with solar rays, with Antiochus I of Commagene. (Mt Nemrut, 1st century BC) Commagene was originally a small
Syro-Hittite kingdom, located in modern south-central
Turkey, with its capital at
Samosata (modern
Samsat, near the
Euphrates). It was first mentioned in
Assyrian texts as
Kummuhu, which was normally an ally of Assyria, but eventually annexed as a province in 708 BC under
Sargon II. The
Achaemenid Empire then conquered Commagene in the 6th century BC and
Alexander the Great conquered the territory in the 4th century BC. After the breakup of the Empire of Alexander the Great, the region became part of the Hellenistic Seleucids, and Commagene emerged in about 163 BC as a state and province in the Greco-Syrian
Seleucid Empire. Perhaps Commagene was part of the kingdom of Armenia in the early Hellenistic period, and was possibly annexed to the Seleucid kingdom soon after Armenia's conquest The Hellenistic kingdom of Commagene, bounded by
Cilicia on the west and
Cappadocia on the north, arose in 162 BC when its governor,
Ptolemy, a
satrap of the disintegrating Seleucid Empire, declared himself independent. Ptolemy's dynasty was related to the
Parthian kings, but his descendant
Mithridates I Callinicus (109 BC – 70 BC) embraced Hellenistic culture and married the Syrian Greek Princess
Laodice VII Thea. His dynasty could thus claim ties with both
Alexander the Great and the Persian kings. This marriage may also have been part of a peace treaty between Commagene and the Seleucid Empire. From this point on, the kingdom of Commagene became more Greek than Persian. With
Sophene, it was to serve as an important centre for the transmission of Hellenistic and Roman culture in the region. Details are sketchy, but Mithridates Callinicus is thought have accepted Armenian suzerainty during the reign of
Tigranes II the Great. Mithridates and Laodice's son was King
Antiochus I Theos of Commagene (reigned 70 –38 BC). Antiochus was an ally of the Roman general
Pompey during the latter's campaigns against
Mithridates VI of Pontus in 64 BC. Thanks to his diplomatic skills, Antiochus was able to keep Commagene independent from the Romans. In 17 when
Antiochus III of Commagene died, Emperor
Tiberius annexed Commagene to the province of
Syria. According to Josephus, this move was supported by the local nobility but opposed by the mass of the common people, who preferred to remain under their kings as before; Tacitus, on the other hand, states that "most preferred Roman, but others royal rule". In 38 AD,
Caligula reinstated Antiochus III's son
Antiochus IV and also gave him the wild areas of
Cilicia to govern. Antiochus IV was the only
client king of Commagene under the
Roman Empire. Deposed by Caligula and restored again upon
Claudius' accession in 41 AD, Antiochus reigned until 72, when Emperor
Vespasian deposed the dynasty and definitively re-annexed the territory to the Roman Empire, acting on allegations "that Antiochus was about to revolt. The
Legio VI Ferrata, which Paetus led into Commagene, was not resisted by the populace; a day-long battle with Antiochus' sons Epiphanes and Callinicus ended in a draw, and Antiochus surrendered. The
Legio III Gallica would occupy the area by 73 AD. A 1st-century letter in
Syriac by
Mara Bar Serapion describes refugees fleeing the Romans across the Euphrates and bemoans the Romans' refusal to let the refugees return; this might describe the Roman takeover of either 18 or 72. The descendants of Antiochus IV lived prosperously and in distinction in
Anatolia,
Greece,
Italy, and the
Middle East. As a testament to the descendants of Antiochus IV, the citizens of
Athens erected a funeral monument in honor of his grandson
Philopappos, who was a benefactor of the city, upon his death in 116. Another descendant of Antiochus IV was the historian
Gaius Asinius Quadratus, who lived in the 3rd century. ==Geography==