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Cotys I (Odrysian)

Cotys I or Kotys I (Ancient Greek: Κότυς, Kotys) was a king of the Odrysians in Thrace from 384 BC to his murder in 360 BC. He was known to have been born during the reign of Seuthes I, based on ancient sources and date of birth estimates for Cotys, his daughter who married the Athenian general Iphicrates, and her son Menestheus.[1] According to Harpokration, he reigned for 24 years, which places his accession in 384 BC.[2] Although his origins are actually unknown,[3] An Athenian inscription dated to 330 BC, which honors Reboulas, brother of Cotys and son of king Seuthes. As the ordinal of Seuthes is not mentioned, it was unclear, however, which of the preceding kings named Seuthes is meant by the inscription.[4] While scholars originally believed Seuthes II to be the father of Cotys I,[5] now it is known that Seuthes I was his father, as Seuthes II was only 7 years old at the time of Seuthes I's abdication in 411 BC. [6]

Cotys I
King of Thrace
Reign384–360 BC
PredecessorHebryzelmis
SuccessorCersobleptes

In 390 BC the Athenian general Iphicrates joined his colleague Thrasybulus in Thrace, helping arrange peace between the Thracian rulers Amadocus I and Seuthes II, and making both Athenian allies. Iphicrates remained for about two years, and married the daughter of Cotys in opulent circumstances.[7] Cotys' precise standing at the time remains obscure, but he is tentatively identified as a brother of Hebryzelmis,[8] who was the Odrysian king in Thrace in 386/385 BC, when he was honored in an Athenian decree.[9] Shortly afterwards, in 384 BC, Cotys I became king, perhaps at first in the interior parts of Thrace.[10] With the help of Iphicrates, Cotys succeeded in establishing himself as the heir of Hebryzelmis,[11] and eliminating the opposition of his rivals, possibly including Amadocus II and Saratocus.[12] Archaeological finds of items inscribed for Cotys to the north and west suggest expansion and contacts in that direction that have escaped the narrative sources.[13] The name of Cotys (in one instance described as a son of the god Apollon) appears several times on objects from the Rogozen Treasure, although the precise manner in which it came to be buried in northwestern Bulgaria, presumably in the territory of the Triballi, remains unclear.[14]

As Cotys tried to enlarge his kingdom, including towards the Aegean and the Chersonese, his actions led to increasing tensions with Athens. In the early 370s BC, the Second Athenian Confederacy was founded with a number of neighboring cities and islands joining the Confederacy as a safeguard against the threat from Cotys, among others.[11]

In 375 BC Cotys probably supported Hales, leader of Triballi, a powerful Thracian tribe in northwestern Thrace, in their attack on the city of Abdera. According to Diodorus, the city was saved only after the intervention of the Athenian general, Chabrias, whose forces then garrisoned the city.[15] In 367 BC Ariobarzanes, the Persian satrap of Phrygia, occupied Sestos. Following Ariobarzanes' revolt against the Persian king Artaxerxes II in 365 BC, Cotys apparently opposed Ariobarzanes and his ally, Athens, but his actions are ambivalent and unclear. The same year Cotys welcomed the return of his son-in-law, the dismissed Athenian general Iphicrates, and a new ally, the mercenary commander Charidemus, who married another daughter of Cotys.[16] The Athenians under their general Timotheus were able to gain Sestos and Krithote. Soon after, in 363 or 362 BC, Cotys sent Miltokythes into the Thracian Chersonese to take Sestos. Miltokythes besieged the city and starved it into surrender, then attacked Krithote. Athenian generals sent to relieve the attacked towns were unsuccessful.[11]

At this time, in 362 BC, however, Miltokythes rebelled against Cotys, seizing the royal treasury at Hieron Oros and, finding himself besieged there by Cotys, appealed for help to both Ariobarzanes and Athens. Cotys also appealed for help from Athens, and allied himself to the Persian satrap of Lydia Autophradates, enemy of Ariobarzanes. Athens chose to support Miltokythes, and sent a fleet to his aid, but this was defeated by Cotys with the help of his son-in-law Iphicrates. Miltokythes was forced to abandon Hieron Oros in spring 361 BC, and Cotys now besieged Sestos. Athens now allied with Sparta against Cotys. Ariobarzanes surrendered Sestos and Kritothe to the Athenian general Timotheus, and the Athenians dispatched two more commanders to aid Miltokythes against Cotys. Nevertheless, Cotys prevailed with the continued assistance of Iphicrates and Charidemus. According to Demosthenes, they bribed the Athenian military and naval commanders, and several were tried and condemned after being recalled to Athens. Despite an attempt for peace between Athens and Cotys, proclaiming him an ally, Charidemus is found besieging the last remaining Athenian fortresses in the southern Chersonese again in 360 BC.[17]

By 360 BC, Cotys controlled almost all of the Chersonese peninsula, and the Athenians dispatched a new commander, Charidemus' friend Cephisodotus to the area. By the time Cephisodotus arrived in the last week of September 360 BC, Cotys had been murdered by two of Plato’s students from Aenus, Python and Heraclides. Thought previously to be close to the king, they murdered him during a feast in his palace, under the pretext that he had wronged their father. Upon their return to Athens, they were proclaimed honorary citizens and rewarded with gold wreaths. Python is said to have told the Athenians that "God did this, borrowing from me the hand that did the deed."[18] Identifying an unnamed Thracian king met by Philip II of Macedon with Cotys, some authors had put Cotys' death in 359 BC, assuming it took place after Philip II's accession; this is still found cited in the literature, but the chronology of Cephisodotus' arrival in 360 BC is certain. Philip may have met Cotys before becoming king of Macedon and, moreover, it is not certain that the Thracian king in question should be identified with Cotys.[19]

Cotys I was the last ruler of a relatively unified Thrace for centuries. On his death, his son and heir Cersobleptes found himself opposed by Amadocus II (son of Amadocus I and possibly already a rival to Cotys in the early 370s BC) and Berisades (son or descendant of Saratocus?), as well as Miltokythes and a certain Spokes. While Cersobleptes managed to eliminate some of these foes with the continued support of Charidemus (who captured and executed Miltokythes in 357 BC), he had to accept a partition of the kingdom with Amadocus II and Berisades.[20] The division of Odrysian Thrace was exploited by Philip II of Macedon to impose his control over the area.

As a former ally of Athens who became a dangerous foe, Cotys I has been portrayed in a fairly negative light in our sources, depicted as irritable, intemperate, drunken, inordinately cruel, and perfidious, most notably in the polemics of Demosthenes. Plutarch provides a more nuanced depiction of Cotys' character in the following anecdote: Cotys, when one gave him a leopard, gave him a lion in return. He was naturally prone to anger, and punished the mistakes of his servants severely. When a stranger brought him some earthen vessels, thin and brittle, but delicately shaped and admirably adorned with carvings, he rewarded the stranger for them, and then broke them all into pieces, "Lest (he said) my passion should provoke me to punish those that break them excessively." [21]

Cotys I had several children, including a daughter who married Iphicrates probably before 387 BC, another daughter who married Charidemus probably after 365 BC,[22] a son named Cersobleptes who succeeded his father on the throne in 360 BC, and possibly a second son named Seuthes, who may have served as Cersobleptes' deputy (hyparkhos) and may have become king as Seuthes III (these identifications are hypothetical and debated).[23]

In popular culture

  • Cotys I appears in the 2014 film Hercules portrayed by John Hurt. Here, Cotys is depicted as the main antagonist as King of Thrace during the year 361 BC. Unlike in the film, the actual Cotys I, never features in the mythology of Heracles/Hercules.

References

  1. ^ Sears 2013: 65.
  2. ^ Tacheva 2006: 141–142, 146, who expresses some doubts as to the veracity or implications of this statement.
  3. ^ Tacheva 2006: 145.
  4. ^ Delev 1997: n. 21.
  5. ^ For example, Werner 1961:240; Stronk 1995: 57–58; Archibald 1998; Zahrnt 2015: 44.
  6. ^ Topalov 1994: 92–105, 137–150, 161–163, compare Topalov 2003: 204–207, and Topalov 2006: 187–188; Delev 1997: n. 24; Vulpe 1976: 31–32 allows for both possibilities.
  7. ^ Tacheva 2006: 142–144.
  8. ^ Topalov 1994: 92–105, 137–150, 161–163, compare Topalov 2003: 204–207, and Topalov 2006: 187–188.
  9. ^ Tacheva 2006: 144; Zahrnt 2015: 44.
  10. ^ Tacheva 2006: 146–147.
  11. ^ a b c Valeva, Julia; Nankov, Emil; Graninger, Denver (2015). A Companion to Ancient Thrace. Chichester, United Kingdom: John Wiley & Sons. p. 44. ISBN 9781444351040.
  12. ^ Tacheva 2006: 146–149, sees identifies Amadocus as Amadocus I.
  13. ^ Tacheva 2006: 147–149.
  14. ^ Valeva 2015: 203–204; Dana 2015: 250–251.
  15. ^ Diodorus 15.36.1–4. Tacheva 2006: 147–149; Zahrnt 2015: 44.
  16. ^ Tacheva 2006: 154–155; she considers Charidemus' wife a granddaughter of Cotys: 158, n. 51.
  17. ^ Tacheva 2006: 152–158.
  18. ^ Plutarch, Precepts of Statecraft 20 816E (Moralia 10: 253–254), compare On Praising Oneself 11 542E (Moralia 7: 137–138); Demosthenes, 23.118–119; Tacheva 2006: 159.
  19. ^ Delev 1997: 7–8; Tacheva 2006: 158–159.
  20. ^ Delev 1997: 8–10.
  21. ^ Plutarch, Sayings of kings and commanders 15, adapted from Goodwin 1878: 189.
  22. ^ Tacheva 2006: 158, n. 51, considers her a granddaughter rather than daughter of Cotys, but nothing prevents a significant difference in age between probable half-sisters who married Iphicrates and Charidemus.
  23. ^ Manov 2019: 104; Tacheva 2006: 187 identifies Seuthes III with the former deputy Seuthes but not as a son of Cotys I; Topalov 2001: 273–238 denies any relation to the deputy Seuthes and places Seuthes III in a rival branch of the dynasty as heir of Amadocus I, Amadocus II, and Teres III; Beloch 1923: 90–91 considers the deputy Seuthes a non-reigning son of Cotys, and this Seuthes as the father of Cotys and Reboulas from the Athenian decree from 330 BC.

Βιβλιογραφία

  • Demosthenes, Against Aristocrates
  • Diodorus, Bibliotheca historica
  • Z. Archibald, The Odrysian Kingdom of Thrace: Orpheus Unmasked, Oxford, 1998.
  • K. J. Beloch, Griechische Geschichte, vol. 3/2, Berlin, 1923.
  • D. Dana, Inscriptions, in: J. Valeva et al. (eds.), A Companion to Ancient Thrace, Wiley, 2015: 243–264.
  • P. Delev, “Filip II i zalezăt na Goljamoto Odrisko carstvo v Trakija,” Šumenski universitet “Episkop Konstantin Preslavski,” Trudove na katedrite po istorija i bogoslovie 1 (1997) 7–40.
  • W. Goodwin, Plutarch's Morals, Cambridge, 1878.
  • M. Manov, "The Hellenistic Tomb with Greek Inscription from Smyadovo, Bulgaria - Reconsidered," Journal of Ancient History and Archaeology 6/3 (2019) 99–118.
  • M. Sears, Athens, Thrace, and the Shaping of Athenian Leadership, Cambridge, 2013.
  • J. P. Stronk, The Ten Thousand in Thrace, Amsterdam, 1995.
  • M. Tacheva, The Kings of Ancient Thrace. Book One, Sofia, 2006.
  • S. Topalov, The Odrysian Kingdom from the Late 5th to the Mid-4th C. B.C., Sofia, 1994.
  • S. Topalov, Contributions to the Study of the Coinage and History in the Lands of Eastern Thrace from the End of the 4th C. B.C. to the end of the 3rd C. B.C., Sofia, 2001.
  • S. Topalov, Ancient Thrace. Contributions to the Study of the Early Thracian Tribal Coinage and its Relations to the Coinage of the Odrysians and the Odrysian Kingdom during 6th-4th C. B.C., Sofia, 2003.
  • S. Topalov, On the Political History of the Odrysian Kingdom from the End of the 6th Century B.C. to the Middle of the 4th Century B.C., Sofia, 2006.
  • J. Valeva, Gold, Silver, and Bronze Vessels, in: J. Valeva et al. (eds.), A Companion to Ancient Thrace, Wiley, 2015: 197–211.
  • J. Valeva et al. (eds.), A Companion to Ancient Thrace, Wiley, 2015.
  • R. Vulpe, Studia Thracologica, Bucharest, 1976.
  • M. Zahrnt, Early History of Thrace to the Murder of Kotys I (360 BCE), in: J. Valeva et al. (eds.), A Companion to Ancient Thrace, Wiley, 2015: 35–47.
  • R. Werner, in: W.-D. von Barloewen (ed.), Abriss der Geschichte antiker Randkulturen, Munich, 1961: 83–150, 239–242.
Cotys I (Odrysian)
Born: Unknown Died: 360 BC
Preceded by King of Thrace
384–360 BC
Succeeded by

cotys, odrysian, cotys, kotys, ancient, greek, Κότυς, kotys, king, odrysians, thrace, from, murder, known, have, been, born, during, reign, seuthes, based, ancient, sources, date, birth, estimates, cotys, daughter, married, athenian, general, iphicrates, menes. Cotys I or Kotys I Ancient Greek Kotys Kotys was a king of the Odrysians in Thrace from 384 BC to his murder in 360 BC He was known to have been born during the reign of Seuthes I based on ancient sources and date of birth estimates for Cotys his daughter who married the Athenian general Iphicrates and her son Menestheus 1 According to Harpokration he reigned for 24 years which places his accession in 384 BC 2 Although his origins are actually unknown 3 An Athenian inscription dated to 330 BC which honors Reboulas brother of Cotys and son of king Seuthes As the ordinal of Seuthes is not mentioned it was unclear however which of the preceding kings named Seuthes is meant by the inscription 4 While scholars originally believed Seuthes II to be the father of Cotys I 5 now it is known that Seuthes I was his father as Seuthes II was only 7 years old at the time of Seuthes I s abdication in 411 BC 6 Cotys IKing of ThraceReign384 360 BCPredecessorHebryzelmisSuccessorCersobleptesIn 390 BC the Athenian general Iphicrates joined his colleague Thrasybulus in Thrace helping arrange peace between the Thracian rulers Amadocus I and Seuthes II and making both Athenian allies Iphicrates remained for about two years and married the daughter of Cotys in opulent circumstances 7 Cotys precise standing at the time remains obscure but he is tentatively identified as a brother of Hebryzelmis 8 who was the Odrysian king in Thrace in 386 385 BC when he was honored in an Athenian decree 9 Shortly afterwards in 384 BC Cotys I became king perhaps at first in the interior parts of Thrace 10 With the help of Iphicrates Cotys succeeded in establishing himself as the heir of Hebryzelmis 11 and eliminating the opposition of his rivals possibly including Amadocus II and Saratocus 12 Archaeological finds of items inscribed for Cotys to the north and west suggest expansion and contacts in that direction that have escaped the narrative sources 13 The name of Cotys in one instance described as a son of the god Apollon appears several times on objects from the Rogozen Treasure although the precise manner in which it came to be buried in northwestern Bulgaria presumably in the territory of the Triballi remains unclear 14 As Cotys tried to enlarge his kingdom including towards the Aegean and the Chersonese his actions led to increasing tensions with Athens In the early 370s BC the Second Athenian Confederacy was founded with a number of neighboring cities and islands joining the Confederacy as a safeguard against the threat from Cotys among others 11 In 375 BC Cotys probably supported Hales leader of Triballi a powerful Thracian tribe in northwestern Thrace in their attack on the city of Abdera According to Diodorus the city was saved only after the intervention of the Athenian general Chabrias whose forces then garrisoned the city 15 In 367 BC Ariobarzanes the Persian satrap of Phrygia occupied Sestos Following Ariobarzanes revolt against the Persian king Artaxerxes II in 365 BC Cotys apparently opposed Ariobarzanes and his ally Athens but his actions are ambivalent and unclear The same year Cotys welcomed the return of his son in law the dismissed Athenian general Iphicrates and a new ally the mercenary commander Charidemus who married another daughter of Cotys 16 The Athenians under their general Timotheus were able to gain Sestos and Krithote Soon after in 363 or 362 BC Cotys sent Miltokythes into the Thracian Chersonese to take Sestos Miltokythes besieged the city and starved it into surrender then attacked Krithote Athenian generals sent to relieve the attacked towns were unsuccessful 11 At this time in 362 BC however Miltokythes rebelled against Cotys seizing the royal treasury at Hieron Oros and finding himself besieged there by Cotys appealed for help to both Ariobarzanes and Athens Cotys also appealed for help from Athens and allied himself to the Persian satrap of Lydia Autophradates enemy of Ariobarzanes Athens chose to support Miltokythes and sent a fleet to his aid but this was defeated by Cotys with the help of his son in law Iphicrates Miltokythes was forced to abandon Hieron Oros in spring 361 BC and Cotys now besieged Sestos Athens now allied with Sparta against Cotys Ariobarzanes surrendered Sestos and Kritothe to the Athenian general Timotheus and the Athenians dispatched two more commanders to aid Miltokythes against Cotys Nevertheless Cotys prevailed with the continued assistance of Iphicrates and Charidemus According to Demosthenes they bribed the Athenian military and naval commanders and several were tried and condemned after being recalled to Athens Despite an attempt for peace between Athens and Cotys proclaiming him an ally Charidemus is found besieging the last remaining Athenian fortresses in the southern Chersonese again in 360 BC 17 By 360 BC Cotys controlled almost all of the Chersonese peninsula and the Athenians dispatched a new commander Charidemus friend Cephisodotus to the area By the time Cephisodotus arrived in the last week of September 360 BC Cotys had been murdered by two of Plato s students from Aenus Python and Heraclides Thought previously to be close to the king they murdered him during a feast in his palace under the pretext that he had wronged their father Upon their return to Athens they were proclaimed honorary citizens and rewarded with gold wreaths Python is said to have told the Athenians that God did this borrowing from me the hand that did the deed 18 Identifying an unnamed Thracian king met by Philip II of Macedon with Cotys some authors had put Cotys death in 359 BC assuming it took place after Philip II s accession this is still found cited in the literature but the chronology of Cephisodotus arrival in 360 BC is certain Philip may have met Cotys before becoming king of Macedon and moreover it is not certain that the Thracian king in question should be identified with Cotys 19 Cotys I was the last ruler of a relatively unified Thrace for centuries On his death his son and heir Cersobleptes found himself opposed by Amadocus II son of Amadocus I and possibly already a rival to Cotys in the early 370s BC and Berisades son or descendant of Saratocus as well as Miltokythes and a certain Spokes While Cersobleptes managed to eliminate some of these foes with the continued support of Charidemus who captured and executed Miltokythes in 357 BC he had to accept a partition of the kingdom with Amadocus II and Berisades 20 The division of Odrysian Thrace was exploited by Philip II of Macedon to impose his control over the area As a former ally of Athens who became a dangerous foe Cotys I has been portrayed in a fairly negative light in our sources depicted as irritable intemperate drunken inordinately cruel and perfidious most notably in the polemics of Demosthenes Plutarch provides a more nuanced depiction of Cotys character in the following anecdote Cotys when one gave him a leopard gave him a lion in return He was naturally prone to anger and punished the mistakes of his servants severely When a stranger brought him some earthen vessels thin and brittle but delicately shaped and admirably adorned with carvings he rewarded the stranger for them and then broke them all into pieces Lest he said my passion should provoke me to punish those that break them excessively 21 Cotys I had several children including a daughter who married Iphicrates probably before 387 BC another daughter who married Charidemus probably after 365 BC 22 a son named Cersobleptes who succeeded his father on the throne in 360 BC and possibly a second son named Seuthes who may have served as Cersobleptes deputy hyparkhos and may have become king as Seuthes III these identifications are hypothetical and debated 23 In popular culture EditCotys I appears in the 2014 film Hercules portrayed by John Hurt Here Cotys is depicted as the main antagonist as King of Thrace during the year 361 BC Unlike in the film the actual Cotys I never features in the mythology of Heracles Hercules References Edit Sears 2013 65 Tacheva 2006 141 142 146 who expresses some doubts as to the veracity or implications of this statement Tacheva 2006 145 Delev 1997 n 21 For example Werner 1961 240 Stronk 1995 57 58 Archibald 1998 Zahrnt 2015 44 Topalov 1994 92 105 137 150 161 163 compare Topalov 2003 204 207 and Topalov 2006 187 188 Delev 1997 n 24 Vulpe 1976 31 32 allows for both possibilities Tacheva 2006 142 144 Topalov 1994 92 105 137 150 161 163 compare Topalov 2003 204 207 and Topalov 2006 187 188 Tacheva 2006 144 Zahrnt 2015 44 Tacheva 2006 146 147 a b c Valeva Julia Nankov Emil Graninger Denver 2015 A Companion to Ancient Thrace Chichester United Kingdom John Wiley amp Sons p 44 ISBN 9781444351040 Tacheva 2006 146 149 sees identifies Amadocus as Amadocus I Tacheva 2006 147 149 Valeva 2015 203 204 Dana 2015 250 251 Diodorus 15 36 1 4 Tacheva 2006 147 149 Zahrnt 2015 44 Tacheva 2006 154 155 she considers Charidemus wife a granddaughter of Cotys 158 n 51 Tacheva 2006 152 158 Plutarch Precepts of Statecraft 20 816E Moralia 10 253 254 compare On Praising Oneself 11 542E Moralia 7 137 138 Demosthenes 23 118 119 Tacheva 2006 159 Delev 1997 7 8 Tacheva 2006 158 159 Delev 1997 8 10 Plutarch Sayings of kings and commanders 15 adapted from Goodwin 1878 189 Tacheva 2006 158 n 51 considers her a granddaughter rather than daughter of Cotys but nothing prevents a significant difference in age between probable half sisters who married Iphicrates and Charidemus Manov 2019 104 Tacheva 2006 187 identifies Seuthes III with the former deputy Seuthes but not as a son of Cotys I Topalov 2001 273 238 denies any relation to the deputy Seuthes and places Seuthes III in a rival branch of the dynasty as heir of Amadocus I Amadocus II and Teres III Beloch 1923 90 91 considers the deputy Seuthes a non reigning son of Cotys and this Seuthes as the father of Cotys and Reboulas from the Athenian decree from 330 BC Bibliografia EditDemosthenes Against Aristocrates Diodorus Bibliotheca historica Z Archibald The Odrysian Kingdom of Thrace Orpheus Unmasked Oxford 1998 K J Beloch Griechische Geschichte vol 3 2 Berlin 1923 D Dana Inscriptions in J Valeva et al eds A Companion to Ancient Thrace Wiley 2015 243 264 P Delev Filip II i zalezăt na Goljamoto Odrisko carstvo v Trakija Sumenski universitet Episkop Konstantin Preslavski Trudove na katedrite po istorija i bogoslovie 1 1997 7 40 W Goodwin Plutarch s Morals Cambridge 1878 M Manov The Hellenistic Tomb with Greek Inscription from Smyadovo Bulgaria Reconsidered Journal of Ancient History and Archaeology 6 3 2019 99 118 M Sears Athens Thrace and the Shaping of Athenian Leadership Cambridge 2013 J P Stronk The Ten Thousand in Thrace Amsterdam 1995 M Tacheva The Kings of Ancient Thrace Book One Sofia 2006 S Topalov The Odrysian Kingdom from the Late 5th to the Mid 4th C B C Sofia 1994 S Topalov Contributions to the Study of the Coinage and History in the Lands of Eastern Thrace from the End of the 4th C B C to the end of the 3rd C B C Sofia 2001 S Topalov Ancient Thrace Contributions to the Study of the Early Thracian Tribal Coinage and its Relations to the Coinage of the Odrysians and the Odrysian Kingdom during 6th 4th C B C Sofia 2003 S Topalov On the Political History of the Odrysian Kingdom from the End of the 6th Century B C to the Middle of the 4th Century B C Sofia 2006 J Valeva Gold Silver and Bronze Vessels in J Valeva et al eds A Companion to Ancient Thrace Wiley 2015 197 211 J Valeva et al eds A Companion to Ancient Thrace Wiley 2015 R Vulpe Studia Thracologica Bucharest 1976 M Zahrnt Early History of Thrace to the Murder of Kotys I 360 BCE in J Valeva et al eds A Companion to Ancient Thrace Wiley 2015 35 47 R Werner in W D von Barloewen ed Abriss der Geschichte antiker Randkulturen Munich 1961 83 150 239 242 Cotys I Odrysian Odrysian kingdom of ThraceBorn Unknown Died 360 BCPreceded byHebryzelmis King of Thrace384 360 BC Succeeded byCersobleptes Berisades andAmadocus II This biography of a member of a European royal house is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte This Ancient Thrace related article is a stub You can help Wikipedia by expanding it vte Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Cotys I Odrysian amp oldid 1109424904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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