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Coin of Seleucus II
Seleucus II Callinicus or Pogon (the epithets meaning "beautiful victor" and "bearded",
respectively) reigned from 246 to 225 BC as
head of the Seleucid dynasty. He was proclaimed king by his mother,
Laodice, whilst her partisans at Antioch made away with Berenice and her son.
Berenice's brother, Ptolemy III, who had just succeeded
to the Egyptian throne, at once invaded the Seleucid realm and marched victoriously to the Tigris or beyond, receiving the
submission of the eastern provinces, whilst his fleets swept the coasts of Asia
Minor.
In the interior of Asia Minor Seleucus maintained himself, and when Ptolemy returned to Egypt he recovered Northern Syria and
the nearer provinces of Iran. In Asia Minor his younger brother Antiochus Hierax was put up
against him by a party to which Laodice herself adhered.
At Ancyra (about 235 BC) Seleucus
sustained a crushing defeat and left the country beyond the Taurus to his
brother and the other powers of the peninsula. He then undertook an anabasis to regain Parthia, the results of which however came to nothing. According to some sources, he was even taken prisoner for
several years by the Parthian king.
In Asia Minor, Pergamum now rose to greatness under Attalus I, and Antiochus Hierax, after a failed attempt to his brother's dominions when his own were
vanishing, perished as a fugitive in Thrace in 228 BC/227 BC.
About a year later Seleucus was killed by a fall from his horse. He was succeeded by his elder son, Seleucus III Ceraunus and later by his younger son Antiochus III the Great.
This entry is based on one from the 1911
Encyclopedia Britannica.
(In 246 BC, Arasces of Parthia rebelled against Seleucid rule. The independent rule
of the Parthians slowly grew over the course of the next century until they became the inheritors of the Persian Empire.)
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