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Argead dynasty

The Argead dynasty (Greek: Ἀργεάδαι, romanizedArgeádai), also known as the Temenid dynasty (Greek: Τημενίδαι, Tēmenídai) was an ancient Macedonian royal house of Dorian Greek provenance.[1][2][3] They were the founders and the ruling dynasty of the kingdom of Macedon from about 700 to 310 BC.[4]

Argeads
Ἀργεάδαι
Royal house
Parent houseTemenids (Heracleidae)
CountryMacedonia
Founded7th century BC
Final rulerAlexander IV of Macedon
TitlesBasileus of Macedonia, King of Persia, King of Asia, Pharaoh of Egypt (Thirty-second Dynasty of Egypt), Hegemon of the Hellenic League, Strategos Autokrator of Greece
Estate(s)Macedonia
Dissolution310 BC
Cadet branchesPtolemaic dynasty (?)

Their tradition, as described in ancient Greek historiography, traced their origins to Argos, of Peloponnese in Southern Greece, hence the name Argeads or Argives.[5][6][1] Initially rulers of the tribe of the same name,[7] by the time of Philip II they had expanded their reign further, to include under the rule of Macedonia all Upper Macedonian states. The family's most celebrated members were Philip II of Macedon and his son Alexander the Great, under whose leadership the kingdom of Macedonia gradually gained predominance throughout Greece, defeated the Achaemenid Empire and expanded as far as Egypt and India. The mythical founder of the Argead dynasty is King Caranus.[8][9] The Argeads claimed descent from Heracles through his great-great-grandson Temenus, also king of Argos.

Origin edit

 
 
Triobol of Argos (top), and a bronze coin of King Amyntas II of Macedon (bottom). The early Argead kings often copied the wolf of Argos' coins on their own coinage to highlight their supposed ancestry from this city.[10]

The words Argead and Argive derive (via Latin Argīvus)[11] from the Greek Ἀργεῖος (Argeios meaning "of or from Argos"),[12] which is first attested in Homer where it was also used as a collective designation for the Greeks ("Ἀργείων Δαναῶν", Argive Danaans).[13][14] The Argead dynasty claimed descent from the Temenids of Argos, in the Peloponnese, whose legendary ancestor was Temenus, the great-great-grandson of Heracles.[1]

In the excavations of the royal palace at Aegae, Manolis Andronikos discovered in the "tholos" room (according to some scholars "tholos" was the throne room) a Greek inscription relating to that belief.[15] This is testified by Herodotus, in The Histories, where he mentions that three brothers of the lineage of Temenus, Gauanes, Aeropus and Perdiccas, fled from Argos to the Illyrians and then to Upper Macedonia, to a town called Lebaea, where they served the king. The latter asked them to leave his territory, believing in an omen that something great would happen to Perdiccas. The boys went to another part of Macedonia, near the garden of Midas, above which mount Bermio stands. There they made their abode and slowly formed their own kingdom.[16]

Herodotus also relates the incident of the participation of Alexander I of Macedon in the Olympic Games in 504 or 500 BC where the participation of the Macedonian king was contested by participants on the grounds that he was not Greek. The Hellanodikai, however, after examining his Argead claim confirmed that the Macedonian kings were Greeks and allowed him to participate.[17]

 
The route of the Argeads from Argos, Peloponnese, to Macedonia according to Herodotus.

Another theory supported by the Greek historian Miltiades Hatzopoulos, following the opinion of the ancient author Appian, is that the Argead dynasty actually came from Argos Orestikon.[18][19]

 
House of Argos

According to Thucydides, in the History of the Peloponnesian War, the Argeads were originally Temenids from Argos, who descended from the highlands to Lower Macedonia, expelled the Pierians from Pieria and acquired in Paionia a narrow strip along the river Axios extending to Pella and the sea. They also added Mygdonia in their territory through the expulsion of the Edoni, Eordians, and Almopians.[20]

History edit

Succession disputes edit

The death of the king almost invariably triggered dynastic disputes and often a war of succession between members of the Argead family, leading to political and economic instability.[21] These included:

Additionally, long-established monarchs could still face a rebellion by a relative when the former's kingship was perceived to be weak. An example was Philip's rebellion against his older brother, king Perdiccas II, in the prelude to the Peloponnesian War (433–431 BCE).

List of rulers edit

Argead Rulers
Image Reign Monarch Name Comments
c. 808-778 BC Karanos Founder of the Argead dynasty and the first king of Macedon. (Possibly Fictional)
c. 778-750 BC Koinos (Possibly Fictional)
c. 750-700 BC Tyrimmas (Possibly Fictional)
c. 700-678 BC Perdiccas I
c. 678-640 BC Argaeus I
c. 640-602 BC Philip I
c. 602-576 BC Aeropus I
576-547 BC Alcetas
547-498 BC Amyntas I Vassal of the Achaemenid Empire in 512/511 BC. Historians recognize Amyntas as the first Macedonian monarch of historical importance.
  497-454 BC Alexander I Fully subordinate part of the Achaemenid Empire after 492 BC, then full Independence after 479 BC following the withdrawal of the Achaemenid army.
  454-413 BC Perdiccas II
  413-399 BC Archelaus
399-396 BC Orestes Ruled jointly with Aeropus II, until he was murdered by Aeropus II
  399-394/393 BC Aeropus II Joint rule with Orestes until 396 BC, then sole rule
  393 BC Amyntas II Very brief reign ended with his assassination by an Elimieotan nobleman named Derdas
  393 BC Pausanias Assassinated by, Amyntas III in the year of his accession
  393 BC Amyntas III (First Reign)
393-392 BC Argaeus II Usurped throne from Amyntas III for about a year with the aid of the Illyrians
  392-370 BC Amyntas III (Second Reign) Restored to the throne after around one year
370-368 BC Alexander II Assassinated by his maternal uncle Ptolemy of Aloros
  368-359 BC Perdiccas III Ptolemy of Aloros was his regent from 368-365 BC, until he was murdered by Perdiccas III
359 BC Amyntas IV Young son of Perdiccas III, throne usurped by Philip II
  359-336 BC Philip II Expanded Macedonian territory and influence to achieve a dominant position in the Balkans, confederated most of the Greek city-states in the League of Corinth under his hegemony.
  336-323 BC Alexander III the Great The most notable Macedonian king and one of the most celebrated kings and military strategists of all time. By the end of his reign, Alexander was simultaneously King of Macedonia, Pharaoh of Egypt and King of Persia, and had conquered the entire former Achaemenid Empire as well as parts of the western Indus Valley.
  323-317 BC Philip III Arrhidaeus Half-Brother of Alexander the Great, Titular figurehead king of the Macedonian Empire, during the early Wars of the Diadochi; was mentally disabled to at least some degree. Executed by Olympias.
  323/317-309 BC Alexander IV Son of Alexander the Great and Roxana of Bactria, who was yet unborn at the time of his father's death. A pretender upon his birth, from 317 BC the titular figurehead king of the Macedonian Empire, during the early-middle Wars of the Diadochi. Executed by Cassander.

Family tree edit

Modern historians disagree on a number of details concerning the genealogy of the Argead dynasty. Robin Lane Fox, for example, refutes Nicholas Hammond's claim that Ptolemy of Aloros was Amyntas II's son, arguing that Ptolemy was neither his son nor an Argead.[24] Consequently, the charts below do not account for every chronological, genealogical, and dynastic complexity. Instead, they represent one common reconstruction of the Argeads advanced by historians such as Hammond, Elizabeth Carney, and Joseph Roisman.[25][26][27][28]


References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b c Howatson & Harvey 1989, p. 339: "In historical times the royal house traced its descent from the mythical Temenus, king of Argos, who was one of the Heracleidae, and more immediately from Perdiccas I, who left Argos for Illyria, probably in the mid-seventh century BC, and from there captured the Macedonian plain and occupied the fortress of Aegae (Vergina), setting himself up as king of the Macedonians. Thus the kings were of largely Dorian Greek stock (see PHILIP (1)); they presumably spoke a form of Dorian Greek and their cultural tradition had Greek features."
  2. ^ Cosmopoulos 1992, p. 30.
  3. ^ Grant 1988, p. 259: "It was the descendants of these Dorians [...] who formed the upper class among the Macedonians of subsequent epochs."
  4. ^ Cosmopoulos 1992, "TABLE 2: The Argeiad Kings" (p. 30).
  5. ^ , Oxford Dictionaries.
  6. ^ Hammond 1986, p. 516: "In the early 5th century the royal house of Macedonia, the Temenidae was recognised as Macedonian by the Presidents of the Olympic Games. Their verdict considered themselves to be of Macedonian descent."
  7. ^ Rogers 2004, p. 316: "According to Strabo, 7.11 ff., the Argeadae were the tribe who were able to make themselves supreme in early Emathia, later Macedonia."
  8. ^ Green 2013, p. 103.
  9. ^ According to Pausanias (Description of Greece 9.40.8–9), Caranus set up a trophy after the Argive fashion for a victory against Cisseus: "The Macedonians say that Caranus, king of Macedonia, overcame in battle Cisseus, a chieftain in a bordering country. For his victory Caranus set up a trophy after the Argive fashion, but it is said to have been upset by a lion from Olympus, which then vanished. Caranus, they assert, realized that it was a mistaken policy to incur the undying hatred of the non-Greeks dwelling around, and so, they say, the rule was adopted that no king of Macedonia, neither Caranus himself nor any of his successors, should set up trophies, if they were ever to gain the good-will of their neighbors. This story is confirmed by the fact that Alexander set up no trophies, neither for his victory over Dareius nor for those he won in India."
  10. ^ Hoover 2011, p. 161; Hoover 2016, p. 295.
  11. ^ Lewis & Short 1879, Argīvus.
  12. ^ Liddell & Scott 1940, Ἀργεῖος.
  13. ^ Cartledge 2011, Chapter 4: Argos, p. 23: "The Late Bronze Age in Greece is also called conventionally 'Mycenaean', as we saw in the last chapter. But it might in principle have been called 'Argive', 'Achaean', or 'Danaan', since the three names that Homer does in fact apply to Greeks collectively were 'Argives', 'Achaeans', and 'Danaans'."
  14. ^ Homer. Iliad, 2.155–175, 4.8; Odyssey, 8.578, 4.6.
  15. ^ The Greek inscription found in the tholos room of the royal palace at Aegae reads "ΗΡΑΚΛΗΙ ΠΑΤΡΩΙΩΙ" (Andronikos 1994, p. 38: "Η επιγραφή αυτή είναι: «ΗΡΑΚΛΗΙ ΠΑΤΡΩΙΩΙ», που σημαίνει στον «Πατρώο Ηρακλή», στον Ηρακλή δηλαδή που ήταν γενάρχης της βασιλικής οικογένειας των Μακεδόνων." [Translation: "This inscription is: «ΗΡΑΚΛΗΙ ΠΑΤΡΩΙΩΙ», which means "Father (Ancestor) Hercules", dedicated to Hercules who was the ancestor of the royal family of the Macedonians."])
  16. ^ Herodotus. Histories, 8.137.
  17. ^ Herodotus. Histories, 5.22.
  18. ^ Appian. Syrian Wars, 11.10.63.
  19. ^ Hatzopoulos 2017, pp. 314–324
  20. ^ Thucydides. History of the Peloponnesian War, 2.99.
  21. ^ a b Roisman, Joseph (2002). Brill's Companion to Alexander the Great. Leiden/Boston: Brill. pp. 71–75. ISBN 9789004217553. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  22. ^ Errington, Robert Malcolm (1990). A History of Macedonia. Berkeley: University of California Press. pp. 28–29. ISBN 9780520063198. Retrieved 23 August 2020.
  23. ^   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainMason, Charles Peter (1870). "Argaeus". In Smith, William (ed.). Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Vol. 1. p. 279.
  24. ^ Fox, Robin Lane (2011). "399–369 BC". In Fox, Robin Lane (ed.). Brill's Companion to Ancient Macedon: Studies in the Archaeology and History of Macedon, 650 BC – 300 AD. Boston: Brill. pp. 231–232.
  25. ^ N.G.L., Hammond; Griffith, G.T. (1979). A History of Macedonia Volume II: 550-336 B.C. Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 179. ISBN 9780198148142
  26. ^ Roisman, Joseph (2010). "Classical Macedonia to Perdiccas III". In Roisman, Joseph; Worthington, Ian (eds.). A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. Wiley-Blackwell. p. 158.
  27. ^ Carney, Elizabeth Donnelly (2000). Woman and Monarchy in Macedonia. University of Oklahoma Press. p. 250. ISBN 9780806132129.
  28. ^ Psoma, Selene (2012). "Arepyros or A(u)re(lius) Pyros?". Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik. 180: 202–204.

Sources edit

  • Andronikos, Manolēs (1994). Vergina: The Royal Tombs. Athens: Ekdotikē Athēnōn. ISBN 960-213-128-4.
  • Cartledge, Paul (2011). Ancient Greece: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-960134-9.
  • Cosmopoulos, Michael B. (1992). Macedonia: An Introduction to its Political History. Winnipeg: Manitoba Studies in Classical Civilization.
  • Grant, Michael (1988). The Rise of the Greeks. New York: Charles Scribner's Sons. ISBN 9780684185361.
  • Green, Peter (2013) [1991]. Alexander of Macedon, 356–323 B.C.: A Historical Biography. Berkeley and Los Angeles, CA: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-52-095469-4.
  • Hammond, Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière (1986). A History of Greece to 322 BC. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press. ISBN 0-19-873095-0.
  • Hoover, Oliver D. (2011). Handbook of Coins of the Peloponnesos: Achaia, Phleiasia, Sikyonia, Elis, Triphylia, Messenia, Lakonia, Argolis, and Arkadia, Sixth to First Centuries BC (The Handbook of Greek Coinage Series, Volume 5). Lancaster/London: Classical Numismatic Group.
  • Hoover, Oliver D. (2016). Handbook of Coins of Macedon and Its Neighbors. Part I: Macedon, Illyria, and Epeiros, Sixth to First Centuries BC (The Handbook of Greek Coinage Series, Volume 3). Lancaster/London: Classical Numismatic Group.
  • Howatson, M. C.; Harvey, Sir Paul (1989). The Oxford Companion to Classical Literature. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-866121-5.
  • Lewis, Charlton T.; Short, Charles (1879). A Latin Dictionary. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert (1940). A Greek-English Lexicon. Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  • Rogers, Guy MacLean (2004). Alexander: The Ambiguity of Greatness. New York: Random House Publishing Group. ISBN 1-4000-6261-6.

Further reading edit

  • Anson, Edward M. (2014). Alexander's Heirs: The Age of the Successors. Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.
  • Carney, Elizabeth Donnelly (2009). "The Role of the BASILIKOI PAIDES at the Argead Court". In Howe, Timothy; Reames, Jeanne (eds.). Macedonian Legacies: Studies in Ancient Macedonian History and Culture in Honor of Eugene N. Borza. Claremont, CA: Regina. pp. 145–164.
  • Carney, Elizabeth Donnelly (2010). "Putting Women in their Place: Women in Public under Philip II and Alexander III and the Last Argeads". In Carney, Elizabeth D.; Ogden, Daniel (eds.). Philip II and Alexander the Great: Father and Son, Lives and Afterlives. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 43–53.
  • Errington, Robert Malcolm (1978). "The Nature of the Macedonian State under the Monarchy". Chiron. 8: 77–134.
  • Griffith, Guy Thompson (1979). "The Reign of Philip the Second: The Government of the Kingdom". In Hammond, Nicholas Geoffrey Lemprière; Griffith, Guy Thompson (eds.). A History of Macedonia. Vol. 2. Oxford: Clarendon. pp. 383–404.
  • Hatzopoulos, Miltiades B. (1996). Macedonian Institutions under the Kings (2 Volumes). Paris: De Boccard.
  • Hatzopoulos, Miltiades B. (2017). "Recent Research in the Ancient Macedonian Dialect: Consolidation and New Perspectives". Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects. Berlin: De Gruyter. pp. 299–328. doi:10.1515/9783110532135-016. ISBN 978-3-11-053213-5.
  • King, Carol J. (2010). "Macedonian Kingship and Other Political Institutions". In Roisman, Joseph; Worthington, Ian (eds.). A Companion to Ancient Macedonia. Oxford, Chichester and Malden: Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 373–391. ISBN 978-1-4051-7936-2.
  • Ogden, Daniel (2011). "The Royal Families of Argead Macedon and the Hellenistic World". In Rawson, Beryl (ed.). A Companion to Families in the Greek and Roman Worlds. Malden, MA: Blackwell-Wiley. pp. 92–107.

External links edit

argead, dynasty, greek, Ἀργεάδαι, romanized, argeádai, also, known, temenid, dynasty, greek, Τημενίδαι, tēmenídai, ancient, macedonian, royal, house, dorian, greek, provenance, they, were, founders, ruling, dynasty, kingdom, macedon, from, about, argeadsἈργεάδ. The Argead dynasty Greek Ἀrgeadai romanized Argeadai also known as the Temenid dynasty Greek Thmenidai Temenidai was an ancient Macedonian royal house of Dorian Greek provenance 1 2 3 They were the founders and the ruling dynasty of the kingdom of Macedon from about 700 to 310 BC 4 ArgeadsἈrgeadaiRoyal houseVergina SunParent houseTemenids Heracleidae CountryMacedoniaFounded7th century BCFinal rulerAlexander IV of MacedonTitlesBasileus of Macedonia King of Persia King of Asia Pharaoh of Egypt Thirty second Dynasty of Egypt Hegemon of the Hellenic League Strategos Autokrator of GreeceEstate s MacedoniaDissolution310 BCCadet branchesPtolemaic dynasty Their tradition as described in ancient Greek historiography traced their origins to Argos of Peloponnese in Southern Greece hence the name Argeads or Argives 5 6 1 Initially rulers of the tribe of the same name 7 by the time of Philip II they had expanded their reign further to include under the rule of Macedonia all Upper Macedonian states The family s most celebrated members were Philip II of Macedon and his son Alexander the Great under whose leadership the kingdom of Macedonia gradually gained predominance throughout Greece defeated the Achaemenid Empire and expanded as far as Egypt and India The mythical founder of the Argead dynasty is King Caranus 8 9 The Argeads claimed descent from Heracles through his great great grandson Temenus also king of Argos Contents 1 Origin 2 History 2 1 Succession disputes 2 2 List of rulers 3 Family tree 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 Sources 5 Further reading 6 External linksOrigin edit nbsp nbsp Triobol of Argos top and a bronze coin of King Amyntas II of Macedon bottom The early Argead kings often copied the wolf of Argos coins on their own coinage to highlight their supposed ancestry from this city 10 The words Argead and Argive derive via Latin Argivus 11 from the Greek Ἀrgeῖos Argeios meaning of or from Argos 12 which is first attested in Homer where it was also used as a collective designation for the Greeks Ἀrgeiwn Danaῶn Argive Danaans 13 14 The Argead dynasty claimed descent from the Temenids of Argos in the Peloponnese whose legendary ancestor was Temenus the great great grandson of Heracles 1 In the excavations of the royal palace at Aegae Manolis Andronikos discovered in the tholos room according to some scholars tholos was the throne room a Greek inscription relating to that belief 15 This is testified by Herodotus in The Histories where he mentions that three brothers of the lineage of Temenus Gauanes Aeropus and Perdiccas fled from Argos to the Illyrians and then to Upper Macedonia to a town called Lebaea where they served the king The latter asked them to leave his territory believing in an omen that something great would happen to Perdiccas The boys went to another part of Macedonia near the garden of Midas above which mount Bermio stands There they made their abode and slowly formed their own kingdom 16 Herodotus also relates the incident of the participation of Alexander I of Macedon in the Olympic Games in 504 or 500 BC where the participation of the Macedonian king was contested by participants on the grounds that he was not Greek The Hellanodikai however after examining his Argead claim confirmed that the Macedonian kings were Greeks and allowed him to participate 17 nbsp The route of the Argeads from Argos Peloponnese to Macedonia according to Herodotus Another theory supported by the Greek historian Miltiades Hatzopoulos following the opinion of the ancient author Appian is that the Argead dynasty actually came from Argos Orestikon 18 19 nbsp House of ArgosAccording to Thucydides in the History of the Peloponnesian War the Argeads were originally Temenids from Argos who descended from the highlands to Lower Macedonia expelled the Pierians from Pieria and acquired in Paionia a narrow strip along the river Axios extending to Pella and the sea They also added Mygdonia in their territory through the expulsion of the Edoni Eordians and Almopians 20 History editSuccession disputes edit The death of the king almost invariably triggered dynastic disputes and often a war of succession between members of the Argead family leading to political and economic instability 21 These included Six year Macedonian interregnum 399 393 BCE after the death of king Archelaus between Orestes Aeropus II Amyntas II and Pausanias 22 Macedonian war of succession 393 392 BCE after the death of king Pausanias between Amyntas III and Argaeus II 23 Macedonian war of succession 369 368 BCE after the death of king Amyntas III between Ptolemy of Aloros and Alexander II of Macedon citation needed Macedonian war of succession 360 359 BCE after the death of king Perdiccas III between Philip II who deposed Amyntas IV Argeus supported by Athens Pausanias supported by Thrace and Archelaus supported by the Chalcidian League 21 Wars of the Diadochi 323 277 BCE after the death of king Alexander the Great between his Diadochi Successors Additionally long established monarchs could still face a rebellion by a relative when the former s kingship was perceived to be weak An example was Philip s rebellion against his older brother king Perdiccas II in the prelude to the Peloponnesian War 433 431 BCE List of rulers edit Argead Rulers Image Reign Monarch Name Commentsc 808 778 BC Karanos Founder of the Argead dynasty and the first king of Macedon Possibly Fictional c 778 750 BC Koinos Possibly Fictional c 750 700 BC Tyrimmas Possibly Fictional c 700 678 BC Perdiccas Ic 678 640 BC Argaeus Ic 640 602 BC Philip Ic 602 576 BC Aeropus I576 547 BC Alcetas547 498 BC Amyntas I Vassal of the Achaemenid Empire in 512 511 BC Historians recognize Amyntas as the first Macedonian monarch of historical importance nbsp 497 454 BC Alexander I Fully subordinate part of the Achaemenid Empire after 492 BC then full Independence after 479 BC following the withdrawal of the Achaemenid army nbsp 454 413 BC Perdiccas II nbsp 413 399 BC Archelaus399 396 BC Orestes Ruled jointly with Aeropus II until he was murdered by Aeropus II nbsp 399 394 393 BC Aeropus II Joint rule with Orestes until 396 BC then sole rule nbsp 393 BC Amyntas II Very brief reign ended with his assassination by an Elimieotan nobleman named Derdas nbsp 393 BC Pausanias Assassinated by Amyntas III in the year of his accession nbsp 393 BC Amyntas III First Reign 393 392 BC Argaeus II Usurped throne from Amyntas III for about a year with the aid of the Illyrians nbsp 392 370 BC Amyntas III Second Reign Restored to the throne after around one year370 368 BC Alexander II Assassinated by his maternal uncle Ptolemy of Aloros nbsp 368 359 BC Perdiccas III Ptolemy of Aloros was his regent from 368 365 BC until he was murdered by Perdiccas III359 BC Amyntas IV Young son of Perdiccas III throne usurped by Philip II nbsp 359 336 BC Philip II Expanded Macedonian territory and influence to achieve a dominant position in the Balkans confederated most of the Greek city states in the League of Corinth under his hegemony nbsp 336 323 BC Alexander III the Great The most notable Macedonian king and one of the most celebrated kings and military strategists of all time By the end of his reign Alexander was simultaneously King of Macedonia Pharaoh of Egypt and King of Persia and had conquered the entire former Achaemenid Empire as well as parts of the western Indus Valley nbsp 323 317 BC Philip III Arrhidaeus Half Brother of Alexander the Great Titular figurehead king of the Macedonian Empire during the early Wars of the Diadochi was mentally disabled to at least some degree Executed by Olympias nbsp 323 317 309 BC Alexander IV Son of Alexander the Great and Roxana of Bactria who was yet unborn at the time of his father s death A pretender upon his birth from 317 BC the titular figurehead king of the Macedonian Empire during the early middle Wars of the Diadochi Executed by Cassander Family tree editModern historians disagree on a number of details concerning the genealogy of the Argead dynasty Robin Lane Fox for example refutes Nicholas Hammond s claim that Ptolemy of Aloros was Amyntas II s son arguing that Ptolemy was neither his son nor an Argead 24 Consequently the charts below do not account for every chronological genealogical and dynastic complexity Instead they represent one common reconstruction of the Argeads advanced by historians such as Hammond Elizabeth Carney and Joseph Roisman 25 26 27 28 Simplified Family TreePerdiccas Ir c 650 BCArgaeus Ir c 623 BCPhilip Ir c 593 BCAeropus Ir c 563 BCAlcetasr c 533 BCAmyntas Ir 497 BCAlexander Ir 497 454 BCPerdiccas IIr 454 413 BCMenelausAmyntasArchelausr 413 399 BCAeropus IIr 397 394 BCArgaeus IIr 388 387 BCAmyntas IIr 394ArrhidaeusOrestesr 399 397 BCPausaniasr 394Ptolemy of Alorosr 368 365 BCAmyntas IIIr 393 370 BCAlexander IIr 370 368 BCPerdiccas IIIr 365 359 BCPhilip IIr 359 336 BCAmyntas IVr 359Philip III Arrhidaeusr 323 317 BCAlexander the Greatr 336 323 BCAlexander IVr 323 310 BCDetailed Family TreeIndividuals with disputed heritage or rule are italicized Perdiccas I c 650 BCArgaeus I c 623Philip I c 593Aeropus I c 563Alcetas c 533Amyntas I 512 498 7Alexander I 498 7 454Gygaea BubaresSymache CleopatraPerdiccas II 454 413MenelausAmyntasPhilipAlcetasStratonice Seuthes IIAmyntasArchelaus 413 399Aeropus II 398 7 395 4Amyntas II 394 3Arrhidaeussonssonsunnamed sonOrestes 399 398 7Argaeus II 393 BC Pausanias 394 3Ptolemy 368 365Amyntas III 393 3691 Eurydice I 2 GygaeaAlexander II 369 368Perdiccas III 365 360 59Eurynoe1 Audata 2 Phila of Elimeia 3 Nicesipolis 4 PhilinnaPhilip II 360 59 3365 Olympias 6 Meda of Odessos 7 Cleopatra EurydiceMenelausArchelausArrhidaeusAmyntas IV 359CynaneThessalonike CassanderPhilip III 323 317Alexander III 336 3231 Roxana 2 Stateira II Barsine 3 Parysatis IICaranusEuropaEurydice IIAlexander IV 323 310References editCitations edit a b c Howatson amp Harvey 1989 p 339 In historical times the royal house traced its descent from the mythical Temenus king of Argos who was one of the Heracleidae and more immediately from Perdiccas I who left Argos for Illyria probably in the mid seventh century BC and from there captured the Macedonian plain and occupied the fortress of Aegae Vergina setting himself up as king of the Macedonians Thus the kings were of largely Dorian Greek stock see PHILIP 1 they presumably spoke a form of Dorian Greek and their cultural tradition had Greek features Cosmopoulos 1992 p 30 Grant 1988 p 259 It was the descendants of these Dorians who formed the upper class among the Macedonians of subsequent epochs Cosmopoulos 1992 TABLE 2 The Argeiad Kings p 30 Argive Oxford Dictionaries Hammond 1986 p 516 In the early 5th century the royal house of Macedonia the Temenidae was recognised as Macedonian by the Presidents of the Olympic Games Their verdict considered themselves to be of Macedonian descent Rogers 2004 p 316 According to Strabo 7 11 ff the Argeadae were the tribe who were able to make themselves supreme in early Emathia later Macedonia Green 2013 p 103 According to Pausanias Description of Greece 9 40 8 9 Caranus set up a trophy after the Argive fashion for a victory against Cisseus The Macedonians say that Caranus king of Macedonia overcame in battle Cisseus a chieftain in a bordering country For his victory Caranus set up a trophy after the Argive fashion but it is said to have been upset by a lion from Olympus which then vanished Caranus they assert realized that it was a mistaken policy to incur the undying hatred of the non Greeks dwelling around and so they say the rule was adopted that no king of Macedonia neither Caranus himself nor any of his successors should set up trophies if they were ever to gain the good will of their neighbors This story is confirmed by the fact that Alexander set up no trophies neither for his victory over Dareius nor for those he won in India Hoover 2011 p 161 Hoover 2016 p 295 Lewis amp Short 1879 Argivus Liddell amp Scott 1940 Ἀrgeῖos Cartledge 2011 Chapter 4 Argos p 23 The Late Bronze Age in Greece is also called conventionally Mycenaean as we saw in the last chapter But it might in principle have been called Argive Achaean or Danaan since the three names that Homer does in fact apply to Greeks collectively were Argives Achaeans and Danaans Homer Iliad 2 155 175 4 8 Odyssey 8 578 4 6 The Greek inscription found in the tholos room of the royal palace at Aegae reads HRAKLHI PATRWIWI Andronikos 1994 p 38 H epigrafh ayth einai HRAKLHI PATRWIWI poy shmainei ston Patrwo Hraklh ston Hraklh dhladh poy htan genarxhs ths basilikhs oikogeneias twn Makedonwn Translation This inscription is HRAKLHI PATRWIWI which means Father Ancestor Hercules dedicated to Hercules who was the ancestor of the royal family of the Macedonians Herodotus Histories 8 137 Herodotus Histories 5 22 Appian Syrian Wars 11 10 63 Hatzopoulos 2017 pp 314 324 Thucydides History of the Peloponnesian War 2 99 a b Roisman Joseph 2002 Brill s Companion to Alexander the Great Leiden Boston Brill pp 71 75 ISBN 9789004217553 Retrieved 23 August 2020 Errington Robert Malcolm 1990 A History of Macedonia Berkeley University of California Press pp 28 29 ISBN 9780520063198 Retrieved 23 August 2020 nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Mason Charles Peter 1870 Argaeus In Smith William ed Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology Vol 1 p 279 Fox Robin Lane 2011 399 369 BC In Fox Robin Lane ed Brill s Companion to Ancient Macedon Studies in the Archaeology and History of Macedon 650 BC 300 AD Boston Brill pp 231 232 N G L Hammond Griffith G T 1979 A History of Macedonia Volume II 550 336 B C Oxford Clarendon Press p 179 ISBN 9780198148142 Roisman Joseph 2010 Classical Macedonia to Perdiccas III In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Wiley Blackwell p 158 Carney Elizabeth Donnelly 2000 Woman and Monarchy in Macedonia University of Oklahoma Press p 250 ISBN 9780806132129 Psoma Selene 2012 Arepyros or A u re lius Pyros Zeitschrift fur Papyrologie und Epigraphik 180 202 204 Sources edit Andronikos Manoles 1994 Vergina The Royal Tombs Athens Ekdotike Athenōn ISBN 960 213 128 4 Cartledge Paul 2011 Ancient Greece A Very Short Introduction Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 960134 9 Cosmopoulos Michael B 1992 Macedonia An Introduction to its Political History Winnipeg Manitoba Studies in Classical Civilization Grant Michael 1988 The Rise of the Greeks New York Charles Scribner s Sons ISBN 9780684185361 Green Peter 2013 1991 Alexander of Macedon 356 323 B C A Historical Biography Berkeley and Los Angeles CA University of California Press ISBN 978 0 52 095469 4 Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere 1986 A History of Greece to 322 BC Oxford UK Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 873095 0 Hoover Oliver D 2011 Handbook of Coins of the Peloponnesos Achaia Phleiasia Sikyonia Elis Triphylia Messenia Lakonia Argolis and Arkadia Sixth to First Centuries BC The Handbook of Greek Coinage Series Volume 5 Lancaster London Classical Numismatic Group Hoover Oliver D 2016 Handbook of Coins of Macedon and Its Neighbors Part I Macedon Illyria and Epeiros Sixth to First Centuries BC The Handbook of Greek Coinage Series Volume 3 Lancaster London Classical Numismatic Group Howatson M C Harvey Sir Paul 1989 The Oxford Companion to Classical Literature Oxford UK Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 866121 5 Lewis Charlton T Short Charles 1879 A Latin Dictionary Oxford Clarendon Press Liddell Henry George Scott Robert 1940 A Greek English Lexicon Oxford Clarendon Press Rogers Guy MacLean 2004 Alexander The Ambiguity of Greatness New York Random House Publishing Group ISBN 1 4000 6261 6 Further reading editAnson Edward M 2014 Alexander s Heirs The Age of the Successors Malden MA Wiley Blackwell Carney Elizabeth Donnelly 2009 The Role of the BASILIKOI PAIDES at the Argead Court In Howe Timothy Reames Jeanne eds Macedonian Legacies Studies in Ancient Macedonian History and Culture in Honor of Eugene N Borza Claremont CA Regina pp 145 164 Carney Elizabeth Donnelly 2010 Putting Women in their Place Women in Public under Philip II and Alexander III and the Last Argeads In Carney Elizabeth D Ogden Daniel eds Philip II and Alexander the Great Father and Son Lives and Afterlives Oxford Oxford University Press pp 43 53 Errington Robert Malcolm 1978 The Nature of the Macedonian State under the Monarchy Chiron 8 77 134 Griffith Guy Thompson 1979 The Reign of Philip the Second The Government of the Kingdom In Hammond Nicholas Geoffrey Lempriere Griffith Guy Thompson eds A History of Macedonia Vol 2 Oxford Clarendon pp 383 404 Hatzopoulos Miltiades B 1996 Macedonian Institutions under the Kings 2 Volumes Paris De Boccard Hatzopoulos Miltiades B 2017 Recent Research in the Ancient Macedonian Dialect Consolidation and New Perspectives Studies in Ancient Greek Dialects Berlin De Gruyter pp 299 328 doi 10 1515 9783110532135 016 ISBN 978 3 11 053213 5 King Carol J 2010 Macedonian Kingship and Other Political Institutions In Roisman Joseph Worthington Ian eds A Companion to Ancient Macedonia Oxford Chichester and Malden Wiley Blackwell pp 373 391 ISBN 978 1 4051 7936 2 Ogden Daniel 2011 The Royal Families of Argead Macedon and the Hellenistic World In Rawson Beryl ed A Companion to Families in the Greek and Roman Worlds Malden MA Blackwell Wiley pp 92 107 External links edit Argead Dynasty Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 26 April 2008 Retrieved 13 May 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Argead dynasty amp oldid 1204035754, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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