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Agiad dynasty

The Agiad dynasty was one of the two royal families of Sparta, a powerful city-state of Ancient Greece. The Agiads were seniors to the other royal house, the Eurypontids, with whom they had an enduring rivalry. Their hypothetical founder was Agis I, possibly the first king of Sparta at the end of the 10th century BC, who gave his name to the dynasty. The last Agiad king was Agesipolis III, deposed by the Eurypontid Lycurgus in 215 BC. Their most famous member was Leonidas I, known for his heroic death at the Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BC.

Leonidas at Thermopylae (1814) Jacques-Louis David

History edit

In order to explain the peculiarity of the Spartan two kings, the Spartans elaborated a legend saying that Aristodemos—the first king of Sparta—had twins, Eurysthenes and Prokles. Since the Spartans did not know who was born first, they opted for a diarchy, a college of two kings with the same power; Eurysthenes being the first Agiad, Prokles the first Eurypontid.[1]

Modern scholars consider instead Agis I and Eurypon to be the founders of each dynasty, as they give their name to their descendants, not the mythical twins.[2][3] The two dynasties were however not related until the Hellenistic era and the Eurypontids reached royal status much later than the Agiads. As a result, in order to balance the two royal lines, several names were inserted in the list of Eurypontid kings, such as Soos (meaning "stability"),[4] Prytanis and Eunomos (said to have ruled at the same time as Lycurgus). Thus, while the Agiads might have ruled from the end of the 10th century, the Eurypontids only received the kingship in the beginning of the 8th century at the earliest.

It is probable that the two dynasties came to rule jointly under the kings Archelaos (Agiad) and Charillos (Eurypontid) in the 8th century, as a result of the synoecism that created the polis of Sparta.[5] The city was composed of five villages (Pitana, Mesoa, Limnai, Kynosoura, Amyklai), the latter of which merged with the other four after the initial synoecism. The Agiads had their burial ground located in Pitana, while the Eurypontids were in Limnai, which suggest that the dual monarchy was created when the four villages merged.[6] Archelaus and Charilaus are the first kings of Sparta that are considered together in ancient sources: following the oracle of Delphi, they destroyed and conquered Aigys, in the northwest of Sparta.[7] The connection of the Spartan kings with Herakles likely dates of the same period, which also witnessed the construction of the Menelaion, a heroon to Menelaus.[8]

The genealogies given by the Greek writers Herodotus and Pausanias remain highly suspect before the 5th century, as it is not conceivably believable to have 16 direct successions (from father to son) from Eurystenes and Prokles. A lot of successions must have been collateral, especially when considering that of the 26 successions that took place after 491, only 14 were from father to son.[9] Moreover, ancient chronologies produce an average length of 40 years per reign, which is far too long and a consequence of the descent from Herakles myth. Paul Cartledge suggest an average length of 30 years per generation, thus giving a regnal date of c. 930–900 for Agis I, founder of the Agiads. These dates relate well with the archaeological evidence.[10]

Members edit

Spartan kings are shown in bold, all dates BC.

  • Eurysthenes, elder twin son of Aristodemus. He was invented by the Spartans in order to push back the date of the Dorian conquest of Laconia, as well as to explain the origin of the Spartan diarchy.[11]
  • Lathria, wife of Eurystenes, daughter of Thersander, another Heraclid, and twin sister of Anaxandra, the wife of Prokles, the twin brother of her husband.[1]
  • Agis I, allegedly son of Eurysthenes and eponym of the Agiad dynasty. Some modern historians consider he could have been the first historical king of Sparta, with a reign dating from c.930–c.900.[12]
  • Echestratus, allegedly son of Agis I, with a reign perhaps dated from the beginning of the 9th century, c.900–c.870.[13][12]
  • Lycurgus, mythical reformer of Sparta. He is found as the son of Agis I, brother of Echestratus and regent for his nephew Labotas in Herodotus.[14] Modern scholars thinks Herodotus reproduced an attempt from the Agiads to poach him from the Eurypontids.[15]
  • Labotas, allegedly son of Echestratus, with a reign hypothetically dated from c.870–c.840.[16][12]
  • Doryssus, allegedly son of Labotas, with a reign hypothetically dated from c.840–c.815.[12]
  • Agesilaus I, allegedly son of Doryssus, with a reign hypothetically dated from c.815–c.785.[12][17]
  • Archelaus, allegedly son of Agesilaus I, with a reign hypothetically dated from c.785–c.760.[12] He was perhaps the first Agiad king to reign alongside an Eurypontid (Charilaus).[18]
  • Teleclus, allegedly son of Archelaus, king perhaps dated from c. 760–c.740.[19][20][21] He was reputedly murdered by Messenians.[22]
  • Alcmenes, allegedly son of Agesilaus I, with a reign possibly dated from c.740–c.700.[12]
  • Polydorus, allegedly son of Teleclus, king in the first half of the 7th century.[23][24] He was described as a revolutionary king, pushing for a land-reform, but was murdered by an opponent named Polemarchus.[25][26]
  • Eurycrates, allegedly son of Polydorus, with a reign possibly dated from c.665–c.640.[12]
  • Anaxander, allegedly son of Eurycrates, with a reign possibly dated from c.640–c.615.[12]
  • Leandris, wife of Anaxander and mother of Eurycratidas.[27]
  • Eurycratides, son of Anaxander, king from c.615 to c.590.[12]
  • Leon, son of Eurycratides, king from c.590 to c.560.[28][29][30]
  • Anaxandridas II, son of Leon, king from c.560 to 524. He was married to his niece, but as he remained sonless, he married a second time. From his second wife, he had Cleomenes I; then he returned to his first wife and had three sons in quick succession: Dorieus, Leonidas I and Cleombrotus, the latter two perhaps as twins.
  • Cleomenes I, first son of Anaxandridas II, king from 524 to 490. He engineered the deposition of the Eurypontid Damaratus in 491, for which he was sent into exile. He was recalled soon after, but was possibly murdered by his half-brother Leonidas I.[31]
  • Dorieus, second son of Anaxandridas II. He challenged the claim of his half-brother Cleomenes I when their father died. Refusing to be ruled by him, he moved to colonial ventures in Libya and Sicily, where he died c.510.[32][33]
  • Leonidas I, third son of Anaxandridas II, king from 490 to 480. He famously died in the Battle of Thermopylae.[34]
  • Cleombrotus, fourth son of Anaxandridas II, died in 479. He was regent for Pleistarchus in 480, and died just before the Battle of Plataea in 479.[35]
  • Gorgo, daughter of Cleomenes I, she married her uncle Leonidas I. Mother of Pleistarchus.[36]
  • Alkathoa, wife of Cleombrotus, mother of Pausanias and Nicomedes.[37]
  • Euryanax, son of Dorieus, perhaps illegitimate. He fought at the Battle of Plataea.[38][39]
  • Pleistarchus, son of Leonidas and Gordo, king between 480 and 459.[40][41]
  • Pausanias "the Regent", first son of Cleombrotus and Alkathoa, regent of his nephew Pleistarchus in 479. Although he won the Battle of Plataea, he was suspected of Medism and executed by the ephors.[42]
  • Nicomedes, second son of Cleombrotus and Alkathoa, regent of his nephew Pleistoanax in 458. He won the Battle of Tanagra in 457.[43][44]
  • Pleistoanax, first son of Pausanias the regent, king between 459 and 409. He was exiled for 18 years for having allegedly taken a bribe from the Athenian Pericles, between 445 to 427. His son Pausanias reigned meanwhile. He returned to Sparta in 427 and reigned until his death in 409.[45][46]
  • Cleomenes, second son of Pausanias the regent, regent himself of his nephew Pausanias when his brother Pleistoanax was in exile.[47][46]
  • Aristocles, third son of Pausanias the Regent. He helped his brother Pleistoanax to bribe the Pythia in order to secure his return from exile. He later fought in the Battle of Mantinea in 418.[48][49]
  • Pausanias, son of Pleistoanax, king for a first time during the exile of his father between 445 to 427. His reign resumed on the death of his father in 409, until 395 when he had to go into exile.[50][46] He also wrote historical treaties during his exile.
  • Agesipolis I, first son of Pausanias, king from 395 to 380. As he was still a minor in 395, Aristodemus became his regent. He died in Chalkidice in the summer of 380.[51]
  • Cleombrotus I, second son of Pausanias, king from 380 to 371. He died at the Battle of Leuctra.[52]
  • Aristodemus, regent for Agesipolis I in 395, he won the Battle of Nemea in 394.[53]
  • Agesipolis II, first son of Cleombrotus I, king from 371 to 370.[54]
  • Cleomenes II, second son of Cleombrotus I, king from 370 to 309.[47]
  • Acrotatus, first son of Cleomenes II, died before his father. He notably fought the tyrant Agathocles in Sicily c.314.[55]
  • Cleonymus, second son of Cleomenes II, he might have contested the claim of his nephew Areus I in 309, but became his regent instead. He had a long career as general for Sparta and as mercenary, in Italy, Crete, Corcyra, Messenia, etc. After his wife Chilonis left him for Acrotatus (Areus' son) c.275, he went into exile in Epirus and fought against Sparta during Pyrrhus' invasion of the Peloponnese in 272.[56]
  • Areus I, son of Acrotatus, king from 309 to c.265. He notably transformed Sparta into a Hellenistic kingdom, but died before the walls of Corinth during the Chremonidean War.[57]
  • Acrotatus, son of Areus, king from c.265 to c.262. His affair with Chilonis triggered the defection of Cleonymus to Epirus. He died before Megalopolis at the end of the Chremonidean War c.262.[55]
  • Chilonis, a woman of the Eurypontid dynasty, first betrothed to Cleonymus, she left him to marry the future king Acrotatus.[58]
  • Areus II, son of Acrotatus and Chilonis, king from c.262 to 254. He was born after his father's death and died at 8 years old; his cousin Leonidas was his regent throughout his reign.[59][60]
  • Leonidas II, son of Cleonymus, king from 254 to c.236, regent of Areus II before his accession. In his youth, he served in the court of Seleucus I. He was forced into exile by the Eurypontid king Agis IV between 243 and 241.[61][62]
  • Cratesiclea, wife of Leonidas II. She married Megistonos after the death of Leonidas. She went into exile in Egypt with her son Cleomenes III and was killed there in 219.[63]
  • Cleombrotus II, put on the throne by the Eurypontid Agis IV to replace Leonidas II forced into exile in 243–241, but in turn went into exile when Leonidas was restored. He was the son-in-law of Leonidas II, but his relationship with the other Agiads is uncertain.[64]
  • Chilonis, daughter of Leonidas II, wife of Cleombrotus II. She followed her father into exile in 243, then her husband when he was in turn exiled in 241[65]
  • Cleomenes III, elder son of Leonidas II and Cratesiclea, king from c.236 to 222. He continued the social reforms of Agis IV, but was defeated by Macedonia at the Battle of Selasia in 222, after which he went into exile in Egypt. He unsuccessfully tried a coup against Ptolemy IV in 219, then committed suicide.[66]
  • Agiatis, wife of Cleomenes III, she had previously been married to Agis IV. She had one son from Agis (Eudamidas III) and at least two sons from Cleomenes, who are unknown.[67]
  • Eucleidas, second son of Leonidas II and Cratesiclea, he was appointed as co-king by his elder brother Cleomenes III in the place of the Eurypontid Archidamus V. He reigned between 227 and 222, when he died in the Battle of Sellasia.[68][69]
  • Agesipolis, son of Cleombrotus II and Chilonis.[70]
  • Cleomenes, son of Cleombrotus II and Chilonis. He was regent for his nephew Agesipolis III in 219.[71]
  • Agesipolis III, son of Agesipolis, grandson of Cleombrotus II, king in 219 at the death of Cleomenes III, but dethroned by the Eurypontid Lycurgus in 215.[69] He was sent as envoy to Rome c.184, but killed by pirates on the way.[72]

Family tree edit

Agiad edit

Legend
Red
King of Sparta
Orange
Regent
EurysthenesLathria
Agis I
c.930–c.900
Echestratus
c.900–c.870
Labotas
c.870–c.840
Doryssus
c.840–c.815
Agesilaus I

c.815–c.785

Archelaus
c.785–c.760
Teleclus
c. 760–c.740
Alcmenes
c.740–c.700
Polydorus
c.700–c.665
Eurycrates
c.665-c.640
Anaxander
c.640-c.615
Leandris
Eurycratides
c.615-c.590
Leon
c.590-c.560
daughter
(2)Anaxandridas II
c.560–524
(1)
Cleomenes I
524–490
Dorieus
GorgoLeonidas I
490–480
CleombrotusAlkathoaEuryanax
Pleistarchus
480–459
PausaniasNicomedes
Pleistoanax
459–409
CleomenesAristocles
Pausanias
409–395
Agesipolis I
395–380
Cleombrotus I
380–371
Agesipolis II
371–370
Cleomenes II
370–309
AcrotatusCleonymus
Areus I
309–265
Acrotatus
265–262
ChilonisLeonidas II
254–242
241-236
Cratesiclea
Areus II
262–254
Cleombrotus II
242–241
ChilonisEucleidas
227–222
Cleomenes III
236–222
Agiatis
CleomenesAgesipolis2 sons
Agesipolis III
219–215

References edit

  1. ^ a b Hard, Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology, p. 291.
  2. ^ Cartledge, Agesilaos, p. 89.
  3. ^ N. G. L. Hammond, "The Peloponnese", in Boardman et al., Cambridge Ancient History, vol. III, part 1, p. 734, is a notable exception as he writes "the Spartan account is infinitely more probable".
  4. ^ Cartledge, Agesilaos, p. 296. Soos was likely added in the 4th century.
  5. ^ Cartledge, Agesilaos, p. 90.
  6. ^ Cartledge, Agesilaos, pp. 90, 91.
  7. ^ Cartledge, Agesilaos, p. 92.
  8. ^ Cartledge, Agesilaos, p. 295.
  9. ^ Cartledge, Agesilaos, pp. 296, 297.
  10. ^ Cartledge, Agesilaos, pp. 297, 298.
  11. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 59.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Forrest, History of Sparta, p. 21.
  13. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 60.
  14. ^ Asheri et al., Commentary, p. 127.
  15. ^ den Boer, "Political Propaganda", p. 165.
  16. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 80.
  17. ^ Cartledge, Agesilaos, p. 22.
  18. ^ Cartledge, Sparta and Lakonia, pp. 89, 92.
  19. ^ Forrest, History of Sparta, p. 21, dates his reign from c.760–c.740.
  20. ^ Cartledge, Sparta and Lakonia, pp. 84, 94.
  21. ^ Parker, "Some Dates", p. 59, gives the dates of c.730–c.705 for his reign.
  22. ^ Cartledge, Sparta and Lakonia, p. 98.
  23. ^ Forrest, History of Sparta, p. 21, gives c.700–c.665.
  24. ^ Parker, "Some Dates", p. 59, favours c.680–c.653.
  25. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, pp. 108, 109.
  26. ^ Cartledge, Sparta and Lakonia, pp. 115, 116.
  27. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 82.
  28. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, pp. 82, 83.
  29. ^ Forrest, History of Sparta, p. 21, dates his accession from c.590.
  30. ^ Cartledge, Sparta and Lakonia, p. 103, dates his accession to c.575.
  31. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, pp. 76, 77.
  32. ^ Cartledge, Sparta and Lakonia, p. 125.
  33. ^ Powell (ed.), Companion to Sparta, pp. 222, 223, 253, 254, 272, 273, 457.
  34. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 84.
  35. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 75.
  36. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 38.
  37. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, pp. 16, 17.
  38. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 57.
  39. ^ Cartledge, Sparta and Lakonia, p. 178.
  40. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, pp. 105, 106.
  41. ^ White, "Some Agiad Dates", p. 140, writes that he "died in 459/8 or 458/7".
  42. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, pp. 102, 103, favours a date of 469/8 for his death.
  43. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, pp. 97, 98.
  44. ^ White, "Some Agiad Dates", p. 140.
  45. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 106.
  46. ^ a b c White, "Some Agiad Dates", p. 141
  47. ^ a b Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 77.
  48. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, pp. 27, 28.
  49. ^ White, "Some Agiad Dates", pp. 141, 142.
  50. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, pp. 103, 104.
  51. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 9.
  52. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, pp. 75, 76.
  53. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, p. 27; does not tell his exact relationship with the other Agiads.
  54. ^ Poralla & Bradford, Prosopographie, pp. 9, 10.
  55. ^ a b Bradford, Prosopography, p. 22.
  56. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, pp. 246, 247.
  57. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, pp. 43, 44.
  58. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, pp. 452, 453, assumed she was already married to Cleonymus when she left him.
  59. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, p. 44.
  60. ^ Powell (ed.), Companion to Sparta, p. 109.
  61. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, p. 261.
  62. ^ Powell (ed.), Companion to Sparta, pp. 390–392.
  63. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, p. 252.
  64. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, p. 239.
  65. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, p. 453.
  66. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, p. 240.
  67. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, p. 15.
  68. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, pp. 173, 174.
  69. ^ a b Powell (ed.), Companion to Sparta, p. 375.
  70. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, p. 12.
  71. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, p. 241.
  72. ^ Bradford, Prosopography, pp. 12, 13.

Bibliography edit

  • David Asheri, Alan Lloyd, Aldo Corcella, A Commentary on Herodotus, Books 1–4, Oxford University Press, 2007. ISBN 978-0-19-814956-9
  • John Boardman, I. E. S. Edwards, N. G. L. Hammond, L. Sollberger, The Cambridge Ancient History, vol. III, part 1, The Prehistory of the Balkans; and the Middle East and the Aegean world, tenth to eighth centuries B.C., Cambridge University Press, 1982. ISBN 0-521-22496-9
  • W. den Boer, "Political Propaganda in Greek Chronology", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, Bd. 5, H. 2 (Jun., 1956), pp. 162–177.
  • Alfred S. Bradford, A Prosopography of Lacedaemonians from the Death of Alexander the Great, 323 B. C., to the Sack of Sparta by Alaric, A. D. 396, Munich, Beck, 1977. ISBN 3-406-04797-1
  • John Briscoe, A Commentary on Livy: Books 34 - 37, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1981. ISBN 978-0-19-814455-7
  • Paul Cartledge, Agesilaos and the Crisis of Sparta, Baltimore, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1987. ISBN 978-0-7156-3032-7
  • ——, Sparta and Lakonia, A Regional History 1300–362 BC, London, Routledge, 2002 (originally published in 1979). ISBN 0-415-26276-3
  • —— & Antony Spawforth, Hellenistic and Roman Sparta, A tale of two cities, London and New York, Routledge, 2002 (originally published in 1989). ISBN 0-415-26277-1
  • W. G. Forrest, A History of Sparta, New York, Norton, 1986. SBN 393004813
  • Robin Hard, The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology: Based on H.J. Rose's "Handbook of Greek Mythology", London/New York, Routledge, 2004. ISBN 978-0-415-18636-0
  • G. L. Huxley, "Problems in the "Chronography" of Eusebius", Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy: Archaeology, Culture, History, Literature, 1982, Vol. 82C, pp. 183–196.
  • E. I. McQueen, "The Eurypontid House in Hellenistic Sparta", Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, Bd. 39, H. 2 (1990), pp. 163–181.
  • Victor Parker, "Some Dates In Early Spartan History", Klio, 75, 1993, pp. 45–60.
  • Paul Poralla & Alfred S. Bradford, Prosopographie der Lakedaimonier, bis auf die Zeit Alexanders des Grossen, Chicago, 1985 (originally published in 1913). OCLC 1151065049
  • Anton Powell (editor), A Companion to Sparta, Hoboken, Wiley, 2018. ISBN 978-1-4051-8869-2
  • M. L. West, "Alcmanica", The Classical Quarterly, Vol. 15, No. 2 (Nov., 1965), pp. 188–202.
  • Mary E. White, "Some Agiad Dates: Pausanias and His Sons", The Journal of Hellenic Studies, Vol. 84 (1964), pp. 140–152.

agiad, dynasty, royal, families, sparta, powerful, city, state, ancient, greece, agiads, were, seniors, other, royal, house, eurypontids, with, whom, they, enduring, rivalry, their, hypothetical, founder, agis, possibly, first, king, sparta, 10th, century, gav. The Agiad dynasty was one of the two royal families of Sparta a powerful city state of Ancient Greece The Agiads were seniors to the other royal house the Eurypontids with whom they had an enduring rivalry Their hypothetical founder was Agis I possibly the first king of Sparta at the end of the 10th century BC who gave his name to the dynasty The last Agiad king was Agesipolis III deposed by the Eurypontid Lycurgus in 215 BC Their most famous member was Leonidas I known for his heroic death at the Battle of Thermopylae in 480 BC Leonidas at Thermopylae 1814 Jacques Louis David Contents 1 History 2 Members 3 Family tree 3 1 Agiad 4 References 5 BibliographyHistory editIn order to explain the peculiarity of the Spartan two kings the Spartans elaborated a legend saying that Aristodemos the first king of Sparta had twins Eurysthenes and Prokles Since the Spartans did not know who was born first they opted for a diarchy a college of two kings with the same power Eurysthenes being the first Agiad Prokles the first Eurypontid 1 Modern scholars consider instead Agis I and Eurypon to be the founders of each dynasty as they give their name to their descendants not the mythical twins 2 3 The two dynasties were however not related until the Hellenistic era and the Eurypontids reached royal status much later than the Agiads As a result in order to balance the two royal lines several names were inserted in the list of Eurypontid kings such as Soos meaning stability 4 Prytanis and Eunomos said to have ruled at the same time as Lycurgus Thus while the Agiads might have ruled from the end of the 10th century the Eurypontids only received the kingship in the beginning of the 8th century at the earliest It is probable that the two dynasties came to rule jointly under the kings Archelaos Agiad and Charillos Eurypontid in the 8th century as a result of the synoecism that created the polis of Sparta 5 The city was composed of five villages Pitana Mesoa Limnai Kynosoura Amyklai the latter of which merged with the other four after the initial synoecism The Agiads had their burial ground located in Pitana while the Eurypontids were in Limnai which suggest that the dual monarchy was created when the four villages merged 6 Archelaus and Charilaus are the first kings of Sparta that are considered together in ancient sources following the oracle of Delphi they destroyed and conquered Aigys in the northwest of Sparta 7 The connection of the Spartan kings with Herakles likely dates of the same period which also witnessed the construction of the Menelaion a heroon to Menelaus 8 The genealogies given by the Greek writers Herodotus and Pausanias remain highly suspect before the 5th century as it is not conceivably believable to have 16 direct successions from father to son from Eurystenes and Prokles A lot of successions must have been collateral especially when considering that of the 26 successions that took place after 491 only 14 were from father to son 9 Moreover ancient chronologies produce an average length of 40 years per reign which is far too long and a consequence of the descent from Herakles myth Paul Cartledge suggest an average length of 30 years per generation thus giving a regnal date of c 930 900 for Agis I founder of the Agiads These dates relate well with the archaeological evidence 10 Members editSpartan kings are shown in bold all dates BC Eurysthenes elder twin son of Aristodemus He was invented by the Spartans in order to push back the date of the Dorian conquest of Laconia as well as to explain the origin of the Spartan diarchy 11 Lathria wife of Eurystenes daughter of Thersander another Heraclid and twin sister of Anaxandra the wife of Prokles the twin brother of her husband 1 Agis I allegedly son of Eurysthenes and eponym of the Agiad dynasty Some modern historians consider he could have been the first historical king of Sparta with a reign dating from c 930 c 900 12 Echestratus allegedly son of Agis I with a reign perhaps dated from the beginning of the 9th century c 900 c 870 13 12 Lycurgus mythical reformer of Sparta He is found as the son of Agis I brother of Echestratus and regent for his nephew Labotas in Herodotus 14 Modern scholars thinks Herodotus reproduced an attempt from the Agiads to poach him from the Eurypontids 15 Labotas allegedly son of Echestratus with a reign hypothetically dated from c 870 c 840 16 12 Doryssus allegedly son of Labotas with a reign hypothetically dated from c 840 c 815 12 Agesilaus I allegedly son of Doryssus with a reign hypothetically dated from c 815 c 785 12 17 Archelaus allegedly son of Agesilaus I with a reign hypothetically dated from c 785 c 760 12 He was perhaps the first Agiad king to reign alongside an Eurypontid Charilaus 18 Teleclus allegedly son of Archelaus king perhaps dated from c 760 c 740 19 20 21 He was reputedly murdered by Messenians 22 Alcmenes allegedly son of Agesilaus I with a reign possibly dated from c 740 c 700 12 Polydorus allegedly son of Teleclus king in the first half of the 7th century 23 24 He was described as a revolutionary king pushing for a land reform but was murdered by an opponent named Polemarchus 25 26 Eurycrates allegedly son of Polydorus with a reign possibly dated from c 665 c 640 12 Anaxander allegedly son of Eurycrates with a reign possibly dated from c 640 c 615 12 Leandris wife of Anaxander and mother of Eurycratidas 27 Eurycratides son of Anaxander king from c 615 to c 590 12 Leon son of Eurycratides king from c 590 to c 560 28 29 30 Anaxandridas II son of Leon king from c 560 to 524 He was married to his niece but as he remained sonless he married a second time From his second wife he had Cleomenes I then he returned to his first wife and had three sons in quick succession Dorieus Leonidas I and Cleombrotus the latter two perhaps as twins Cleomenes I first son of Anaxandridas II king from 524 to 490 He engineered the deposition of the Eurypontid Damaratus in 491 for which he was sent into exile He was recalled soon after but was possibly murdered by his half brother Leonidas I 31 Dorieus second son of Anaxandridas II He challenged the claim of his half brother Cleomenes I when their father died Refusing to be ruled by him he moved to colonial ventures in Libya and Sicily where he died c 510 32 33 Leonidas I third son of Anaxandridas II king from 490 to 480 He famously died in the Battle of Thermopylae 34 Cleombrotus fourth son of Anaxandridas II died in 479 He was regent for Pleistarchus in 480 and died just before the Battle of Plataea in 479 35 Gorgo daughter of Cleomenes I she married her uncle Leonidas I Mother of Pleistarchus 36 Alkathoa wife of Cleombrotus mother of Pausanias and Nicomedes 37 Euryanax son of Dorieus perhaps illegitimate He fought at the Battle of Plataea 38 39 Pleistarchus son of Leonidas and Gordo king between 480 and 459 40 41 Pausanias the Regent first son of Cleombrotus and Alkathoa regent of his nephew Pleistarchus in 479 Although he won the Battle of Plataea he was suspected of Medism and executed by the ephors 42 Nicomedes second son of Cleombrotus and Alkathoa regent of his nephew Pleistoanax in 458 He won the Battle of Tanagra in 457 43 44 Pleistoanax first son of Pausanias the regent king between 459 and 409 He was exiled for 18 years for having allegedly taken a bribe from the Athenian Pericles between 445 to 427 His son Pausanias reigned meanwhile He returned to Sparta in 427 and reigned until his death in 409 45 46 Cleomenes second son of Pausanias the regent regent himself of his nephew Pausanias when his brother Pleistoanax was in exile 47 46 Aristocles third son of Pausanias the Regent He helped his brother Pleistoanax to bribe the Pythia in order to secure his return from exile He later fought in the Battle of Mantinea in 418 48 49 Pausanias son of Pleistoanax king for a first time during the exile of his father between 445 to 427 His reign resumed on the death of his father in 409 until 395 when he had to go into exile 50 46 He also wrote historical treaties during his exile Agesipolis I first son of Pausanias king from 395 to 380 As he was still a minor in 395 Aristodemus became his regent He died in Chalkidice in the summer of 380 51 Cleombrotus I second son of Pausanias king from 380 to 371 He died at the Battle of Leuctra 52 Aristodemus regent for Agesipolis I in 395 he won the Battle of Nemea in 394 53 Agesipolis II first son of Cleombrotus I king from 371 to 370 54 Cleomenes II second son of Cleombrotus I king from 370 to 309 47 Acrotatus first son of Cleomenes II died before his father He notably fought the tyrant Agathocles in Sicily c 314 55 Cleonymus second son of Cleomenes II he might have contested the claim of his nephew Areus I in 309 but became his regent instead He had a long career as general for Sparta and as mercenary in Italy Crete Corcyra Messenia etc After his wife Chilonis left him for Acrotatus Areus son c 275 he went into exile in Epirus and fought against Sparta during Pyrrhus invasion of the Peloponnese in 272 56 Areus I son of Acrotatus king from 309 to c 265 He notably transformed Sparta into a Hellenistic kingdom but died before the walls of Corinth during the Chremonidean War 57 Acrotatus son of Areus king from c 265 to c 262 His affair with Chilonis triggered the defection of Cleonymus to Epirus He died before Megalopolis at the end of the Chremonidean War c 262 55 Chilonis a woman of the Eurypontid dynasty first betrothed to Cleonymus she left him to marry the future king Acrotatus 58 Areus II son of Acrotatus and Chilonis king from c 262 to 254 He was born after his father s death and died at 8 years old his cousin Leonidas was his regent throughout his reign 59 60 Leonidas II son of Cleonymus king from 254 to c 236 regent of Areus II before his accession In his youth he served in the court of Seleucus I He was forced into exile by the Eurypontid king Agis IV between 243 and 241 61 62 Cratesiclea wife of Leonidas II She married Megistonos after the death of Leonidas She went into exile in Egypt with her son Cleomenes III and was killed there in 219 63 Cleombrotus II put on the throne by the Eurypontid Agis IV to replace Leonidas II forced into exile in 243 241 but in turn went into exile when Leonidas was restored He was the son in law of Leonidas II but his relationship with the other Agiads is uncertain 64 Chilonis daughter of Leonidas II wife of Cleombrotus II She followed her father into exile in 243 then her husband when he was in turn exiled in 241 65 Cleomenes III elder son of Leonidas II and Cratesiclea king from c 236 to 222 He continued the social reforms of Agis IV but was defeated by Macedonia at the Battle of Selasia in 222 after which he went into exile in Egypt He unsuccessfully tried a coup against Ptolemy IV in 219 then committed suicide 66 Agiatis wife of Cleomenes III she had previously been married to Agis IV She had one son from Agis Eudamidas III and at least two sons from Cleomenes who are unknown 67 Eucleidas second son of Leonidas II and Cratesiclea he was appointed as co king by his elder brother Cleomenes III in the place of the Eurypontid Archidamus V He reigned between 227 and 222 when he died in the Battle of Sellasia 68 69 Agesipolis son of Cleombrotus II and Chilonis 70 Cleomenes son of Cleombrotus II and Chilonis He was regent for his nephew Agesipolis III in 219 71 Agesipolis III son of Agesipolis grandson of Cleombrotus II king in 219 at the death of Cleomenes III but dethroned by the Eurypontid Lycurgus in 215 69 He was sent as envoy to Rome c 184 but killed by pirates on the way 72 Family tree editAgiad edit Legend Red King of Sparta Orange Regent EurysthenesLathria Agis Ic 930 c 900 Echestratusc 900 c 870 Labotasc 870 c 840 Doryssusc 840 c 815 Agesilaus Ic 815 c 785 Archelausc 785 c 760 Teleclusc 760 c 740 Alcmenesc 740 c 700 Polydorusc 700 c 665 Eurycratesc 665 c 640 Anaxanderc 640 c 615Leandris Eurycratidesc 615 c 590 Leonc 590 c 560 daughter 2 Anaxandridas IIc 560 524 1 Cleomenes I524 490Dorieus GorgoLeonidas I490 480CleombrotusAlkathoaEuryanax Pleistarchus480 459PausaniasNicomedes Pleistoanax459 409CleomenesAristocles Pausanias409 395 Agesipolis I395 380Cleombrotus I380 371 Agesipolis II371 370Cleomenes II370 309 AcrotatusCleonymus Areus I309 265 Acrotatus265 262ChilonisLeonidas II254 242241 236Cratesiclea Areus II262 254Cleombrotus II242 241ChilonisEucleidas227 222Cleomenes III236 222Agiatis CleomenesAgesipolis2 sons Agesipolis III219 215References edit a b Hard Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology p 291 Cartledge Agesilaos p 89 N G L Hammond The Peloponnese in Boardman et al Cambridge Ancient History vol III part 1 p 734 is a notable exception as he writes the Spartan account is infinitely more probable Cartledge Agesilaos p 296 Soos was likely added in the 4th century Cartledge Agesilaos p 90 Cartledge Agesilaos pp 90 91 Cartledge Agesilaos p 92 Cartledge Agesilaos p 295 Cartledge Agesilaos pp 296 297 Cartledge Agesilaos pp 297 298 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 59 a b c d e f g h i j Forrest History of Sparta p 21 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 60 Asheri et al Commentary p 127 den Boer Political Propaganda p 165 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 80 Cartledge Agesilaos p 22 Cartledge Sparta and Lakonia pp 89 92 Forrest History of Sparta p 21 dates his reign from c 760 c 740 Cartledge Sparta and Lakonia pp 84 94 Parker Some Dates p 59 gives the dates of c 730 c 705 for his reign Cartledge Sparta and Lakonia p 98 Forrest History of Sparta p 21 gives c 700 c 665 Parker Some Dates p 59 favours c 680 c 653 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie pp 108 109 Cartledge Sparta and Lakonia pp 115 116 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 82 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie pp 82 83 Forrest History of Sparta p 21 dates his accession from c 590 Cartledge Sparta and Lakonia p 103 dates his accession to c 575 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie pp 76 77 Cartledge Sparta and Lakonia p 125 Powell ed Companion to Sparta pp 222 223 253 254 272 273 457 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 84 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 75 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 38 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie pp 16 17 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 57 Cartledge Sparta and Lakonia p 178 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie pp 105 106 White Some Agiad Dates p 140 writes that he died in 459 8 or 458 7 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie pp 102 103 favours a date of 469 8 for his death Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie pp 97 98 White Some Agiad Dates p 140 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 106 a b c White Some Agiad Dates p 141 a b Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 77 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie pp 27 28 White Some Agiad Dates pp 141 142 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie pp 103 104 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 9 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie pp 75 76 Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie p 27 does not tell his exact relationship with the other Agiads Poralla amp Bradford Prosopographie pp 9 10 a b Bradford Prosopography p 22 Bradford Prosopography pp 246 247 Bradford Prosopography pp 43 44 Bradford Prosopography pp 452 453 assumed she was already married to Cleonymus when she left him Bradford Prosopography p 44 Powell ed Companion to Sparta p 109 Bradford Prosopography p 261 Powell ed Companion to Sparta pp 390 392 Bradford Prosopography p 252 Bradford Prosopography p 239 Bradford Prosopography p 453 Bradford Prosopography p 240 Bradford Prosopography p 15 Bradford Prosopography pp 173 174 a b Powell ed Companion to Sparta p 375 Bradford Prosopography p 12 Bradford Prosopography p 241 Bradford Prosopography pp 12 13 Bibliography editDavid Asheri Alan Lloyd Aldo Corcella A Commentary on Herodotus Books 1 4 Oxford University Press 2007 ISBN 978 0 19 814956 9 John Boardman I E S Edwards N G L Hammond L Sollberger The Cambridge Ancient History vol III part 1 The Prehistory of the Balkans and the Middle East and the Aegean world tenth to eighth centuries B C Cambridge University Press 1982 ISBN 0 521 22496 9 W den Boer Political Propaganda in Greek Chronology Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte Bd 5 H 2 Jun 1956 pp 162 177 Alfred S Bradford A Prosopography of Lacedaemonians from the Death of Alexander the Great 323 B C to the Sack of Sparta by Alaric A D 396 Munich Beck 1977 ISBN 3 406 04797 1 John Briscoe A Commentary on Livy Books 34 37 Oxford Clarendon Press 1981 ISBN 978 0 19 814455 7 Paul Cartledge Agesilaos and the Crisis of Sparta Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press 1987 ISBN 978 0 7156 3032 7 Sparta and Lakonia A Regional History 1300 362 BC London Routledge 2002 originally published in 1979 ISBN 0 415 26276 3 amp Antony Spawforth Hellenistic and Roman Sparta A tale of two cities London and New York Routledge 2002 originally published in 1989 ISBN 0 415 26277 1 W G Forrest A History of Sparta New York Norton 1986 SBN 393004813 Robin Hard The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology Based on H J Rose s Handbook of Greek Mythology London New York Routledge 2004 ISBN 978 0 415 18636 0 G L Huxley Problems in the Chronography of Eusebius Proceedings of the Royal Irish Academy Archaeology Culture History Literature 1982 Vol 82C pp 183 196 E I McQueen The Eurypontid House in Hellenistic Sparta Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte Bd 39 H 2 1990 pp 163 181 Victor Parker Some Dates In Early Spartan History Klio 75 1993 pp 45 60 Paul Poralla amp Alfred S Bradford Prosopographie der Lakedaimonier bis auf die Zeit Alexanders des Grossen Chicago 1985 originally published in 1913 OCLC 1151065049 Anton Powell editor A Companion to Sparta Hoboken Wiley 2018 ISBN 978 1 4051 8869 2 M L West Alcmanica The Classical Quarterly Vol 15 No 2 Nov 1965 pp 188 202 Mary E White Some Agiad Dates Pausanias and His Sons The Journal of Hellenic Studies Vol 84 1964 pp 140 152 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Agiad dynasty amp oldid 1173975017, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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