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MITHRADATES VI

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Originally appearing in Volume V18, Page 622 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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MITHRADATES VI  . Eupator, called the
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Great, a boy of eleven, now succeeded his
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father . Alarmed at the attempts made upon his
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life by his
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mother, he fled to the mountains and was for many years a hunter . In t 11 he returned to
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Sinope, threw his mother into prison, and put his younger
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brother to
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death . Having thus established himself on the
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throne, he turned his attention to
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conquest . In return for his assistance against the Scythians, the Greeks of the Cimmerian Bosporus and the Tauric Chersonese recognized his
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suzerainty . He occupied
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Colchis,
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Paphlagonia and
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part of
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Galatia; set his son Ariarathes on the throne of
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Cappadocia and drove out Nicomedes III., the young king of Bithynia . The Romans restored the legitimate kings, and, while apparently acquiescing,
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Mithradates made preparations for war . He had long hated the Romans, who had taken
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Phrygia during his minority, and he aimed at driving them from
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Asia Minor . The cause of rupture was the attack on Pontic territory by Nicomedes at the instigation of the Romans . Mithradates, unable to obtain satisfaction, declared war (88 B.c.) . He rapidly overran Galatia, Phrygia and Asia, defeated the
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Roman armies, and ordered a general
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massacre of the Romans in Asia .

He sent large armies into

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European
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Greece, and his generals occupied Athens . But Sulla in Greece and Fimbria in Asia defeated his armies in several battles; the Greek cities were disgusted by his severity, and in 84 he concluded peace, abandoning all his conquests, surrendering his
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fleet and paying a
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fine of 2000 talents . During what is called the Second Mithradatic War,
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Murena invaded
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Pontus without any good reason in 83, but was defeated in 82 . Hostilities were suspended, but disputes constantly occurred, and in 74 a general war broke out . Mithradates defeated Cotta, the Roman consul, at Chalcedon; but
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Lucullus worsted him, and drove him in 72 to take
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refuge in Armenia with his son-in-law Tigranes . After two great victories at Tigranocerta (69) and Artaxata (68), Lucullus was disconcerted by mutiny and the defeat of his
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lieutenant
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Fabius (see LucunLus) . In 66 he was superseded by
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Pompey, who completely defeated both Mithradates and Tigranes . The former established himself in 64 at Panticapaeum, and was planning new
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campaigns against the Romans when his own troops revolted, and, after vainly trying to
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poison himself, he ordered a Gallic mercenary to kill him . So perished the greatest enemy that the Romans had to en-
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counter in Asia Minor . His
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body was sent to Pompey, who buried it in the royal sepulchre at Sinope . Ancient authorities have invested Mithradates with a
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halo of
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romance . His courage, his bodily strength and
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size, his skill in the use of weapons, in
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riding, and in the chase, his speed of
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foot, his capacity for eating and drinking, his penetrating intellect and his mastery of 22
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languages are celebrated to a degree which is almost incredible .

With e

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surface gloss of Greek
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education, he
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united the subtlety, the superstition, and the obstinate endurance of an
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Oriental . He collected curiosities and
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works of
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art; he assembled Greek men of letters round him; he gave prizes to the greatest poets and the best eaters . He spent much of his time in practising magic, and it was believed that he had so saturated his body with poisons that none could injure him . He trusted no one; he murdered Kings of Pontus . his mother, his sons, the
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sister whom he had married; to prevent his
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harem from falling to his enemies he murdered all his concubines, and his most faithful followers were never safe . For eighteen years he showed himself no unworthy adversary of Sulla, Lucullus and Pompey . See T . Reinach, Milhridate Eupator (1890;
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Gera trans. by A . Goetz, 1895, with the author's corrections and additions) ; also E . Meyer, Geschichte
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des Konigreichs Pontos (1879) .

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