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{{Short description|King of Armenia (52–58, 62–88)}}
{{Infobox monarch | name=Tiridates I
{{Infobox royalty
| title=King of Armenia<ref>The Arsacid kings of Armenia did not mint coins; as a result their official titles are unknown.</ref>
| image= Tiridates.jpg | name = Tiridates I
| title =
| caption=Statue of Tiridates I of Armenia in the park of the ].
| image = Տրդատ Ա թագավոր. ընդօրինակություն քանդակից.jpg
| reign= 63<ref>Beginning of reign without interruption.</ref> &ndash; unknown
| date1= 52 to 61 | image_size =
| date2= 63 (coronated in 66) to 88 | alt =
| caption = A painting of the statue of Tiridates I in the ] by ]<ref name="terlemez"/>
| coronation= 66<ref>In Rome by Nero.</ref>
| succession = ]
| predecessor=]
| reign1 = 52–58
| successor=]
| reign-type1 = 1st Reign
| royal house=Arsacid
| predecessor1 = ]
| father= ] (51)
| successor1 = ]
| issue= Died without legitimate issue
| reign2 = 62–88
| religion= ]
| reign-type2 = 2nd Reign
| predecessor2 = ]
| successor2 = ]
| coronation2 = 66, in ] by ]
| birth_name =
| birth_date =
| birth_place =
| death_date = 88
| death_place =
| spouse =
| issue =
| dynasty = ]
| father = ]
| mother =
| religion = ]<ref name="Lang 1980 84, 141, 149">{{cite book |quote="(..) Though Tiridates was to be a client king of the Romans, Nero rightly judged that his investiture would satisfy the honour of the Parthians as well. Three years later, Tiridates made the journey to Rome. As a magus or priest of the '''Zoroastrian''' faith, he had to observe the rites which forbade him to defile water by travelling. (...)"|title=Armenia, cradle of civilization|first=David Marshall|last=Lang |publisher=Allen & Unwin|year=1980 |pages=84, 141, 149 }}</ref>{{sfn|Boyce|1984|p=84}}{{sfn|Russell|1987|p=268}}
}} }}
'''Tiridates I''' ({{lang-hy|Տրդատ Ա}} ''Trdat A''; {{lang-xpr|𐭕𐭉𐭓𐭉𐭃𐭕}}, ''Tīridāt''; {{lang-el|Τιριδάτης}} ''Tiridátes'') was ] beginning in 53 AD and the founder of the ], the Armenian line of the Arsacid Dynasty. The dates of his birth and death are unknown. His early reign was marked by a brief interruption towards the end of the year 54 and a much longer one from 58 to 63 AD. In an agreement to resolve the ] in and over Armenia, Tiridates I (one of the brothers of ]) was crowned king of Armenia by the Roman emperor ] in 66 AD; in the future, the king of Armenia was to be a Parthian prince, but his appointment required approval from the Romans. Even though this made Armenia a ], various contemporary Roman sources thought that Nero had ] ceded Armenia to the ].<ref name="Redgate">{{cite book | last = Redgate | first = Anne Elizabeth| title = The Armenians | edition = First | year = 2000 | publisher = Blackwell Publishers Inc. | location = Massachusetts | pages = 88–91 |isbn = 0-631-22037-2}}</ref>


'''Tiridates I''' ({{langx|xpr|𐭕𐭉𐭓𐭉𐭃𐭕}}, {{transliteration|xpr|Tīridāt}}; {{langx|grc|Τιριδάτης}}, {{transliteration|grc|Tiridátes}}) was ] beginning in 53 AD and the founder of the ]. The dates of his birth and death are unknown. His early reign was marked by a brief interruption towards the end of the year 54 and a much longer one from 58 to 63. In an agreement to resolve the ] in and over Armenia, Tiridates I (one of the brothers of ]) was crowned king of Armenia by the Roman emperor ] in 66; in the future, the king of Armenia was to be a Parthian prince, but his appointment required approval from the Romans. Even though this made Armenia a ], various contemporary Roman sources thought that Nero had '']'' ceded Armenia to the ].<ref name="Redgate">{{cite book | last = Redgate | first = Anne Elizabeth | title = The Armenians | edition = First | year = 2000 | publisher = Blackwell Publishers Inc. | location = Massachusetts | pages = | isbn = 0-631-22037-2 | url = https://archive.org/details/armenianspeoples00aere/page/88 }}</ref>
In addition to being a king, Tiridates I was also a ] priest and was accompanied by other ] on his journey to Rome in 66 AD. In the early 20th century, ] speculated that Tiridates was instrumental in the development of ]<ref>Cumont, ''Les réligions orientales dans le paganisme romaine'' (Conférences faites au Collége de France en 1905)</ref> which—in Cumont's view—was simply Romanized Zoroastrianism. This "continuity" theory has since been questioned.<ref>{{cite encyclopedia|last=Beck|first=Roger|title=Mithraism|encyclopedia=Encyclopedia Iranica|year=2002|url=http://www.iranica.com/newsite/articles/sup/Mithraism.html}}</ref> Tiridates I is one of the principal characters in ]'s opera '']'' and ]'s opera ''].''


In addition to being a king, Tiridates I was also a ]<ref name="Lang 1980 84, 141, 149">{{cite book |quote="(..) Though Tiridates was to be a client king of the Romans, Nero rightly judged that his investiture would satisfy the honour of the Parthians as well. Three years later, Tiridates made the journey to Rome. As a magus or priest of the '''Zoroastrian''' faith, he had to observe the rites which forbade him to defile water by travelling. (...)"|title=Armenia, cradle of civilization|first=David Marshall|last=Lang |publisher=Allen & Unwin|year=1980 |pages=84, 141, 149 }}</ref>{{sfn|Boyce|1984|p=84}}{{sfn|Russell|1987|p=268}} priest and was accompanied by other ] on his journey to Rome in 66. In the early 20th century, ] speculated that Tiridates was instrumental in the development of ] which ultimately became the main religion of the Roman Army and spread across the whole empire.<ref name="Cumont">{{cite book|last =Cumont|first =F.|author-link=Franz Cumont|title =Les religions orientales dans le paganisme romain|publisher =Brepols Publishers|year =1905|location =Turnhout|isbn =978-88-8419-289-9}}</ref> Furthermore, during his reign, he started reforming the administrative structure of Armenia, a reform which was continued by his successors, and which brought many ] customs and offices into it.{{sfn|Chaumont|1986|pp=418–438}}
==Ascension==

Tiridates I was one of the sons born to ] from a Greek ].<ref>Assuming that the mother of Vologases, Pacorus and Tiridates was the same woman. </ref> Virtually nothing is known about his minority and youth, which he spent in ], where his father served as King. Tiridates I's name meant ''given by Tir'', Tir was an Armeno-Parthian god of literature, science and art based on the Avestan ] and fused with the ] ].<ref>{{cite book |first = Mary | last = Boyce | title = A History of Zoroastrianism | publisher = Brill Academic Publishers | year = 1991 | isbn = 90-04-10474-7 | page = 77 }}</ref> In 51 the Roman ] of ], Julius Paelignus, invaded Armenia and ravaged the country, then under an ]n usurper ]. Rhadamistus had killed his uncle ] who was the legitimate king of Armenia by luring the Roman garrison that was protecting him outside of the fortress of ].<ref name="ANRW">{{cite book
==Background==
Tiridates was the youngest son of ], who was king of ], and then later the ].{{sfn|Dąbrowa|2007|p=125}} Tiridates had two elder brothers named ] (the eldest) and ].{{sfn|Dąbrowa|2007|p=125}} Tiridates' name means "given by Tir". Tir is the ] angel (Yazad) of literature, science and art based on the ]n ] and was equated with the ] ]<ref>{{cite book |first = Mary | last = Boyce | title = A History of Zoroastrianism | publisher = Brill Academic Publishers | year = 1991 | isbn = 90-04-10474-7 | page = 77 }}</ref> by way of the process of ].

==Accession==
]]]
In 51 the Roman ] of ], Julius Paelignus, invaded Armenia and ravaged the country, then under an ] usurper ]. Rhadamistus had killed his uncle ], the legitimate king of Armenia, by luring the Roman garrison that was protecting him outside of the fortress of ].<ref name="ANRW">{{cite book
| last =Sherk | last =Sherk
| first =Robert K. | first =Robert K.
| title =ANRW II.7, Politische Geschichte (Provinzen und Randvölker: Griechischer Balkanraum; Kleinasien), Roman Galatia: The Governors from 25 B. C. to A. D. 114 | title =ANRW II.7, Politische Geschichte (Provinzen und Randvölker: Griechischer Balkanraum; Kleinasien), Roman Galatia: The Governors from 25 B.C. to A.D. 114
| publisher =Walter de Gruyter & Co. | publisher =Walter de Gruyter & Co.
| year =1980 | year =1980
Line 28: Line 48:
| pages =954–1052 | pages =954–1052
| isbn =311008015X}}</ref> | isbn =311008015X}}</ref>
Acting without instruction, Paelignus recognized Rhadamistus as the new king of Armenia. Syrian governor Ummidius Quadratus sent Helvidius Priscus with a legion to repair these outrages, but he was recalled so as not to provoke a war with Parthia.<ref name="ANRW"/>
], c. 1848]]


Vonones II died in the same year, and was succeeded by Vologases I.{{sfn|Chaumont|Schippmann|1988|pp=574–580}} Vologases I sought to continue the policies of the prominent former Parthian king ] ({{reign|12|38/41}}), and thus, one of his first objectives was to bolster the Parthian position in strategically and politically unstable regions that had served for decades as the source of war with the ].{{sfn|Dąbrowa|2007|p=125}}{{sfn|Dąbrowa|2012|p=175}} Thus he gave the kingship of ] to Pacorus, and in 52 took the opportunity to invade Armenia, conquering ] and proclaiming Tiridates I as king.{{sfn|Dąbrowa|2007|p=125}}<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'' 12.50.1–2</ref> Vologases felt his invasion was justified due to the recent usurpation of the Armenian throne by the ] prince ], which he saw as a violation of the former settlement made between the Parthians and Romans regarding Armenia.{{sfn|Gregoratti|2018|p=1}}
Acting without instruction, Paelignus recognized Rhadamistus as the new king of Armenia. Syrian governor Ummidius Quadratus sent Helvidius Priscus with a legion to repair these outrages; he was recalled so as not to provoke a war with Parthia.<ref name="ANRW"/> In 52 AD, King ] took the opportunity and invaded Armenia, conquering ] (''Artashat'' in Armenia) and proclaiming his younger brother Tiridates I as king.<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'' 12.50.1–2</ref> This action violated the treaty that had been signed by the Roman emperor ] and Parthian king ] which gave the Romans the explicit right to appoint and crown the kings of Armenia.<ref>Augustus had also recovered the Roman standards held by the Parthians as a prize after the ] during the signing of the treaty, thereby wiping a long standing stain on Roman honor. {{cite book |first = John | last = Boardman | title = The Cambridge ancient history | publisher = Cambridge University Press | pages = 158–159 | year = 1925 | isbn = 0-521-26430-8}}</ref> Vologases I considered the throne of Armenia to have been once the property of his ancestors, now usurped by a foreign monarch in virtue of a crime.<ref>Vologases is referring to Vonones I of Parthia, and the sons of Artabanus II of Parthia, Arsaces and Orodes as the earlier Arsacids who sat on the Armenian throne. Tacitus, ''Annals'', 12.5</ref> A winter epidemic as well as an insurrection initiated by his son ] forced him to withdraw his troops from Armenia, allowing Rhadamistus to come back and punish locals as traitors; they eventually revolted and replaced him with the Parthian prince Tiridates I in early 55.<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 13.7</ref> Rhadamistus escaped along with his wife Zenobia who was pregnant. Unable to continue fleeing, she asked her husband to end her life rather than be captured. Rhadamistus stabbed her with a Median dagger and flung her body into the river ]. Zenobia was not fatally injured and was recovered by shepherds who sent her to Tiridates. Tiridates I received her kindly and treated her as a member of the monarchy.<ref name="Ehsan">{{cite book | last = Yarshater | first = Ehsan| title = The Cambridge History of Iran | year = 1983 | publisher = Cambridge University

Press | location = Massachusetts | pages = 80–83 |isbn = 0-521-20092-X}}</ref> Rhadamistus himself returned to Iberia and was soon put to death by his father ] of Iberia for having plotted against the royal power.<ref name="ANRW"/>
A winter epidemic as well as an insurrection initiated by his son ] forced him to withdraw his troops from Armenia, allowing Rhadamistus to come back and punish locals as traitors; they eventually revolted and replaced him with the prince Tiridates I in early 55.<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 13.7</ref> Rhadamistus escaped along with his wife Zenobia who was pregnant. Unable to continue fleeing, she asked her husband to end her life rather than be captured. Rhadamistus stabbed her with a Median dagger and flung her body into the river ]. Zenobia was not fatally injured and was recovered by shepherds who sent her to Tiridates. Tiridates I received her kindly and treated her as a member of the monarchy.{{sfn|Bivar|1983|pp=80–83}} Rhadamistus himself returned to Iberia and was soon put to death by his father ] for having plotted against the royal power.<ref name="ANRW"/>


==War with Rome== ==War with Rome==
{{details|Roman-Parthian War of 58–63}} {{further|Roman–Parthian War of 58–63}}
]
Unhappy with the growing ]n influence at their doorstep,<ref name="Ehsan">{{cite book | last = Yarshater | first = Ehsan| title = The Cambridge History of Iran | year = 1983 | publisher = Cambridge University
Press | location = Massachusetts | pages = 81–83 |isbn = 0-521-20092-X}}</ref> Roman Emperor Nero sent General ] with a large army to the east in order to restore Roman client kings.<ref name="Ehsan"/><ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 13.9</ref> A Hasmonean named Aristobulus was given ] (] and ]) and ] received ]. In the spring of 58, Corbulo entered Greater Armenia from Cappadocia and advanced towards Artaxata, while Parasmanes I of Iberia attacked from the north, and ] attacked from the southwest. Supported by his brother, Tiridates I sent flying columns to raid the Romans far and wide. Corbulo retaliated using the same tactics and the use of the ] tribes who raided outlying regions of Armenia.<ref name="Ehsan"/> Tiridates I fled from the capital, and Corbulo burned Artaxata to the ground. In the summer, Corbulo began moving towards ] through rough terrain and passing through the Taronitida (Taron), where several of his commanders died in an ambush by the Armenian resistance; however, the city opened its doors, with the exception of one of the citadels, which was destroyed in the ensuing assault.<ref name="Lindsay">{{cite book |first = John | last = Lindsay | title = A View of the History and Coinage of the Parthians |publisher= Adamant Media Corporation | pages = 83–84 | isbn = 1-4021-6080-1 }}</ref> By this time the majority of Armenians had abandoned resistance and accepted the prince favored by Rome.<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 13.55</ref> Unhappy with the growing ]n influence at their doorstep,{{sfn|Bivar|1983|pp=80–83}} Nero sent the Roman general ] with a large army to the east in order to restore Roman client kings.{{sfn|Bivar|1983|pp=80–83}}<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 13.9</ref> A Hasmonean named Aristobulus was given ] (] and ]) and ] received ]. In the spring of 58, Corbulo entered Greater Armenia from Cappadocia and advanced towards Artaxata, while Parasmanes I of Iberia attacked from the north, and ] attacked from the southwest. Supported by his brother, Tiridates I sent flying columns to raid the Romans far and wide. Corbulo retaliated using the same tactics and the use of the ] tribes who raided outlying regions of Armenia.{{sfn|Bivar|1983|pp=80–83}} Tiridates I fled from the capital, and Corbulo burned Artaxata to the ground. In the summer, Corbulo began moving towards ] through rough terrain and passing through the Taronitida (Taron), where several of his commanders died in an ambush by the Armenian resistance; however, the city opened its doors, with the exception of one of the citadels, which was destroyed in the ensuing assault.<ref name="Lindsay">{{cite book |first = John | last = Lindsay | title = A View of the History and Coinage of the Parthians | date = January 1999 |publisher= Adamant Media Corporation | pages = 83–84 | isbn = 1-4021-6080-1 }}</ref> By this time the majority of Armenians had abandoned resistance and accepted the prince favored by Rome.<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 13.55</ref>


Nero gave the crown to the last royal descendant of the ], the grandson of ] (daughter of ]) and ] of ] (the brother of ] and the son of ]),<ref>{{cite web | last =Tabor | first =James D. | title =The Jewish Roman World of Jesus | publisher =Department of Religious Studies • The University of North Carolina at Charlotte | url =http://www.religiousstudies.uncc.edu/jdtabor/john.html | accessdate = 2006-11-30 }}</ref> who assumed the Armenian name ] (his uncle was ]).<ref>Strabo, 12.3.35</ref> His son, named ], married ], the daughter of ] and was made King of Cilicia. Nero was hailed vigorously in public for this initial victory<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 13.56</ref> and Corbulo was appointed governor of Syria as a reward.<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 14.36 This was a very prestigious appointment. Not only was Syria a wealthy province, it was also one of the largest.</ref> A guard of 1000 legionary soldiers, three auxiliary cohorts and two wings of horses were allotted to Tigranes in order to defend the country.<ref name="Lindsay"/> Border districts were bestowed to Roman allies that assisted Corbulo including ], Parasmanes, ] and Antiochus.<ref name="Lindsay" /> Nero gave the crown to the last royal descendant of the ], the grandson of ] (daughter of ]) and ] of ] (the brother of ] and the son of ]),<ref>{{cite web | last =Tabor | first =James D. | title =The Jewish Roman World of Jesus | publisher =Department of Religious Studies • The University of North Carolina at Charlotte | url =http://www.religiousstudies.uncc.edu/jdtabor/john.html | access-date =2006-11-30 | archive-date =2010-01-11 | archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20100111024031/http://www.religiousstudies.uncc.edu/jdtabor/john.html | url-status =dead }}</ref> who assumed the Armenian name ] (his uncle was ]).<ref>Strabo, 12.3.35</ref> His son, named ], married ], the daughter of ] and was made King of Cilicia. Nero was hailed vigorously in public for this initial victory<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 13.56</ref> and Corbulo was appointed governor of Syria as a reward.<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 14.36 This was a very prestigious appointment. Not only was Syria a wealthy province, it was also one of the largest.</ref> A guard of 1000 legionary soldiers, three auxiliary cohorts and two wings of horses were allotted to Tigranes in order to defend the country.<ref name="Lindsay"/> Border districts were bestowed to Roman allies that assisted Corbulo including ], Parasmanes, ] and Antiochus.<ref name="Lindsay" />


Vologases I was infuriated by the fact that an alien now sat on the Armenian throne but hesitated to reinstate his brother as he was engaged in a conflict with the ]ns who were revolting.<ref name="Lindsay" /> Tigranes invaded the Kingdom of ] and deposed its King ] in 61, who was a vassal of Parthians.<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 15.1</ref> Vologases I was infuriated by the fact that an alien now sat on the Armenian throne, but hesitated to reinstate his brother as he was engaged in a conflict with the ]ns who were revolting.<ref name="Lindsay" /> Tigranes invaded the Kingdom of ] and deposed its King ] in 61, who was a vassal of Parthians.<ref>Tacitus, ''Annals'', 15.1</ref>
<!-- Image with unknown copyright status removed: ] -->


Vologases I considered this an act of aggression from Rome and started a campaign to restore Tiridates I to the Armenian throne. He placed under the command of ] Moneses a well-disciplined force of ] along with Adiabenian auxiliaries and ordered him to expel Tigranes from Armenia. Having quelled the Hyrcanian revolt, Vologases I gathered the strength of his dominions and embarked toward Armenia.<ref name="Lindsay" /> Corbulo, having been informed of the impending attack, sent two legions under the commands of Verulanus Severus and Vettius Bolanus to the assistance of Tigranes with secret directions that they should act with caution rather than vigour. He also dispatched a message to Nero, urging him to send a second commander with the explicit purpose of defending Armenia as Syria was now also in peril. Corbulo placed the remainder of the legions on the banks of the ] and armed irregular troops of the nearby provinces. Since the region was deficient in water, he erected forts over the fountains and concealed the rivulets by heaping sand over them.<ref name="Lindsay"/> Vologases I considered this an act of aggression from Rome and started a campaign to restore Tiridates I to the Armenian throne. He placed a well-disciplined force of ]s along with Adiabenian auxiliaries under the command of ] Moneses and ordered him to expel Tigranes from Armenia. Having quelled the Hyrcanian revolt, Vologases I gathered the strength of his dominions and embarked toward Armenia.<ref name="Lindsay" /> Corbulo, having been informed of the impending attack, sent two legions under the commands of Verulanus Severus and ] to the assistance of Tigranes with secret directions that they should act with caution rather than vigour. He also dispatched a message to Nero, urging him to send a second commander with the explicit purpose of defending Armenia as Syria was now also in peril. Corbulo placed the remainder of the legions on the banks of the ] and armed irregular troops of the nearby provinces. Since the region was deficient in water, he erected forts over the fountains and concealed the rivulets by heaping sand over them.<ref name="Lindsay"/>


Moneses marched towards Tigranocerta but failed to break the defense of the city walls as his troops were unfit for a long siege. Corbulo, although eminently successful thought it prudent to use his good fortune with moderation. He sent a Roman centurion by the name of Casperius to the camp of Vologases I in Nisibis located {{convert|37|mi|km}} from Tigranocerta with the demand to raise the siege. Because of a recent locust storm and the scarcity of fodder for his horses Vologases I agreed to raise the siege of Tigranocerta and petitioned to be granted Armenia in order to achieve a firm peace.<ref name="Lindsay"/> Vologases I demanded that both the Roman and Parthian troops should evacuate Armenia, that Tigranes should be dethroned, and that the position of Tiridates I be recognized. The Roman government declined to accede to these arrangements and sent Lucius Caesennius Paetus, governor of Cappadocia, to settle the question by bringing Armenia under direct Roman administration.<ref name="Smith">{{cite encyclopedia | last = Smith Moneses marched towards Tigranocerta but failed to break the defense of the city walls as his troops were unfit for a long siege. Corbulo, although eminently successful thought it prudent to use his good fortune with moderation. He sent a Roman centurion by the name of Casperius to the camp of Vologases I in Nisibis located {{convert|37|mi|km|order=flip}} from Tigranocerta with the demand to raise the siege. Because of a recent locust storm and the scarcity of fodder for his horses Vologases I agreed to raise the siege of Tigranocerta and petitioned to be granted Armenia in order to achieve a firm peace.<ref name="Lindsay"/> Vologases I demanded that both the Roman and Parthian troops should evacuate Armenia, that Tigranes should be dethroned, and that the position of Tiridates I be recognized. The Roman government declined to accede to these arrangements and sent ], governor of Cappadocia, to settle the question by bringing Armenia under direct Roman administration.<ref name="Smith">{{cite encyclopedia | last = Smith
| first = William | authorlink =William Smith (lexicographer) | title=Corbulo | encyclopedia =] | year =1867 | location =] | pages =851 | url =http://www.ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/0860.html}} | first = William | author-link =William Smith (lexicographer) | title=Corbulo | encyclopedia =] | year =1867 | location =] | pages =851 | url =http://www.ancientlibrary.com/smith-bio/0860.html}}
</ref><ref>Tacitus, Annals, 15.1–6,Dio Cassius, 62.20</ref> </ref><ref>Tacitus, Annals, 15.1–6, Dio Cassius, 62.20</ref>


Paetus was an incapable commander and suffered a humiliating defeat at the ] in 62, losing the legions of ] commanded by Calvisius Sabinus and ] commanded by Funisulanus Vettonianus. The command of the troops was returned to Corbulo, who the following year led a strong army into ] and beyond into Armenia, eliminating all of the regional governors he suspected were pro-Parthian. Finally in Rhandeia, Corbulo and Tiridates I met to make a peace agreement. The location of Rhandeia suited both Tiridates I and Corbulo. It appealed to Tiridates I because that is where his army had beaten the Romans and sent them away under a capitulation; on the other hand, it appealed to Corbulo because he was about to wipe out the ill repute earned before in the same location. When Tiridates I arrived at the Roman camp he took off his royal diadem and placed it on the ground near a statue of Nero, agreeing to receive it back only from Nero in Rome.<ref>{{cite book| title = The Penny Cyclopædia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge |publisher = Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge| year = 1842 |location = Great Britain | page = 496}}</ref> Tiridates I was recognized as the vassal king of Armenia; a Roman garrison would remain in the country permanently, in Sophene while Artaxata would be reconstructed. Corbulo left his son-in-law Annius Vinicianus to accompany Tiridates I to Rome in order to attest his own fidelity to Nero.<ref name="Smith"/> Paetus was an incapable commander and suffered a humiliating defeat at the ] in 62, losing the legions of ] commanded by ] and ] commanded by ]. The command of the troops was returned to Corbulo, who the following year led a strong army into ] and beyond into Armenia, eliminating all of the regional governors he suspected were pro-Parthian. Finally in Rhandeia, Corbulo and Tiridates I met to make a peace agreement. The location of Rhandeia suited both Tiridates I and Corbulo. It appealed to Tiridates I because that is where his army had beaten the Romans and sent them away under a capitulation; on the other hand, it appealed to Corbulo because he was about to wipe out the ill repute earned before in the same location. When Tiridates I arrived at the Roman camp he took off his royal diadem and placed it on the ground near a statue of Nero, agreeing to receive it back only from Nero in Rome.<ref>{{cite book| title = The Penny Cyclopædia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge |publisher = Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge| year = 1842 |location = Great Britain | page = 496}}</ref> Tiridates I was recognized as the vassal king of Armenia; a Roman garrison would remain in the country permanently, in Sophene while Artaxata would be reconstructed. Corbulo left his son-in-law ] to accompany Tiridates I to Rome in order to attest his own fidelity to Nero.<ref name="Smith"/>


==Visiting Rome== ==Visiting Rome==
Prior to embarking for Rome, Tiridates I visited his mother and two brothers in Media Atropatene and Parthia. On his long trek he was accompanied by his family and an imposing retinue, comprising many feudal lords and 3,000 horsemen. His route lay across ], through ], on the eastern shores of the ] and ], in northeastern ]. The journey took nine months, and Tiridates I rode on horseback, with his children and queen at his side.<ref>], 63.1.2</ref> The children of Vologases, Monobazes and Pacorus also accompanied Tiridates I.<ref name="Dio1">{{cite book |first = Dio | last = Cassius | title = Dio's Rome Vol. 5 | publisher = ] | year = 2004 | isbn = 1-4191-1613-4 | page = 34 }}</ref> Prior to embarking for Rome in 66 AD, Tiridates I visited his mother and two brothers in Media Atropatene and Parthia. On his long trek he was accompanied by his wife and children and two of his brothers. His escort included an imposing retinue, comprising many feudal lords, several sages, 3,000 Parthian horsemen, and also a large number of Romans.{{sfn|Chaumont|1986|pp=418–438}} Tiridates did not travel through sea, as he did not wish to pollute water, one of the seven Zoroastrian holy aspects.{{sfn|Curtis|2016|p=185}} His route lay across ], through ], on the eastern shores of the ] and ], in northeastern Italy. The journey took nine months, and Tiridates I rode on horseback, with his children and queen at his side.<ref>], 63.1.2</ref> The children of Vologases, Monobazes and Pacorus also accompanied Tiridates I.<ref name="Dio1">{{cite book |first = Dio | last = Cassius | title = Dio's Rome Vol. 5 | publisher = ] | year = 2004 | isbn = 1-4191-1613-4 | page = 34 }}</ref>


], a second-century Roman historian, described Tiridates I favorably at the time of his arrival: "Tiridates himself was in the prime of his life, a notable figure by reason of his youth, beauty, family, and intelligence."<ref name="Dio1">{{cite book |first = Dio | last = Cassius | title = Dio's Rome Vol. 5 | publisher = Kessinger Publishing | year = 2004 | isbn = 1-4191-1613-4 | page = 34 }}</ref> Nero greeted Tiridates I at Neapolis (]) in October, sending a state chariot to carry the visitor over the last few miles. No one was allowed to approach the emperor armed, but Tiridates I maintained his dignity by refusing to remove his sword as he approached the ruler of the Roman Empire (though as a compromise, he agreed to have his sword firmly fastened in the sheath, so that it could not be drawn). At Puteolis (modern ], near Naples) Nero ordered athletic games to be staged in honor of his guest. The Armenian king himself had an opportunity to display his ability as a marksman by shooting an arrow through the bodies of two buffaloes. The event at Puteolis also marked the first attested appearance of ]s: ], a second-century Roman historian, described Tiridates I favorably at the time of his arrival: "Tiridates himself was in the prime of his life, a notable figure by reason of his youth, beauty, family, and intelligence."<ref name="Dio1"/> Nero greeted Tiridates I at Neapolis (]) in October, sending a state chariot to carry the visitor over the last few kilometres.


According to Dio's account, Tiridates I refused to remove his sword as he approached the ruler of the Roman Empire (though as a compromise, he agreed to have his sword firmly fastened in the sheath, so that it could not be drawn).<ref name="cassius dio 62">Cassius Dio, 62.3.1</ref> Nero was reportedly so impressed by this act that he ordered a ] games be staged in honor of his guest at Puteolis (present day ], near Naples). According to Cassius Dio, the Armenian king himself had an opportunity to display his ability as a marksman by shooting an arrow through the bodies of two buffaloes.<ref name="cassius dio 62"/> ] women, men and children fought as ]s and ] at the games to impress the Armenian king.<ref>{{cite book|last=Wiedemann|first=Thomas|title=Emperors and Gladiators|location=London, United Kingdom|publisher=Routledge|year=1992|isbn=0-415-12164-7|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=B7wzXCCsKiQC|page=112}}</ref>
{{cquote|''Nero admired him for this action and entertained him in many ways, especially by giving a gladiatorial exhibition at Puteoli. It was under the direction of Patrobius, one of his freedmen, who managed to make it a most brilliant and costly affair, as may be seen from the fact that on one of the days not a person but Ethiopians—men, women, and children—appeared in the theatre.''<ref>Cassius Dio, 62.3.1</ref>}}


The climax of the ceremonies was reserved for the capital. Rome was profusely decorated with flags, torches, garlands and bunting, and was gorgeously illuminated at night with great crowds of people seen everywhere.<ref name="Lewis">{{cite book |first = Naphtali | last = Lewis | title = Roman Civilization: Selected Readings: The Empire | publisher = Columbia University Press | year = 1990 | isbn = 0-231-07133-7 | page = 33 }}</ref> The climax of the ceremonies was reserved for the capital. Rome was profusely decorated with flags, torches, garlands and bunting, and was gorgeously illuminated at night with great crowds of people seen everywhere.<ref name="Lewis">{{cite book |first = Naphtali | last = Lewis | author-link = Naphtali Lewis | title = Roman Civilization: Selected Readings: The Empire | publisher = Columbia University Press | year = 1990 | isbn = 0-231-07133-7 | page = 33 }}</ref>


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| image2 = Տրդատ Ա թագավոր. ընդօրինակություն քանդակից.jpg
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On the day after Tiridates I's arrival, Nero came to the ] clothed in triumphal vestments and surrounded by dignitaries and soldiers, all resplendent in expensive attire and glittering armor. While Nero sat on the imperial throne, Tiridates I and his retinue advanced between two lines of soldiers. Arriving in front of the ], Tiridates I knelt, with hands clasped on his breast. After the thundering shouts and acclamations excited by this spectacle had subsided, Tiridates I addressed the emperor: On the day after Tiridates I's arrival, Nero came to the ] clothed in triumphal vestments and surrounded by dignitaries and soldiers, all resplendent in expensive attire and glittering armor. While Nero sat on the imperial throne, Tiridates I and his retinue advanced between two lines of soldiers. Arriving in front of the ], Tiridates I knelt, with hands clasped on his breast. After the thundering shouts and acclamations excited by this spectacle had subsided, Tiridates I addressed the emperor:


{{blockquote|My Lord, I am a descendant of ] and the brother of the Kings Vologases and Pacorus. I have come to you who are my god; I have worshipped you as the ;{{efn|] notes: "When Nero entered with the senators and the guard, he ascended the Rostra and sat in his chair of state, looking back down the Forum in an east-southeasterly direction. That is, as Tiridates I approached him through the ranks of soldiers, the rising sun would have hit Nero full on the face, in all his triumphal splendor. The prince then addressed the emperor from the ground, looking up to him on the Rostra: "I have come to you, my god, worshipping you as I do Mithra." The important point—something Nero would know as an initiate, whether others did or not—is that for Zoroastrians the sun was the eye of Mithra, and Mithra was often so closely associated with the sun as to be identified with it: "the Sun whom they call Mithres," as Strabo puts it. Moreover, when Zoroastrians prayed in the open air, they turned toward the sun, since their religion bound them to pray facing fire. Thus, when Tiridates I stood in the open Roman Forum facing the sunlit emperor, and worshipping him as he did Mithra, he was in essence worshipping the sun. An ex-praetor translated his words and proclaimed them to the crowd. At this stage in Rome's history, very few of those present would have known who Mithra was, but there is a good likelihood that the interpreter relayed Tiridates' words as "I have come to you, my god, worshipping you as I do the Sun." For Nero, the marriage of Roman triumph and Parthian ceremony culminated in a splendid theatrical affirmation of his role as the new god of the Sun."<ref>{{cite book | last = Champlin | first = Edward | title = Nero | publisher = Belknap Press | year = 2003 | isbn = 0-674-01192-9 | url = https://archive.org/details/nerocham00cham }}</ref>}} I shall be whatever you would order me to be, because you are my destiny and fortune.}}
{{cquote|My Lord, I am a descendant of ] and the brother of the Kings Vologases and Pacorus. I have come to you who are my god; I have worshipped you as the ;<ref>
<div class="small">] notes: "When Nero entered with the senators and the guard, he ascended the Rostra and sat in his chair of state, looking back down the Forum in an east-southeasterly direction. That is, as Tiridates I approached him through the ranks of soldiers, the rising sun would have hit Nero full on the face, in all his triumphal splendor. The prince then addressed the emperor from the ground, looking up to him on the Rostra: "I have come to you, my god, worshipping you as I do Mithra." The important point—something Nero would know as an initiate, whether others did or not—is that for Zoroastrians the sun was the eye of Mithra, and Mithra was often so closely associated with the sun as to be identified with it: "the Sun whom they call Mithres," as Strabo puts it. Moreover, when Zoroastrians prayed in the open air, they turned toward the sun, since their religion bound them to pray facing fire. Thus, when Tiridates I stood in the open Roman Forum facing the sunlit emperor, and worshipping him as he did Mithra, he was in essence worshipping the sun. An ex-praetor translated his words and proclaimed them to the crowd. At this stage in Rome's history, very few of those present would have known who Mithra was, but there is a good likelihood that the interpreter relayed Tiridates' words as "I have come to you, my god, worshipping you as I do the Sun." For Nero, the marriage of Roman triumph and Parthian ceremony culminated in a splendid theatrical affirmation of his role as the new god of the Sun."</div>{{cite book | last = Champlin | first = Edward | title = Nero | publisher = ] | year = 2003 | isbn = 0-674-01192-9 }}</ref> I shall be whatever you would order me to be, because you are my destiny and fortune.}}


To which Nero replied: To which Nero replied:


{{cquote|You have done well by coming here to enjoy my presence in person. What your father has not left to you and what your brothers did not preserve for you, I do accord to you, and I make you King of Armenia, so that you, as well as they, may know that I have the power to take away and to grant kingdoms.<ref>Cassius Dio, 63.5.2</ref>}} {{blockquote|You have done well by coming here to enjoy my presence in person. What your father has not left to you and what your brothers did not preserve for you, I do accord to you, and I make you King of Armenia, so that you, as well as they, may know that I have the power to take away and to grant kingdoms.<ref>Cassius Dio, 63.5.2</ref>}}


Tiridates I then mounted the steps of the platform and knelt, while Nero placed the royal diadem on his head. As the young king was about to kneel a second time, Nero lifted him by his right hand and after kissing him, made him sit at his side on a chair a little lower than his own. Meanwhile, the populace gave tumultuous ovations to both rulers. A ], speaking to the audience, interpreted and explained the words of Tiridates, who spoke in Greek.<ref>{{cite book |first = Gaius | last = Suetonius Tranquillus |author2=Robert Graves |author3=Michael Grant | title = The Twelve Caesars | publisher = Penguin Classics | year = 2003 | isbn = 0-14-044921-3 | page = 220 }}</ref> According to ], Tiridates I then introduced Nero to magian feasts (''magicis cenis'').<ref>Pliny, '']'' 30.6.17</ref> ] claimed that Tiridates I was also interested in all things Roman.<ref>Tacitus, '']'' 15.5</ref> Tiridates I then mounted the steps of the platform and knelt, while Nero placed the royal diadem on his head. As the young king was about to kneel a second time, Nero lifted him by his right hand and after kissing him, made him sit at his side on a chair a little lower than his own. Meanwhile, the populace gave tumultuous ovations to both rulers. A ], speaking to the audience, interpreted and explained the words of Tiridates, who spoke in Greek.<ref>{{cite book | first = Gaius | last = Suetonius Tranquillus | author2 = Robert Graves | author3 = Michael Grant | title = The Twelve Caesars | publisher = Penguin Classics | year = 2003 | isbn = 0-14-044921-3 | page = | url = https://archive.org/details/twelvecaesars00suet_0/page/220 }}</ref> According to ], Tiridates I then introduced Nero to magian feasts (''magicis cenis'').<ref>Pliny, '']'' 30.6.17</ref> ] claimed that Tiridates I was also interested in all things Roman.<ref>Tacitus, '']'' 15.5</ref>


Public festivities continued for some time after the coronation ceremony. The interior of the ] and every piece of its furniture was entirely gilded for the occasion; for this reason, Rome thenceforth recalled that date as "the Golden Day." Daytime festivities were on a scale no less lavish than those of the night: Royal purple awnings stretched as protection against the heat of the sun. Nero, clad in green and wearing a chariot driver's headdress, took part in a ]. At the evening banquets, Nero, in gold-embroidered vestments, sang and played the lyre with ] accompaniment. Tiridates I was amazed and disgusted by Nero's extravagance, but he had only praise for Corbulo and expressed to Corbulo his surprise at his serving such a master.<ref name="Dio">{{cite book |first = Dio | last = Cassius | title = Dio's Rome Vol. 5 | publisher = Kessinger Publishing | year = 2004 | isbn = 1-4191-1613-4 | page = 36 }}</ref> He made no concealment of his views to Nero's face and said to him sarcastically: "Sire, you have a wonderful servant in the person of Corbulo."<ref name="Dio"/> Public festivities continued for some time after the coronation ceremony. The interior of the ] and every piece of its furniture was entirely gilded for the occasion; for this reason, Rome thenceforth recalled that date as "the Golden Day." Daytime festivities were on a scale no less lavish than those of the night: Royal purple awnings stretched as protection against the heat of the sun. Nero, clad in green and wearing a chariot driver's headdress, took part in a ]. At the evening banquets, Nero, in gold-embroidered vestments, sang and played the lyre with ] accompaniment. Tiridates I was amazed and disgusted by Nero's extravagance, but he had only praise for Corbulo and expressed to Corbulo his surprise at his serving such a master.<ref name="Dio">{{cite book |first = Dio | last = Cassius | title = Dio's Rome Vol. 5 | publisher = Kessinger Publishing | year = 2004 | isbn = 1-4191-1613-4 | page = 36 }}</ref> He made no concealment of his views to Nero's face and said to him sarcastically: "Sire, you have a wonderful servant in the person of Corbulo."<ref name="Dio"/>


In memory of these events, the Senate honored Nero with the laurel wreath and the title of ], or commander-in-chief of the armies. No reception comparable to this in magnitude and splendor is recorded in the history of Rome. Besides the enormous sum spent in festivities, the Roman Government bore the entire cost of the journey of Tiridates I and his retinue, both from and to their homeland. Nero also made a gift to Tiridates I of fifty million ].<ref>{{cite book | last =Kurkjian | first =Vahan | authorlink =Vahan Kurkjian | title =A History of Armenia | publisher =] In memory of these events, the Senate honored Nero with the laurel wreath and the title of ], or commander-in-chief of the armies. No reception comparable to this in magnitude and splendor is recorded in the history of Rome. Besides the enormous sum spent in festivities, the Roman Government bore the entire cost of the journey of Tiridates I and his retinue, both from and to their homeland. Nero also made a gift to Tiridates I of fifty million ].<ref>{{cite book | last =Kurkjian | first =Vahan | author-link =Vahan Kurkjian | title =A History of Armenia | publisher =]
| year =1958 | location =New York | url =http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Asia/Armenia/_Texts/KURARM/15*.html | id =ISBN: B000BQMKSI }}</ref> | year =1958 | location =New York | url =https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Asia/Armenia/_Texts/KURARM/15*.html | asin = B000BQMKSI }}</ref>


===Three Magi theory===
On his journey back to Armenia, Tiridates I viewed an exhibition of ]. When seeing that one of the contestants fell on his back and was being beaten by his opponents, Tiridates I saw exclaimed: "That's an unfair contest. It isn't fair that a man who has fallen should be beaten."<ref name="Dio"/>
It has been suggested that the visit of Tiridates I, an event that greatly impressed contemporaries, was adapted by Christians to become the story of the adoration of the Christ Child by the ].{{sfn|Curtis|2016|p=185}}<ref>A. Dietrich, „“Die Weisen aus dem Morgenlande“, ''Zeitschrift für die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft,'' Bd. III, 1902, S.1-der–14; cited in J. Duchesne-Guillemin, “Die Drei Weisen aus dem Morgenlande und die Anbetung der Zeit”, ''Antaios'', Vol. VII, 1965, pp. 234–252 .</ref> The Christian legend changed Rome into Bethlehem, the birthplace of the Ruler of the coming Kingdom of God, and replaced Tiridates I with that contemporary king who was already connected with Christianity through the ]: ], otherwise known as Kaspar.<ref>Ernst Herzfeld, ''Archaeological History of Iran,'' London, Oxford University Press for the British Academy, 1935, pp. 65–66.</ref>


==Peace with Rome==
Later, Nero summoned the Parthian King Vologases I to Rome several times, but when the invitations became burdensome to Vologases I, he sent back a dispatch to this effect: "It is far easier for you than for me to traverse so great a body of water. Therefore, if you will come to Asia, we can then arrange to meet each other."<ref name="Dio"/>
] inscription attributed to Tiridates I on basalt rock from the fortress of Garni, within the grounds of the ] complex.{{sfn|Olbrycht|2016|pp=100–101}}]]


Nero closed the gates of the ] in the Roman Forum, which were never shut save in times of universal peace, claiming that peace prevailed at the time throughout the Roman world. This was a considerable victory for Nero politically,<ref>Dio Cassius, ''Roman History'', 62.23</ref> and he became very popular in the eastern provinces of Rome and with the Armenians and Parthians. The immediate dividend of the peace was Rome's ability to divert legions from Syria to Judea, which broke into open warfare culminating in the ] just one year after Tiridates' coronation.<ref>{{cite book |first = David | last = Shotter | title = Nero |url = https://archive.org/details/nero00shot |url-access = limited | publisher = Routledge (UK) | pages = –40 | year = 1997 | isbn = 0-415-31942-0}}</ref> The peace between Parthia and Rome lasted 50 years, until the emperor ] invaded Armenia in 114.<ref>Dio Cassius 68.17.2–3</ref>
It has been suggested that the visit of Tiridates I, an event that greatly impressed contemporaries, was adapted by Christians to become the story of the adoration of the Christ Child by the ].<ref>A. Dietrich, „“Die Weisen aus dem Morgenlande“, ''Zeitschrift für die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft,'' Bd. III, 1902, S.1-14; cited in J. Duchesne-Guillemin, “Die Drei Weisen aus dem Morgenlande und die Anbetung der Zeit”, ''Antaios'', Vol. VII, 1965, p. 234-252, p.245.</ref> The Christian legend changed Rome into Bethlehem, the birthplace of the Ruler of the coming Kingdom of God, and replaced Tiridates I with that contemporary king who was already connected with Christianity through the ]: ], otherwise known as Kaspar.<ref>Ernst Herzfeld, ''Archaeological History of Iran,'' London, Oxford University Press for the British Academy, 1935, pp.65-66.</ref>
]


When Tiridates I returned to Armenia, he took with him a great number of skilled ]s for the reconstruction of Artaxata which he renamed "Neronia" in honor of the emperor.<ref name="Bourn">{{cite book | first = George | last = Bournoutian | author-link = George Bournoutian | title = A Concise History of the Armenian People | publisher = Mazda Publishers | year = 2002 | isbn = 1-56859-141-1 | page = | url = https://archive.org/details/concisehistoryof00geor/page/42 }}</ref> He also embellished the royal residence at nearby ]<ref>The Greek inscription found in Garni in 1945 refers to Tiridates I as ] and supreme ruler of ]. On the basis of building techniques and paleography, scholars generally continue identifying Tiridates I with the inscription. However, R. D. Wilkinson believes that the Tiridates I mentioned in the inscription was not Tiridates I.{{cite journal|last =Joyce|first =Reynolds|title =Roman Inscriptions 1966–1970|journal =The Journal of Roman Studies|volume =61|pages =152|publisher =Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies|year =1971|doi =10.2307/300013|jstor =300013|s2cid =161484397}}</ref> with colonnades and monuments of dazzling richness, and added a ]. Trade between the two continents also grew, allowing Armenia to secure its independence from Rome.<ref name="Bourn"/> Rome now counted upon Armenia as a loyal ally, even after Nero's death and through the entire duration of ]'s rule in the East.
==Fragile Peace==
]


==War with Alans and aftermath==
Peace prevailed at this time throughout the Roman Empire. Nero therefore closed the gates of the ], which were never shut save in times of universal peace. When Tiridates I returned to Armenia, he took with him a great number of skilled artisans for the reconstruction of Artaxata. He renamed the capital Neronia in honor of the emperor;<ref name="Bourn">{{cite book |first = George | last = Bournoutian |authorlink=George Bournoutian | title = A Concise History of the Armenian People | publisher = Mazda Publishers | year = 2002 | isbn = 1-56859-141-1 | page = 42 }}</ref> he embellished the royal residence at ],<ref>The Greek inscription found in Garni in 1945 refers to Tiridates I as ] and supreme ruler of ]. On the basis of building techniques and paleography, scholars generally continue identifying Tiridates I with the inscription. However, R. D. Wilkinson believes that the Tiridates I mentioned in the inscription was not Tiridates I.{{cite journal|last =Joyce|first =Reynolds|title =Roman Inscriptions 1966–1970|journal =The Journal of Roman Studies|volume =61|pages =152|publisher =Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies|year =1971|doi =10.2307/300013|jstor =300013}}</ref> nearby, with colonnades and monuments of dazzling richness and also the addition of a new temple. Trade between the two continents also grew, allowing Armenia to secure its independence from Rome.<ref name="Bourn">{{cite book |first = George | last = Bournoutian | title = A Concise History of the Armenian People | publisher = Mazda Publishers | year = 2002 | isbn = 1-56859-141-1 | page = 42 }}</ref> Rome now counted upon Armenia as a loyal ally, even after Nero's death and through the entire duration of ]'s rule in the East. Peace was a considerable victory for Nero politically.<ref>Dio Cassius, ''Roman History'', 62.23</ref> ] The immediate dividend of the peace was Rome's ability to turn its full attention to the mounting problems at Judea, which broke into open warfare culminating in the ] just one year after Tiridates' coronation. Large numbers of legions were diverted to Judea from Syria, which would otherwise have been impossible.<ref>{{cite book |first = David | last = Shotter | title = Nero | publisher = Routledge (UK) | pages = 39–40 | year = 1997 | isbn = 0-415-31942-0}}</ref> Nero became very popular in the eastern provinces of Rome and with the Armenians and Parthians. The name of ] discovered carved on a mountain in ] (in modern ]), attests to the presence of Roman soldiers by the shores of the ] in 89 AD, farther east than any previously known Roman inscription.<ref name="Lewis"/> The peace between Parthia and Rome lasted 50 years, until emperor ] invaded Armenia in 114.<ref>Dio Cassius 68.17.2–3</ref>
In 72 the ], a warlike nomadic ] tribe, made an incursion into Media Atropatene as well as various districts of northern Armenia.{{sfn|Alemany|2000|p=92}} Tiridates I and his brother ], King of Media Atropatene, faced them at a number of battles, during one of which Tiridates I was briefly captured, narrowly escaping being taken alive.{{sfn|Alemany|2000|p=92}} He was lassoed from a distance and caught, but he quickly managed to whip out his sword and slash the rope in time. The Alans withdrew with a lot of booty after plundering Armenia and Media Atropatene.{{sfn|Alemany|2000|p=92}} The King of Iberia asked for protection against the Alans from ], who helped reconstruct the fortress of ] around the Iberian capital ], near modern ]. An Aramaic inscription found near Tbilisi indicates that Tiridates I also warred with Iberia during his final years. The exact date of the end of Tiridates I's reign is unknown; various sources name ] as his successor.{{sfn|Russell|1987|p=157}}<ref>Both Classical Greco-Roman and Armenian sources from the ] mention Sanatruces (Sanatruk in Armenian), in Armenian sources he is identified with the martyrdom of ]. Professor Nina Garsoian, Emerita of Columbia University, states that there is no explicit evidence naming Sanatruces as Tiridates' successor.{{cite book|last =Hovannisian|first =Richard G.|title =The Armenian people from ancient to modern times: from antiquity to the fourteenth century|publisher =Palgrave Macmillan|year =1997|isbn =0-312-10168-6|page =|url =https://archive.org/details/armenianpeoplefr00rich_0/page/69}}</ref>


The name of ] discovered carved on a mountain in ] (in modern ]), attests to the presence of Roman soldiers by the shores of the ] in 89, farther east than any previously known Roman inscription.<ref name="Lewis"/>
==War with Alans and Aftermath==
In 72 the ], a warlike nomadic ] tribe, made an incursion into Media Atropatene as well as various districts of northern Armenia. Tiridates I and his brother ], King of Media Atropatene, faced them at a number of battles, during one of which Tiridates I was briefly captured, narrowly escaping being taken alive. He was lassoed from a distance and caught, but he quickly managed to whip out his sword and slash the rope in time. The Alans withdrew with a lot of booty after plundering Armenia and Media Atropatene.<ref>], '']'' 7.8.4</ref> The King of Iberia asked for protection against the Alans from ], who helped reconstruct the fortress of ] around the Iberian capital ], near modern ]. An Aramaic inscription found near Tbilisi indicates that Tiridates I also warred with Iberia during his final years. The exact date of the end of Tiridates I's reign is unknown; various sources name Sanatruces as his successor.<ref>Both Classical Greco-Roman and Armenian sources from the ] mention Sanatruces (Sanatruk in Armenian), in Armenian sources he is identified with the martyrdom of ]. Professor Nina Garsoian, Emerita of Columbia University, states that there is no explicit evidence naming Sanatruces as Tiridates' successor. {{cite book|last =Hovannisian|first =Richard G.|title =The Armenian people from ancient to modern times: from antiquity to the fourteenth century|publisher =Palgrave Macmillan|year =1997|isbn =0-312-10168-6|page =69 }}</ref> It is known that Tiridates' nephew, Axidares, the son of Pacorus II of Parthia, was King of Armenia by 110.<ref> ], ]</ref>


It is known that Tiridates' great-nephew, ], the son of ], was King of Armenia by 110.{{sfn|Chaumont|1986|pp=418–438}}
==Footnotes==

{{reflist|30em}}
==Cultural depictions==
Tiridates I is one of the principal characters in ]'s opera '']'' and ]'s opera ''].''

==Notes==
{{notelist}}


==References== ==References==
{{reflist}}
*{{cite book|last =Chahin|first =Mark|title =The Kingdom of Armenia|publisher =Routledge|year =2001|location =London|isbn =0-7007-1452-9}}

*{{cite book|last =Grant|first =Michael|title =The Annals of Imperial Rome|publisher =Penguin Classics|year =1956|pages =354–360|isbn =0-14-044060-7}}
== Bibliography ==
*{{cite journal|last =Henderson|first =Bernard W.|title =The Chronology of the Wars in Armenia, A. D. 51–63|journal =Classical Review|volume =15|issue =3|pages =159–165|publisher =Cambridge University Press|year =1901|id =ISSN: 0009840X}}
=== Ancient works ===
*{{cite book|last =Hovannisian|first =Richard G.|authorlink=Richard Hovannisian|title =The Armenian people from ancient to modern times: from antiquity to the fourteenth century|publisher =Palgrave Macmillan|year =1997|pages =64–66|isbn =0-312-10168-6}}
* ], ''Roman History''
*{{cite book|last =Khachatrian|first =Hayk|title =All the 141 Armenian Kings|publisher =Amaras|year =1998|location=Yerevan}}
* ], '']''
*{{cite book|last =Lynam|first =Robert|authorlink =Robert Lynam (writer)|title =The History of the Roman Emperors: From Augustus to the Death of Marcus Antoninus|publisher =Simpkin, Marshall & Co.

|year =1850|location =London|pages =422–428, 468–470 }}
=== Modern works ===
* {{cite book |title=Sources on the Alans: A Critical Compilation |year=2000 |publisher=Brill |last=Alemany |first= Agustí |isbn=978-9004114425 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8bZ4c5oZpNAC }}
* {{Cambridge History of Iran|volume=3a|last=Bivar|first=A.D.H.|chapter=The Political History of Iran Under the Arsacids|pages=21–99}}.
* {{cite book | title = Zoroastrians: Their Religious Beliefs and Practices | year = 1984 | publisher = Psychology Press | last = Boyce | first = Mary | author-link = Mary Boyce | pages = 1–252 | isbn = 978-0415239028 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=a6gbxVfjtUEC&q=false }}
* {{cite book|chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/23810856|last=Curtis|first=Vesta Sarkhosh|editor1-first=Markus|editor1-last=Williams|editor2-first=Sarah|editor2-last=Stewart|editor3-first=Almut|editor3-last=Hintze|year=2016|chapter=Ancient Iranian Motifs and Zoroastrian Iconography|title=The Zoroastrian Flame Exploring Religion, History and Tradition|publisher=I.B. Tauris|isbn=978-0857728159|pages=179–203}}
* {{cite book |last1=Dąbrowa|first1=Edward |editor1-last =Lanfranchi | editor1-first =Giovanni B. |editor2-last = Rollinger | editor2-first =Robert | chapter=The Parthian Kingship |title=Concepts of Kingship in Antiquity |date=2007|pages=123–134|publisher=S.A.R.G.O.N. Editrice e Libreria | location = Padova |chapter-url=https://www.academia.edu/1501481|chapter-url-access=registration|isbn=978-88-95672-01-4}}
* {{cite book |first1=Edward |last1=Dąbrowa |editor1-last=Daryaee |editor1-first=Touraj |editor1-link=Touraj Daryaee |title=The Oxford Handbook of Iranian History |date=2012 |publisher=Oxford University Press |chapter=The Arsacid Empire |pages=1–432 |isbn=978-0-19-987575-7 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=K-poAgAAQBAJ |access-date=2019-01-13 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190101051501/https://books.google.dk/books?id=K-poAgAAQBAJ&pg |archive-date=2019-01-01 |url-status=dead }}
* {{cite journal |last1=Olbrycht|first1=Marek Jan | title=The Sacral Kingship of the early Arsacids I. Fire Cult and Kingly Glory |journal=Anabasis |date=2016|volume=7|pages=91–106|url=https://www.academia.edu/33754166|url-access=registration}}
* {{cite book|last =Chahin|first =Mark|title =The Kingdom of Armenia|publisher =Routledge|year =2001|location =London|isbn =0-7007-1452-9}}
* {{cite book|last =Grant|first =Michael|title =The Annals of Imperial Rome|url =https://archive.org/details/annalsofimperial00taci|url-access =registration|publisher =Penguin Classics|year =1956|pages =|isbn =0-14-044060-7}}
* {{cite book |last1=Gregoratti|first1=Leonardo|editor1-last=Bagnall|editor1-first=Roger |title=The Encyclopedia of Ancient History |date=2018 |chapter=Vologases I|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|location=Leiden}}
* {{cite journal|last =Henderson|first =Bernard W.|title =The Chronology of the Wars in Armenia, A.D. 51–63|journal =Classical Review|volume =15|issue =3|pages =159–165|publisher =Cambridge University Press|year =1901|doi =10.1017/S0009840X00029887|s2cid =222639800|issn =0009-840X}}
* {{cite book|last =Hovannisian|first =Richard G.|author-link =Richard G. Hovannisian|title =The Armenian people from ancient to modern times: from antiquity to the fourteenth century|publisher =Palgrave Macmillan|year =1997|pages =|isbn =0-312-10168-6|url =https://archive.org/details/armenianpeoplefr00rich_0/page/64}}
* {{cite book|last =Khachatrian|first =Hayk|title =All the 141 Armenian Kings|publisher =Amaras|year =1998|location=Yerevan}}
* {{cite book|last =Lynam|first =Robert|author-link =Robert Lynam (writer)|title =The History of the Roman Emperors: From Augustus to the Death of Marcus Antoninus|url =https://archive.org/details/historyromanemp00whitgoog|publisher =Simpkin, Marshall & Co.
|year =1850|location =London|pages =–428, 468–470 }}
* {{cite book|last =Cumont|first =F.|author-link=Franz Cumont|title =Les religions orientales dans le paganisme romain|publisher =Brepols Publishers|year =1905|location =Turnhout|isbn =978-88-8419-289-9}}
* {{cite encyclopedia | title = Armenia and Iran ii. The pre-Islamic period | last = Chaumont | first = M. L. | url = http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/armenia-ii | encyclopedia = Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. II, Fasc. 4 | pages = 418–438 | year = 1986 }}
* {{cite encyclopedia | article = Balāš | last1 = Chaumont | first1 = M. L. | first2 = K. | last2 = Schippmann | url = http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/balas-proper-name##1 | encyclopedia = Encyclopaedia Iranica, Vol. III, Fasc. 6 | pages = 574–580 | year = 1988 }}
* Girolamo Cardano ''Nero: An Exemplary Life'' Inkstone 2012. * Girolamo Cardano ''Nero: An Exemplary Life'' Inkstone 2012.
* {{cite book |last1=Russell |first1=James R. |author-link1=James R. Russell |title=Zoroastrianism in Armenia |date=1987 |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn=978-0674968509}}

==Further reading==
* {{cite journal |last1=Clark |first1=Timothy |title=Processing into Dominance: Nero, the Crowning of Tiridates I, and a New Narrative of Rome's Supremacy in the East |journal=Journal of Ancient History |date=2021 |volume=9 |issue=2 |pages=269–296 |doi=10.1515/jah-2020-0030|s2cid=240075265 }}
* {{cite thesis |last1=Poirot |first1=John Joseph |title=Perceptions of classical Armenia: Romano-Parthian relations, 70 BC–AD 220 |type=MA thesis |publisher=Louisiana State University |date=2003 |doi=10.31390/gradschool_theses.832 |url=https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_theses/832/|doi-access=free }}


==External links== ==External links==
* *
*{{sp icon}} (analysis of the conflict with Corbulo, includes detailed maps.) * analysis of the conflict with Corbulo, includes detailed maps {{in lang|es}}
*
*


{{Armenian kings}}
{{Arsacid dynasty of Armenia}} {{Arsacid dynasty of Armenia}}


{{featured article}} {{Authority control}}


<!-- Metadata: see ] -->
{{Persondata
|NAME = Tiridates I of Armenia
|ALTERNATIVE NAMES = Տրդատ Ա (Armenian); Trdat I (Eastern Armenian); Drtad I (Western Armenian)
|SHORT DESCRIPTION = King of Armenia
|DATE OF BIRTH = c. 1st century AD
|PLACE OF BIRTH = unknown
|DATE OF DEATH = c. 1st century AD
|PLACE OF DEATH = unknown
}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Tiridates 01 Of Armenia}} {{DEFAULTSORT:Tiridates 01 Of Armenia}}
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Latest revision as of 03:27, 5 January 2025

King of Armenia (52–58, 62–88)
Tiridates I
A painting of the statue of Tiridates I in the Louvre Museum by Panos Terlemezian
King of Armenia
1st Reign52–58
PredecessorRhadamistus
SuccessorTigranes VI
2nd Reign62–88
Coronation66, in Rome by Nero
PredecessorTigranes VI
SuccessorSanatruk
Died88
DynastyArsacid dynasty
FatherVonones II
ReligionZoroastrianism

Tiridates I (Parthian: 𐭕𐭉𐭓𐭉𐭃𐭕, Tīridāt; Ancient Greek: Τιριδάτης, Tiridátes) was King of Armenia beginning in 53 AD and the founder of the Arsacid dynasty of Armenia. The dates of his birth and death are unknown. His early reign was marked by a brief interruption towards the end of the year 54 and a much longer one from 58 to 63. In an agreement to resolve the Roman–Parthian conflict in and over Armenia, Tiridates I (one of the brothers of Vologases I of Parthia) was crowned king of Armenia by the Roman emperor Nero in 66; in the future, the king of Armenia was to be a Parthian prince, but his appointment required approval from the Romans. Even though this made Armenia a client kingdom, various contemporary Roman sources thought that Nero had de facto ceded Armenia to the Parthian Empire.

In addition to being a king, Tiridates I was also a Zoroastrian priest and was accompanied by other magi on his journey to Rome in 66. In the early 20th century, Franz Cumont speculated that Tiridates was instrumental in the development of Mithraism which ultimately became the main religion of the Roman Army and spread across the whole empire. Furthermore, during his reign, he started reforming the administrative structure of Armenia, a reform which was continued by his successors, and which brought many Iranian customs and offices into it.

Background

Tiridates was the youngest son of Vonones II, who was king of Media Atropatene, and then later the Parthian Empire. Tiridates had two elder brothers named Pacorus (the eldest) and Vologases. Tiridates' name means "given by Tir". Tir is the Zoroastrian angel (Yazad) of literature, science and art based on the Avestan Tishtrya and was equated with the Greek Apollo by way of the process of interpretatio graeca.

Accession

Coin of Tiridates' brother Vologases I

In 51 the Roman procurator of Cappadocia, Julius Paelignus, invaded Armenia and ravaged the country, then under an Iberian usurper Rhadamistus. Rhadamistus had killed his uncle Mithridates, the legitimate king of Armenia, by luring the Roman garrison that was protecting him outside of the fortress of Gornea. Acting without instruction, Paelignus recognized Rhadamistus as the new king of Armenia. Syrian governor Ummidius Quadratus sent Helvidius Priscus with a legion to repair these outrages, but he was recalled so as not to provoke a war with Parthia.

Vonones II died in the same year, and was succeeded by Vologases I. Vologases I sought to continue the policies of the prominent former Parthian king Artabanus II (r. 12–38/41), and thus, one of his first objectives was to bolster the Parthian position in strategically and politically unstable regions that had served for decades as the source of war with the Romans. Thus he gave the kingship of Media Atropatene to Pacorus, and in 52 took the opportunity to invade Armenia, conquering Artaxata and proclaiming Tiridates I as king. Vologases felt his invasion was justified due to the recent usurpation of the Armenian throne by the Iberian prince Rhadamistus, which he saw as a violation of the former settlement made between the Parthians and Romans regarding Armenia.

A winter epidemic as well as an insurrection initiated by his son Vardanes forced him to withdraw his troops from Armenia, allowing Rhadamistus to come back and punish locals as traitors; they eventually revolted and replaced him with the prince Tiridates I in early 55. Rhadamistus escaped along with his wife Zenobia who was pregnant. Unable to continue fleeing, she asked her husband to end her life rather than be captured. Rhadamistus stabbed her with a Median dagger and flung her body into the river Araxes. Zenobia was not fatally injured and was recovered by shepherds who sent her to Tiridates. Tiridates I received her kindly and treated her as a member of the monarchy. Rhadamistus himself returned to Iberia and was soon put to death by his father Pharasmanes I of Iberia for having plotted against the royal power.

War with Rome

Further information: Roman–Parthian War of 58–63
Armenia and the Roman East in ca. 50 AD, before the outbreak of the war.

Unhappy with the growing Parthian influence at their doorstep, Nero sent the Roman general Gnaeus Domitius Corbulo with a large army to the east in order to restore Roman client kings. A Hasmonean named Aristobulus was given Lesser Armenia (Nicopolis and Satala) and Sohaemus of Emesa received Armenia Sophene. In the spring of 58, Corbulo entered Greater Armenia from Cappadocia and advanced towards Artaxata, while Parasmanes I of Iberia attacked from the north, and Antiochus IV of Commagene attacked from the southwest. Supported by his brother, Tiridates I sent flying columns to raid the Romans far and wide. Corbulo retaliated using the same tactics and the use of the Moschoi tribes who raided outlying regions of Armenia. Tiridates I fled from the capital, and Corbulo burned Artaxata to the ground. In the summer, Corbulo began moving towards Tigranocerta through rough terrain and passing through the Taronitida (Taron), where several of his commanders died in an ambush by the Armenian resistance; however, the city opened its doors, with the exception of one of the citadels, which was destroyed in the ensuing assault. By this time the majority of Armenians had abandoned resistance and accepted the prince favored by Rome.

Nero gave the crown to the last royal descendant of the kings of Cappadocia, the grandson of Glaphyra (daughter of Archelaus of Cappadocia) and Alexander of Judea (the brother of Herod Archelaus and the son of Herod the Great), who assumed the Armenian name Tigranes (his uncle was Tigranes V). His son, named Gaius Julius Alexander, married Iotapa, the daughter of Antiochus IV of Commagene and was made King of Cilicia. Nero was hailed vigorously in public for this initial victory and Corbulo was appointed governor of Syria as a reward. A guard of 1000 legionary soldiers, three auxiliary cohorts and two wings of horses were allotted to Tigranes in order to defend the country. Border districts were bestowed to Roman allies that assisted Corbulo including Polemon, Parasmanes, Aristobolus and Antiochus.

Vologases I was infuriated by the fact that an alien now sat on the Armenian throne, but hesitated to reinstate his brother as he was engaged in a conflict with the Hyrcanians who were revolting. Tigranes invaded the Kingdom of Adiabene and deposed its King Monobazes in 61, who was a vassal of Parthians.

Vologases I considered this an act of aggression from Rome and started a campaign to restore Tiridates I to the Armenian throne. He placed a well-disciplined force of cataphracts along with Adiabenian auxiliaries under the command of spahbod Moneses and ordered him to expel Tigranes from Armenia. Having quelled the Hyrcanian revolt, Vologases I gathered the strength of his dominions and embarked toward Armenia. Corbulo, having been informed of the impending attack, sent two legions under the commands of Verulanus Severus and Marcus Vettius Bolanus to the assistance of Tigranes with secret directions that they should act with caution rather than vigour. He also dispatched a message to Nero, urging him to send a second commander with the explicit purpose of defending Armenia as Syria was now also in peril. Corbulo placed the remainder of the legions on the banks of the Euphrates and armed irregular troops of the nearby provinces. Since the region was deficient in water, he erected forts over the fountains and concealed the rivulets by heaping sand over them.

Moneses marched towards Tigranocerta but failed to break the defense of the city walls as his troops were unfit for a long siege. Corbulo, although eminently successful thought it prudent to use his good fortune with moderation. He sent a Roman centurion by the name of Casperius to the camp of Vologases I in Nisibis located 60 kilometres (37 mi) from Tigranocerta with the demand to raise the siege. Because of a recent locust storm and the scarcity of fodder for his horses Vologases I agreed to raise the siege of Tigranocerta and petitioned to be granted Armenia in order to achieve a firm peace. Vologases I demanded that both the Roman and Parthian troops should evacuate Armenia, that Tigranes should be dethroned, and that the position of Tiridates I be recognized. The Roman government declined to accede to these arrangements and sent Lucius Caesennius Paetus, governor of Cappadocia, to settle the question by bringing Armenia under direct Roman administration.

Paetus was an incapable commander and suffered a humiliating defeat at the Battle of Rhandeia in 62, losing the legions of XII Fulminata commanded by Calvisius Sabinus and IV Scythica commanded by Lucius Funisulanus Vettonianus. The command of the troops was returned to Corbulo, who the following year led a strong army into Melitene and beyond into Armenia, eliminating all of the regional governors he suspected were pro-Parthian. Finally in Rhandeia, Corbulo and Tiridates I met to make a peace agreement. The location of Rhandeia suited both Tiridates I and Corbulo. It appealed to Tiridates I because that is where his army had beaten the Romans and sent them away under a capitulation; on the other hand, it appealed to Corbulo because he was about to wipe out the ill repute earned before in the same location. When Tiridates I arrived at the Roman camp he took off his royal diadem and placed it on the ground near a statue of Nero, agreeing to receive it back only from Nero in Rome. Tiridates I was recognized as the vassal king of Armenia; a Roman garrison would remain in the country permanently, in Sophene while Artaxata would be reconstructed. Corbulo left his son-in-law Lucius Annius Vinicianus to accompany Tiridates I to Rome in order to attest his own fidelity to Nero.

Visiting Rome

Prior to embarking for Rome in 66 AD, Tiridates I visited his mother and two brothers in Media Atropatene and Parthia. On his long trek he was accompanied by his wife and children and two of his brothers. His escort included an imposing retinue, comprising many feudal lords, several sages, 3,000 Parthian horsemen, and also a large number of Romans. Tiridates did not travel through sea, as he did not wish to pollute water, one of the seven Zoroastrian holy aspects. His route lay across Thrace, through Illyria, on the eastern shores of the Adriatic and Picenum, in northeastern Italy. The journey took nine months, and Tiridates I rode on horseback, with his children and queen at his side. The children of Vologases, Monobazes and Pacorus also accompanied Tiridates I.

Cassius Dio, a second-century Roman historian, described Tiridates I favorably at the time of his arrival: "Tiridates himself was in the prime of his life, a notable figure by reason of his youth, beauty, family, and intelligence." Nero greeted Tiridates I at Neapolis (Naples) in October, sending a state chariot to carry the visitor over the last few kilometres.

According to Dio's account, Tiridates I refused to remove his sword as he approached the ruler of the Roman Empire (though as a compromise, he agreed to have his sword firmly fastened in the sheath, so that it could not be drawn). Nero was reportedly so impressed by this act that he ordered a gladiatorial games be staged in honor of his guest at Puteolis (present day Pozzuoli, near Naples). According to Cassius Dio, the Armenian king himself had an opportunity to display his ability as a marksman by shooting an arrow through the bodies of two buffaloes. Ethiopian women, men and children fought as gladiators and gladiatrices at the games to impress the Armenian king.

The climax of the ceremonies was reserved for the capital. Rome was profusely decorated with flags, torches, garlands and bunting, and was gorgeously illuminated at night with great crowds of people seen everywhere.

Ancient Roman statue formerly identified with Tiridates I. Louvre MuseumA drawing of the statueA painting of the statue by Panos Terlemezian

On the day after Tiridates I's arrival, Nero came to the Forum clothed in triumphal vestments and surrounded by dignitaries and soldiers, all resplendent in expensive attire and glittering armor. While Nero sat on the imperial throne, Tiridates I and his retinue advanced between two lines of soldiers. Arriving in front of the dais, Tiridates I knelt, with hands clasped on his breast. After the thundering shouts and acclamations excited by this spectacle had subsided, Tiridates I addressed the emperor:

My Lord, I am a descendant of Arsakes and the brother of the Kings Vologases and Pacorus. I have come to you who are my god; I have worshipped you as the ; I shall be whatever you would order me to be, because you are my destiny and fortune.

To which Nero replied:

You have done well by coming here to enjoy my presence in person. What your father has not left to you and what your brothers did not preserve for you, I do accord to you, and I make you King of Armenia, so that you, as well as they, may know that I have the power to take away and to grant kingdoms.

Tiridates I then mounted the steps of the platform and knelt, while Nero placed the royal diadem on his head. As the young king was about to kneel a second time, Nero lifted him by his right hand and after kissing him, made him sit at his side on a chair a little lower than his own. Meanwhile, the populace gave tumultuous ovations to both rulers. A Praetor, speaking to the audience, interpreted and explained the words of Tiridates, who spoke in Greek. According to Pliny the Elder, Tiridates I then introduced Nero to magian feasts (magicis cenis). Tacitus claimed that Tiridates I was also interested in all things Roman.

Public festivities continued for some time after the coronation ceremony. The interior of the Theatre of Pompey and every piece of its furniture was entirely gilded for the occasion; for this reason, Rome thenceforth recalled that date as "the Golden Day." Daytime festivities were on a scale no less lavish than those of the night: Royal purple awnings stretched as protection against the heat of the sun. Nero, clad in green and wearing a chariot driver's headdress, took part in a chariot race. At the evening banquets, Nero, in gold-embroidered vestments, sang and played the lyre with zither accompaniment. Tiridates I was amazed and disgusted by Nero's extravagance, but he had only praise for Corbulo and expressed to Corbulo his surprise at his serving such a master. He made no concealment of his views to Nero's face and said to him sarcastically: "Sire, you have a wonderful servant in the person of Corbulo."

In memory of these events, the Senate honored Nero with the laurel wreath and the title of Imperator, or commander-in-chief of the armies. No reception comparable to this in magnitude and splendor is recorded in the history of Rome. Besides the enormous sum spent in festivities, the Roman Government bore the entire cost of the journey of Tiridates I and his retinue, both from and to their homeland. Nero also made a gift to Tiridates I of fifty million sesterces.

Three Magi theory

It has been suggested that the visit of Tiridates I, an event that greatly impressed contemporaries, was adapted by Christians to become the story of the adoration of the Christ Child by the Three Magi. The Christian legend changed Rome into Bethlehem, the birthplace of the Ruler of the coming Kingdom of God, and replaced Tiridates I with that contemporary king who was already connected with Christianity through the Acts of St. Thomas: Gondophares, otherwise known as Kaspar.

Peace with Rome

Greek inscription attributed to Tiridates I on basalt rock from the fortress of Garni, within the grounds of the Garni Temple complex.

Nero closed the gates of the Temple of Janus in the Roman Forum, which were never shut save in times of universal peace, claiming that peace prevailed at the time throughout the Roman world. This was a considerable victory for Nero politically, and he became very popular in the eastern provinces of Rome and with the Armenians and Parthians. The immediate dividend of the peace was Rome's ability to divert legions from Syria to Judea, which broke into open warfare culminating in the First Jewish–Roman War just one year after Tiridates' coronation. The peace between Parthia and Rome lasted 50 years, until the emperor Trajan invaded Armenia in 114.

Roman coin struck in 66 under Nero's reign depicting the gates of the Temple of Janus closed.

When Tiridates I returned to Armenia, he took with him a great number of skilled artisans for the reconstruction of Artaxata which he renamed "Neronia" in honor of the emperor. He also embellished the royal residence at nearby Garni with colonnades and monuments of dazzling richness, and added a new temple. Trade between the two continents also grew, allowing Armenia to secure its independence from Rome. Rome now counted upon Armenia as a loyal ally, even after Nero's death and through the entire duration of Vespasian's rule in the East.

War with Alans and aftermath

In 72 the Alans, a warlike nomadic Sarmatian tribe, made an incursion into Media Atropatene as well as various districts of northern Armenia. Tiridates I and his brother Pacorus, King of Media Atropatene, faced them at a number of battles, during one of which Tiridates I was briefly captured, narrowly escaping being taken alive. He was lassoed from a distance and caught, but he quickly managed to whip out his sword and slash the rope in time. The Alans withdrew with a lot of booty after plundering Armenia and Media Atropatene. The King of Iberia asked for protection against the Alans from Vespasian, who helped reconstruct the fortress of Harmozica around the Iberian capital Mtskheta, near modern Tbilisi. An Aramaic inscription found near Tbilisi indicates that Tiridates I also warred with Iberia during his final years. The exact date of the end of Tiridates I's reign is unknown; various sources name Sanatruk as his successor.

The name of Legio XII Fulminata discovered carved on a mountain in Gobustan (in modern Azerbaijan), attests to the presence of Roman soldiers by the shores of the Caspian Sea in 89, farther east than any previously known Roman inscription.

It is known that Tiridates' great-nephew, Axidares, the son of Pacorus II, was King of Armenia by 110.

Cultural depictions

Tiridates I is one of the principal characters in George Frideric Handel's opera Radamisto and Reinhard Keiser's opera Octavia.

Notes

  1. Edward Champlin notes: "When Nero entered with the senators and the guard, he ascended the Rostra and sat in his chair of state, looking back down the Forum in an east-southeasterly direction. That is, as Tiridates I approached him through the ranks of soldiers, the rising sun would have hit Nero full on the face, in all his triumphal splendor. The prince then addressed the emperor from the ground, looking up to him on the Rostra: "I have come to you, my god, worshipping you as I do Mithra." The important point—something Nero would know as an initiate, whether others did or not—is that for Zoroastrians the sun was the eye of Mithra, and Mithra was often so closely associated with the sun as to be identified with it: "the Sun whom they call Mithres," as Strabo puts it. Moreover, when Zoroastrians prayed in the open air, they turned toward the sun, since their religion bound them to pray facing fire. Thus, when Tiridates I stood in the open Roman Forum facing the sunlit emperor, and worshipping him as he did Mithra, he was in essence worshipping the sun. An ex-praetor translated his words and proclaimed them to the crowd. At this stage in Rome's history, very few of those present would have known who Mithra was, but there is a good likelihood that the interpreter relayed Tiridates' words as "I have come to you, my god, worshipping you as I do the Sun." For Nero, the marriage of Roman triumph and Parthian ceremony culminated in a splendid theatrical affirmation of his role as the new god of the Sun."

References

  1. ^ Տրդատ Ա թագավոր. ընդօրինակություն քանդակից (in Armenian). National Gallery of Armenia. Archived from the original on 6 November 2023.
  2. ^ Lang, David Marshall (1980). Armenia, cradle of civilization. Allen & Unwin. pp. 84, 141, 149. (..) Though Tiridates was to be a client king of the Romans, Nero rightly judged that his investiture would satisfy the honour of the Parthians as well. Three years later, Tiridates made the journey to Rome. As a magus or priest of the Zoroastrian faith, he had to observe the rites which forbade him to defile water by travelling. (...)
  3. ^ Boyce 1984, p. 84.
  4. ^ Russell 1987, p. 268.
  5. Redgate, Anne Elizabeth (2000). The Armenians (First ed.). Massachusetts: Blackwell Publishers Inc. pp. 88–91. ISBN 0-631-22037-2.
  6. Cumont, F. (1905). Les religions orientales dans le paganisme romain. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers. ISBN 978-88-8419-289-9.
  7. ^ Chaumont 1986, pp. 418–438.
  8. ^ Dąbrowa 2007, p. 125.
  9. Boyce, Mary (1991). A History of Zoroastrianism. Brill Academic Publishers. p. 77. ISBN 90-04-10474-7.
  10. ^ Sherk, Robert K. (1980). ANRW II.7, Politische Geschichte (Provinzen und Randvölker: Griechischer Balkanraum; Kleinasien), Roman Galatia: The Governors from 25 B.C. to A.D. 114. Berlin & New York: Walter de Gruyter & Co. pp. 954–1052. ISBN 311008015X.
  11. Chaumont & Schippmann 1988, pp. 574–580.
  12. Dąbrowa 2012, p. 175.
  13. Tacitus, Annals 12.50.1–2
  14. Gregoratti 2018, p. 1.
  15. Tacitus, Annals, 13.7
  16. ^ Bivar 1983, pp. 80–83.
  17. Tacitus, Annals, 13.9
  18. ^ Lindsay, John (January 1999). A View of the History and Coinage of the Parthians. Adamant Media Corporation. pp. 83–84. ISBN 1-4021-6080-1.
  19. Tacitus, Annals, 13.55
  20. Tabor, James D. "The Jewish Roman World of Jesus". Department of Religious Studies • The University of North Carolina at Charlotte. Archived from the original on 2010-01-11. Retrieved 2006-11-30.
  21. Strabo, 12.3.35
  22. Tacitus, Annals, 13.56
  23. Tacitus, Annals, 14.36 This was a very prestigious appointment. Not only was Syria a wealthy province, it was also one of the largest.
  24. Tacitus, Annals, 15.1
  25. ^ Smith, William (1867). "Corbulo". Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Boston. p. 851.{{cite encyclopedia}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  26. Tacitus, Annals, 15.1–6, Dio Cassius, 62.20
  27. The Penny Cyclopædia of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. Great Britain: Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. 1842. p. 496.
  28. ^ Curtis 2016, p. 185.
  29. Dio Cassius, 63.1.2
  30. ^ Cassius, Dio (2004). Dio's Rome Vol. 5. Kessinger Publishing. p. 34. ISBN 1-4191-1613-4.
  31. ^ Cassius Dio, 62.3.1
  32. Wiedemann, Thomas (1992). Emperors and Gladiators. London, United Kingdom: Routledge. p. 112. ISBN 0-415-12164-7.
  33. ^ Lewis, Naphtali (1990). Roman Civilization: Selected Readings: The Empire. Columbia University Press. p. 33. ISBN 0-231-07133-7.
  34. Champlin, Edward (2003). Nero. Belknap Press. ISBN 0-674-01192-9.
  35. Cassius Dio, 63.5.2
  36. Suetonius Tranquillus, Gaius; Robert Graves; Michael Grant (2003). The Twelve Caesars. Penguin Classics. p. 220. ISBN 0-14-044921-3.
  37. Pliny, Natural History 30.6.17
  38. Tacitus, Tacitus Annals 15.5
  39. ^ Cassius, Dio (2004). Dio's Rome Vol. 5. Kessinger Publishing. p. 36. ISBN 1-4191-1613-4.
  40. Kurkjian, Vahan (1958). A History of Armenia. New York: Armenian General Benevolent Fund. ASIN B000BQMKSI.
  41. A. Dietrich, „“Die Weisen aus dem Morgenlande“, Zeitschrift für die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft, Bd. III, 1902, S.1-der–14; cited in J. Duchesne-Guillemin, “Die Drei Weisen aus dem Morgenlande und die Anbetung der Zeit”, Antaios, Vol. VII, 1965, pp. 234–252 .
  42. Ernst Herzfeld, Archaeological History of Iran, London, Oxford University Press for the British Academy, 1935, pp. 65–66.
  43. Olbrycht 2016, pp. 100–101.
  44. Dio Cassius, Roman History, 62.23
  45. Shotter, David (1997). Nero. Routledge (UK). pp. 39–40. ISBN 0-415-31942-0.
  46. Dio Cassius 68.17.2–3
  47. ^ Bournoutian, George (2002). A Concise History of the Armenian People. Mazda Publishers. p. 42. ISBN 1-56859-141-1.
  48. The Greek inscription found in Garni in 1945 refers to Tiridates I as Helios and supreme ruler of Greater Armenia. On the basis of building techniques and paleography, scholars generally continue identifying Tiridates I with the inscription. However, R. D. Wilkinson believes that the Tiridates I mentioned in the inscription was not Tiridates I.Joyce, Reynolds (1971). "Roman Inscriptions 1966–1970". The Journal of Roman Studies. 61. Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies: 152. doi:10.2307/300013. JSTOR 300013. S2CID 161484397.
  49. ^ Alemany 2000, p. 92.
  50. Russell 1987, p. 157.
  51. Both Classical Greco-Roman and Armenian sources from the Late Antiquity mention Sanatruces (Sanatruk in Armenian), in Armenian sources he is identified with the martyrdom of Thaddeus. Professor Nina Garsoian, Emerita of Columbia University, states that there is no explicit evidence naming Sanatruces as Tiridates' successor.Hovannisian, Richard G. (1997). The Armenian people from ancient to modern times: from antiquity to the fourteenth century. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 69. ISBN 0-312-10168-6.

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