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Alexander I Balas
Alexander I Balas (from Bel, Semitic for "lord"): name of a Seleucid king, ruled from 152 to 145.
Successor of: Demetrius I Soter
Relatives:
- Father: Antiochus IV Epiphanes (spurious)
- Mother: Laodice IV (spurious)
- Wife: Cleopatra Thea (daughter of Ptolemy VI Philometor)
- Son: Antiochus VI Dionysus (or Epiphanes); perhaps Alexander II Zabinas
Main deeds
- Summer 152: Insurrection against Demetrius I Soter, supported by Rome, the Seleucid princess Laodice VI, Attalus II Philadelphus, Ariarathes V Philopator of Cappadocia, and Ptolemy VI Philometor
- In Judaea, the Hasmonaean leader Jonathan also supports Alexander and is recognized as high priest; Judaean troops play a role in this civil war
- June 150: Demetrius is defeated near Antioch; one of his officers, Diodotus, makes sure that Alexander can capture the capital; the victorious king starts to call himself Epiphanes, "manifestation of the god", like his (presumed) father Antiochus IV
- 150: Marriage to Cleopatra Thea (daughter of Ptolemy VI Philometor) in Ptolemais
- 147: Cleopatra gives birth to Alexander's son Antiochus VI Dionysus
- 146: Revolt of Demetrius II Nicator; Jonathan defeats Demetrius' general Apollonius
- 146: Cilician revolt
- 146: Ptolemy supports Demetrius' claim to the throne; Cleopatra leaves her husband and remarries with Demetrius; her father captures Antioch, but is killed
- Beginning of August 145: Alexander Balas flees but is killed by the Nabataean Arabs
- Alexander's supporter Diodotus saves Alexander's son Antiochus, who is now two years old
Succeeded by: Demetrius II Nicator, who inherits a civil war against Diodotus and Alexander' son Antiochus VI Dionysus
Contemporary events
- The reign of Alexander Balas created a great disturbance, which resulted in the take-over of the eastern part of the empire by the Parthians and the rise of Cilician pirates
Sources
- 1 Maccabees 10-11
- Diodorus of Sicily, Library of World History, 31-33
- Flavius Josephus, Jewish Antiquities, 13.35ff
- Livy, Periochae 52.10
- Polybius of Megalopolis, World History, 33.15, 18