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Seleucus II Callinicus
Seleucus II Callinicus ("beautiful victor"): name of a Seleucid king, ruled from 246 to 225.
Successor of: Antiochus II Theos
Relatives
- Father: Antiochus II Theos
- Mother: Laodice I
- Wife: Laodice II
- Children:
- Antiochis (married to Xerxes of Armenia),
- Alexander (= Seleucus III Keraunos)
- A son Lu-xxxnote
- Antiochus III the Great
- daughter
Main deeds
- Born c.265
- Early July 246: Antiochus II Theos dies, leaving a confused dynastic situation.
- From his first marriage, with Laodice II, he had two sons Seleucus II Callinicus (immediately recognized as king) and Antiochus Hierax (co-ruler in Sardes); they live in Ephesus
- From his second marriage, with the Ptolemaic princess Berenice Phernephorus, he had a five-year old son Antiochus; they live in Antioch
- Late summer 246: the child Antiochus is killed by partisans of Laodice
- September 246: King Ptolemy III Euergetes decides to avenge his relative: outbreak of the Laodicean War or Third Syrian War. He captures Seleucia and Antioch, but cannot prevent that Berenice is killed by the populace
- December 246: Ptolemy proceeds to Babylon; he is still there in February 245
- 245: The king's sister "Laodice" marries Mithridates II of Pontus; Phrygia is awarded to him as a marriage gift
- 245: Revolt of Andragoras in Parthia; raids of the Parni, led by Arsaces
- 243: Birth of Alexander (= Seleucus III Keraunos)
- 242/241: Unsuccesful Seleucid attack on Egypt
- 241: End of the Third Syrian War
- 240: War between king Seleucus II and Antiochus Hierax; the latter is successful but loses his territories to Attalus I Soter of Pergamon
- 239/238: The Seleucid princess Stratonice II, who had been queen of Macedonia (married to Demetrius II) returns; Seleucus refuses to marry her; she attempts an insurrection but is killed
- 238: The Parni overrun Astavene
- 235: The Parnian leader Tiridates settles in Parthia; Arsaced recognized as king; beginning of the Parthian Empire
- 230-227: Seleucus tries to suppress the revolt in Parthia, but instead loses Hyrcania; Diodotus declares himself independent in Bactria
- 229: Stay in Babylon
- 228: Unsuccessful insurrection of Antiochus Hierax in Mesopotamia
- The Macedonian king Antigonus III Doson intervenes in Caria
- December 225: Seleucus II dies after a fall from his horse
Succeeded by: Seleucus III Keraunos (or Soter)
Sources:
- Seleucid Accessions Chronicle (BCHP 10)
- Invasion of Ptolemy III chronicle (BCHP 11)
- Adoulis inscription (OGIS 54)
- Appian of Alexandria, Syrian Wars, 66
- Polyaenus, Stratagems, 4.17