151: 2 Syria 2 War

Coin depicting Antiochos II Theos via Wikimedia

Trevor’s WiFi is back, and so is the History of Persia. Although he started in a relatively strong position, the new Seleucid king Antiochus II’s reign was immediately derailed by the Second Syrian War. Rebellions, invasions, and alliances ensue.
Download

Visit https://HoPfulMedia.com.co to support this show!
Support BlueSky Facebook Instagram

149: Theogonies

“Phanes” by Francisco Salviati, 16th Century

The Ancient Greeks had many ideas about the origins of the universe and humanity over the centuries. The best known is probably Hesiod’s Theogony, but the Orphics developed many of their own versions of the story. Today, we explore some of those competing ideas about the dawn of Time.
Download

Visit https://HoPfulMedia.com.co to support this show!
Support BlueSky Facebook Instagram

146: Dating in the Family

The Xian Stele, Chinese with a Syriac translation date Year of the Greeks 1092, over 1000 years into the Seleucid Era via Wikimedia

Like any good king, Antiochus I Soter had a royal family, and as his reign comes to an end, it’s time to talk about them, from his brother in Anatolia to troublesome sons and wide ranging in-laws. He’s in his Seleucid Era.
Download

Visit https://HoPfulMedia.com.co to support this show!
Support BlueSky Facebook Instagram

145: From Antiochus to Ashoka

Sketch of the Aramaic inscription of Ashoka at Khalsi

After losing a large piece of the eastern empire to Chandragupta Maurya, the Seleucids didn’t just ignore their eastern neighbors. In the later decades of Seleucus’ reign, Megasthenes established diplomatic ties between the two eastern kingdoms. In the generations that followed, diplomacy and trade helped to stabilize both the Maurya and the Seleucids.
Download

Visit https://HoPfulMedia.com.co to support this show!
Support BlueSky Facebook Instagram

143: The First Syrian War

Ptolemy II and Arsinoe II via Wikimedia

No sooner had Antiochus I defeated the new-found Galatians in Anatolia, than war erupted in the south. Magas, brother of Ptolemy II and self-declared King of Cyrene, formed a marriage alliance with Antiochus before fighting a war of succession against his brother, dragging the Seleucid Empire along for the ride.
Download

Visit https://HoPfulMedia.com.co to support this show!
Support BlueSky Facebook Instagram

142: Gauls With Gall

Map of Galatian settlement routes before the Elephant Victory, via Wikimedia

After sweeping through the Balkans with their kin, three tribes of Gauls in Thrace drew the attention of the embattled Nicomeides of Bithynia as potential allies in his war against a Seleucid-backed opponent. The Gauls crossed the Bosporus and swept through Nicomeides enemies with ease before turning their sites on the war torn regions of Seleucid Anatolia.
Download

Visit https://HoPfulMedia.com.co to support this show!
Support BlueSky Facebook Instagram