Online Encyclopedia

GYGES

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V12, Page 751 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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GYGES  , founder of the third or Mermnad

dynasty of Lydian kings, he reigned 687–652 B.C. according to H . Gelzer, 6go–657 B.C. according to H . Winckler . The chronology of the Lydian kings given by Herodotus has been shown by the
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Assyrian inscriptions to be about twenty years in excess . Gyges was the son of Dascylus, who, when recalled from banishment in
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Cappadocia by the Lydian king Sadyattes—called Candaules " the
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Dog-strangler " (a title of the Lydian Hermes) by the Greeks—sent his son back to
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Lydia instead of himself . Gyges soon became a favourite of Sadyattes and was despatched by him to fetch Tudo, the daughter of Arnossus of
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Mysia, whom the Lydian king wished to make his queen . On the way Gyges fell in love with Tudo, who complained to Sadyattes of his conduct . Forewarned that the king intended to punish him with
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death, Gyges assassinated Sadyattes in the
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night and seized the
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throne with the help of Arselis of Mylasa, the captain of the Carian bodyguard, whom he had won over to his cause .
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Civil war ensued, which was finally ended by an
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appeal to the oracle of Delphi and the confirmation of the right of Gyges to the
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crown by the Delphian
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god . Further to secure his title he married Tudo . Many legends were told among the Greeks about his rise to power . That found in Herodotus, which may be traced to the poet
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Archilochus of Paros, described how " Candaules " insisted upon showing Gyges his wife when unrobed, which so enraged her that she gave Gyges the choice of murdering her
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husband and making himself king, or of being put to death himself .

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Plato made Gyges a shepherd, who discovered a magic ring by means of which he murdered his master and won the affection of his wife (Hdt. i . 8-14; Plato, Rep . 359; Justin i . 7;
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Cicero, De off. iii. g) . Once established on the throne Gyges devoted himself to consolidating his
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kingdom and making it a military power . The Troad was conquered,
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Colophon captured from the Greeks, Smyrna besieged and alliances entered into with Ephesus and Miletus . The
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Cimmerii, who had ravaged
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Asia Minor, were beaten back, and an
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embassy was sent to Assur-bani-pal at Nineveh (about 65o B.c.) in the hope of obtaining his help against the barbarians . The Assyrians, however, were otherwise engaged, and Gyges turned to
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Egypt, sending his faithful Carian troops along with Ionian mercenaries to assist Psammetichus in shaking off the Assyrian yoke (66o B.C.) . A few years later he fell in
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battle against the Cimmerii under Dugdamme (called Lygdamis by Strabo i . 3 . 21), who took the
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lower
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town of
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Sardis . Gyges was succeeded by his son Ardys .

See Nicolaus Damascenus, quoting from the Lydian historian

Xanthus, in C . Muller, Fragmenta historicorum Graecorum, iii.; R . Schubert, Geschichte der Konige von Lydien (1884) ; M . G . Radet, La Lydie et le monde grec au temps de Mermnades (1892–1893) ; H . Gelzer, " Das Zeitalter
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des Gyges " (Rhein .
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Mus., '875); H . Winckler, Altorientalische Forschungen, i . (1893) ; Macan's edition of Herodotus . (A . H .

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