Mount Nemrut, apex of the Kingdom of Commagene
Top Image : Mount Nemrut, Turkey Located in the city of Adiyaman is a mountain 2,150 meters high.
Crowned by Mount Nemrut , the territory of the Kingdom of Commagene, landlocked by Syria on the south, Cilicia on the west, Cappadocia on the north-west, Sophene on the north-east and Osroene on the east, was not very large in circumference, and it did not even last a full two centuries from 163 BC to 17 AD. However, its lack in size and duration was made up for by its rich prelude in history and its fourth king, Antiochus I Theos, whose megalomania led to millions of people visiting his kingdom and paying tribute to him even today, as he intended. Antiochus I Theos claimed himself a god, but there is no denying that his royal lineage was impressive. He was the creator of Mount Nemrut and the monumental pantheon of statues of himself and the gods on the mountain summit provide ring-side seats to history unfolding on the staged landscape before them. Gazing towards the east over centuries, the headstone of Antiochus would have seen the rise and fall of the Achaemenid Dynasty, as well as the Parthians; and gazing towards the west he would have seen the advance of Alexander the Great, the rivalry between the Seleucid and Orontid Dynasties for control of Armenia and finally the Roman legions marching into his land, swallowing his little Kingdom of Commagene.
Historical Backdrop
The Achaemenids were a royal Persian Dynasty (730 – 330 BC) whose vast empire stretched from Egypt and south-eastern Europe in the west – including Armenia - to the Indus Valley in the east. During the eighth to seventh centuries BC, the province of Sophene (in Armenia) was part of the Kingdom of Ararat (Urartu). By 600 BC it was ruled by the Orontids of the Kingdom of Armenia.
The origin of the Orontid Dynasty of Armenia is shrouded in mist. Xenophon’s Cyropaedia (370 BC) the partly fictional biography of Cyrus the Great, (r 559 – 530 BC) founder of Persia's Achaemenid Empire, mentions the unnamed King of Armenia. His name is supplied later by fifth-century BC Armenian historian Movses Khorenatsi in his History of Armenia as ‘Orontes’. Both references to this Orontes as the original King of Armenia, who met with Cyrus the Great, has been reviewed as legendary rather than factual. Tigranes, son of Orontes was the legendary Armenian prince, contemporary and friend of Cyrus the Great.
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