Mithridates' year of birth is not specified by ancient historians, but his coin mints illustrate him as a middle-aged man. He was probably a son of
Mithridates II. In July/August 87 BC, Mithridates III usurped the Parthian throne from
Orodes I. Around the same period, the
Seleucid ruler
Demetrius III Eucaerus besieged his brother
Philip I Philadelphus in
Bereoa in
Syria. The governor of the city, however, called on Aziz, an Arab
phylarch (tribal leader), and the Parthian governor Mithridates Sinaces for help; with their aid, Demetrius III was defeated and taken hostage to Mithridates III, who treated him with "honour" until he died of illness. In August/September 80 BC, Mithridates III was dethroned in
Babylon, and was shortly afterwards expelled from
Susa by Orodes I. Mithridates III may have survived this event and managed to flee to the north, where he continued fighting until he died the following year. Other scholars, however, do not support the existence of a Mithridates III ruling in the 80s BC. According to
M. Rahim Shayegan (2011), the existence of rival kings during Orodes I's reign "repose primarily upon numismatic evidence, may find scant support in the literary and documentary sources, and can be contradicted by a diverging interpretation of the period's coinage." Shayegan deduces that Gotarzes I reigned till his death in , and was succeeded by Orodes I. == References ==