Family and early life She was one of the daughters and among the children born to the Seleucid Monarchs
Antiochus III the Great and
Laodice III. Her paternal grandparents were the former Seleucid Monarchs
Seleucus II Callinicus and
Laodice II, while her maternal grandparents were King
Mithridates II of Pontus and his wife
Laodice. The parents of Laodice IV were first cousins, because her paternal grandfather and her maternal grandmother were brother and sister, and were among the children of
Antiochus II Theos and
Laodice I. She was born and raised in the Seleucid Empire. Laodice was commemorated with an honorific inscription dedicated to her at
Delos.
Ancestry First tenure as queen consort In 196 BC, her eldest brother, crown prince
Antiochus, was appointed by her father to succeed him. In that year Laodice was married to him. The marriage of Laodice IV and Antiochus was the first sibling marriage to occur in the Seleucid dynasty. Antiochus III appointed Laodice in 193 BC as the chief priestess of the state cult dedicated to her mother Laodice III in
Media. There are surviving coins dating from 175 BC that show portraits of Laodice IV and her first son with Seleucus IV, Antiochus, making them the first Seleucid King and Queen depicted on coins.
Third marriage After the death of Seleucus IV, Laodice married for the third time her youngest brother
Antiochus IV Epiphanes, who succeeded his second eldest brother as King. Antiochus IV co-ruled with his nephew Antiochus and adopted him as his son, but had him assassinated in 170 BC. Laodice bore Antiochus IV two children: a son,
Antiochus V Eupator, and a daughter,
Laodice VI. When Laodice's youngest brother and first son co-ruled, her second son
Demetrius I Soter was sent as a political hostage to
Rome. When Antiochus IV died, the first son of Laodice IV and Antiochus IV, Antiochus V Eupator succeeded his father as Seleucid King. ==See also==