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Seleucus I Nicator
Seleucus I Nicator ("victor"): one of the Diadochi, founder of the Seleucid Empire, ruled from 311 to 281.
Successor of: Alexander the Great
Relatives
- Father: Antiochus
- Mother: Laodice
- Married to:
- Apame I, daughter of Spitamenes
- Son: Antiochus I Soter
- Son: Achaeus
- Stratonice I, daughter of Demetrius I Poliorcetes and Phila I
- Daughter: Phila II (married to Antigonus Gonatas)
- Apame I, daughter of Spitamenes
Main deeds
- Born c.358 in Europos in Macedonia
- Page of Philip II
- Joins Alexander the Great
- 330 (?): commander of the agema of Shieldbearers
- 324: Marries Apame I at Susa (text)
- 323: Death of Alexander; Perdiccas appoints Seleucus as commander of the Shieldbearers
- 320 (?): One of the murderers of Perdiccas
- 320 (?): At the conference of Triparadisus, he is made satrap of Babylonia (text)
- 316: Flees from Babylonia when Antigonus Monophthalmus tries to subdue him; finds refuge in Egypt, where Ptolemy I Soter has become an independent ruler
- 315-311: In the Third Diadoch War, Seleucus has a naval command for Ptolemy against Antigonus, but is unable to overcome his opponents
- 312: Battle of Gaza: Ptolemy and Seleucus defeat Antigonus' son Demetrius Poliorcetes
- 311: Seleucus reoccupies Babylonia (May); outbreak of the Babylonian War; Seleucus defeats Nicanor (autumn)
- 310: Seleucus defeats Demetrius (spring); Antigonus invades Babylonia (autumn)
- 309: Seleucus defeats Antigonus (spring); origin of the Seleucid Empire
- Campaigns in the east; treaty with Chandragupta, king of the Maurya empire; Seleucus obtains 500 elephants.note
- 307-301: Fourth Diadoch War of all Diadochi against Antigonus and Demetrius
- 301: In the Battle of Ipsus, Antigonus is defeated; Seleucus conquers Syria
- Seleucus founds Seleucia on the Tigris, Seleucia in Pieria, Antioch, Apamea, Laodicea, Cyrrhus, Dura Europos, and Diocaesarea
- 299: He marries Stratonice I, daughter of Demetrius Poliorcetes and Phila I
- 292: Seleucus appoints his son Antiochus as successor; he becomes satrap of Bactria
- 281: In the battle of Corupedium, Seleucus defeats Lysimachus, ruler of western Asia Minor, Thrace and Macedonia
- September 281: When Seleucus crosses to Europe, he is assassinated by Ptolemy Keraunos
- Seleucus was buried in Seleucia
Succeeded by: Antiochus I Soter
Sources
- Appian on the career of Seleucus
- Diadochi chronicle (BCHP 3)
- End of Seleucus I chronicle (BCHP 9)
Literature
- A.N. Bosworth, "The Rise of Seleucus" in: The Legacy of Alexander. Politics, Warfare, and Propaganda under the Successors (2002)