Philetaerus
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Coin, dipicting the head of Philetaerus on the obverse and seated Athena, Greek goddess of war and wisdom, on the reverse, struck during the reign of Eumenes I (263 BC–241 BC) |
Philetaerus (circa
343 BC–
263 BC) was the founder of the
Attalid dynasty of
Pergamon in
Anatolia.
He was born in Tieum a small town on the
Black Sea coast of Anatolia between
Bithynia to the west and
Paphlagonia to the east. His father was Attalus (perhaps from
Macedon) and his mother Boa was Paphlagonian.
After the death of
Alexander the Great in
323 BC, Philetaerus became embroiled in the struggle for supremacy, called the
Wars of the Diadochi (diadochi means "successors" in Greek) between Alexander's regional governors,
Antigonus in
Phrygia,
Lysimachus in
Thrace and
Seleucus in
Babylonia (among others). Philetaerus served first under Antigonus. He then shifted his allegiance to Lysimachus, who, after Antigonas was killed at the
Battle of Ipsus in
301 BC, made Philetaerus commander of Pergamon, where Lysimachus kept a treasury of nine thousand
talents.
Philetaerus served Lysimachus until
282 BC, when perhaps because of conflicts involving the court intrigues of
Arsinoƫ, Lysimachus' third wife, Philataerus deserted Lysimachus, offering himself and the important fortress of Pergamon, along with its treasury to Seleceus who subsequently defeated and killed Lysimachus at the
Battle of Corupedium in
281 BC. Seleceus himself was killed by
Ptolemy Ceraunus a brother of Arsinoƫ at
Lysimachia a few months later.
Though nominally under Seleucid control, Philetaerus, especially after the death of Seleceus, had considerable autonomy and was able with the help of his considerable wealth to increase his power and influence beyond Pergamon. There are numerous records of Philetaerus as benefactor to neighboring cities and temples, including the temples at
Delphi and
Delos. He also contributed troops, money and food to the city of
Cyzicus for defense against the invading
Gauls. As a result Philetaerus gained prestige and goodwill for himself and his family.
During his nearly forty year rule, he constructed on the
acropolis of Pergamon, the temple of
Demeter, and the temple of
Athena, (Pergamon's patron deity), and Pergamon's first palace and he added considerably to the cities fortifications.
Philetaerus never married and had no children. He adopted his nephew
Eumenes I (the son of Philetaerus' brother also named Eumenes), who succeeded him as ruler of Pergamon, upon his death in 263 BC.
Strabo
12.3.8 Hansen, p. 15.
Strabo
13.4.1 Pausanias
1.10.3, 4; Strabo
13.4.1 Pausanias
1.10.5 Junianus Justinus
17.2; Strabo
13.4.1 For a more detailed account of the benefactions of Philetaerus, including sources, see Hansen, pp. 18–19; see also Strabo
13.4.1 Hansen, pp. 17, 18
Both Strabo
13.4.1 and Pausanias
1.8.1 state that he was a eunuch, according to Strabo, as the result of a childhood accident. Strabo
13.4.2*Hansen, Esther V. (1971).
The Attalids of Pergamon. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press; London: Cornell University Press Ltd. ISBN 0801406153.
*
Junianus Justinus, Epitome of the
Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus, translated, with Footnotes, by the Rev. John Selby Watson; London: Henry G. Bohn, York Street, Convent Garden (1853).
*
Pausanias,
Description of Greece, Books I-II, (Loeb Classical Library) translated by W. H. S. Jones; Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. (1918) ISBN 0674991044.
*
Strabo,
Geography, (Loeb Classical Library) translated by Horace Leonard Jones; Cambridge, Massachusetts: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann, Ltd. (1924) Books 10-12, ISBN 0674992334; Books 13-14, ISBN 0674992466.