, wearing the satrapal headdress, from his coinage. Source: Orontes was the son of Artasuras and married to Artaxerxes' daughter
Rhodogunê. He was satrap of
Armenia in 401 when
Xenophon's Ten Thousand marched through that region after the battle of
Cunaxa. In 380, when he and
Tiribazus (then satrap of
Lydia) were besieging
Evagoras, king of
Salamis on
Cyprus, he made false accusations against Tiribazus (who had been
hyparch under him in Armenia) that got him demoted to the minor satrapy of Mysia, on the border between Phrygia and Lydia. His resentment at this decline in his fortunes is presumed to be behind his rebellion, but why it occurred at this time is unknown.
Diodorus Siculus said that:The peoples who had revolted from the King chose as their general
Orontes in charge of all branches of the administration.Those associating with Orontes do not appear to be the other men named here. Diodorus went on to say that among the rebels were "Lycians, Pisidians,
Pamphylians, and Cilicians, likewise Syrians,
Phoenicians, and practically all the coastal peoples". In the end, though, he betrayed his compatriots, arresting the leaders and delivering them to Artaxerxes, thus putting himself back the good graces of the King. There is a reference to Orontes in
Demosthenes'
On the Symmories (a.k.a.
On the Navy Boards) of 354 that has led some to surmise that he rebelled a second time against Artaxerxes' successor, but there is no other information to corroborate this. == Revolt of Autophradates (362 BCE?) ==