8040" (PP III) Studia Hellenstica. 11 (1956).
  • Willy Clarysse: "Prosopographia Ptolemaica IX: Addenda et Corrigenda au volume III." (PP III/IX) Studia Hellenistica. 25 (1981).
  • L. Koenen: "Kleopatra III. als Priesterin des Alexanderkultes (P. Colon. inv. nr. 5063)," Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 5 (1970) pp. 61–84.
  • T. B. Mitford: "Seleucus and Theodorus," Opuscula Atheniensia, Vol. 1 (1953), pp. 130–171.
  • T. B. Mitford: "The Hellenistic Inscriptions of Old Paphos." The Annual of the British School at Athens 56 (1961), pp. 1–41.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.