Online Encyclopedia

PACORUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 442 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PACORUS  , a

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Parthian name, borne by two Parthian princes . 1 . PACORUS, son of Orodes I., was, after the
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battle of Carrhae, sent by his
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father into
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Syria at the head of an army in 52 B.C . The prince was still very young, and the real leader was Osaces . He was defeated and killed by C . Cassius, and soon after Pacorus was recalled by his father, because one of the satraps had rebelled and proclaimed him king (Dio Cass. xl . 28 sqq.; Justin xlii . 4; cf .
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Cicero, ad Fam. xv . 1; ad AU. vi . 1 . 14) .

Father and son were reconciled, but the

war against the Romans was always deferred . In the autumn of 45 Pacorus and the Arabic chieftain Alchaudonius came to the help of Q .
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Caecilius Bassus, who had rebelled against Caesar in Syria; but Pacorus soon returned, as his troops were unable to operate in the winter (Cie. ad Att. xiv. g . 3; Dio Cass. xlvii . 27) . At last in 40 B.C. the
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Roman fugitive Titus
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Labienus induced Orodes to send a
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great army under the command of Pacorus against the Roman provinces . Pacorus conquered the whole of Syria and
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Phoenicia with the exception of Tyre, and invaded
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Palestine, where he plundered Jerusalem, deposed Hyrcanus, and made his
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nephew Antigonus king (Dio Cass. xlviii . 24 sqq.; Joseph . Ant. xiv . 13; Tac . Hist. v . 9) .

Mean-while Labienus occupied

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Cilicia and the
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southern parts of
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Asia Minor down to the Carian coast (Dio Cass. xlviii . 26; Strabo xiv . 66o) . But in 39 P . Ventidius Bassus, the general of Mark Antony, drove him back into Cilicia, where he was killed, defeated the Parthians in Syria (Dio Cass. xlviii . 39 sqq.) and at last beat Pacorus at Gindarus (in
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northern Syria), on the 9th of
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June 38, the anniversary of the battle of Carrhae . Pacorus himself was slain in the battle, which effectually stopped the Parthian conquests west of the Euphrates (Dio Cass. xlix . 19 seq.; Justin xlii . 4; Plut . Anton . 24; Strabo xvi . 751; Velleius ii .

78; cf .

Horace, Od. iii . 6, g) . 2 . PACORUS, Parthian king, only mentioned by Dio Cass. lxviii . 17; Arrian, ap . Suid. s.v. thva7rit, according to whom he sold the
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kingdom of
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Osroene :o
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Abgar VII.; and Ammianus Marcellinus
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xxiii . 6 . 23, who mentions that he enlarged
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Ctesiphon and built its walls . But from his numerous dated coins we learn that he was on the
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throne, with interruptions, from A.D . 78–95 . He always calls himself
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Arsaces Pacorus .

This mention of his proper name, together with the royal name Arsaces, shows that his kingdom was disputed by rivals . Two of them we know from coins—Vologaeses II., who appears from 77–79 and again from 111–146, and

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Artabanus III. in 8o and 81 . Pacorus may have died about 105; he was succeeded by his
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brother Orroes . (ED .

End of Article: PACORUS
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