User:Douglas Coldwell/Sandboxes/03
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Laodice (in Greek Λαοδικη - Laodike) (a.k.a. Berenice of Pontus)[1] was the sister of the king of Pontus Mithridates Eupator (120–63 BC) and the wife of Ariarathes VI (130–116 BC), king of Cappadocia.
After the death of her husband, who was assassinated by Gordius, at the instigation of Mithridates, in order to avoid a similar fate for herself and her two sons, she threw herself into the arms of Nicomedes III, king of Bithynia, whom she married, and put in possession of Cappadocia.[2] After the death of her son, she joined with Nicomedes in the attempt to establish an impostor upon the throne of Cappadocia, and even went to Rome to bear witness in person that she had had three sons by Ariarathes; notwithstanding which, the claim of the pretender was rejected by the senate.1 She was the mother of Ariarathes VII and Ariarathes VIII. Her father was Mithridates V of Pontus.
[edit] References
- Smith, William (editor); Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, "Laodice (13)", Boston, (1867)
- This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology by William Smith (1870).
[edit] Sources
- ^ Giovanni Boccaccio’s On Famous Women translated by Virginia Brown (2001), page 149; Cambridge and London, Harvard University Press; ISBN 0-674-01130-9
- ^ Hazel, John (2001) Who's Who in the Roman World, "Nicomedes" page 211; ISBN 9780415224109