See also

Family of Agathocles and Alexandria of BACTRIA

Husband: Agathocles (c. 170- )
Wife: Alexandria of BACTRIA (195- )
Children: Agathocleia (c. 165- )

Husband: Agathocles

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Agathocles

Name: Agathocles
Sex: Male
Father: Demetrius I (231-c. 171)
Mother: Sundhari (226- )
Title frm 0190 B.C. to 0180 B.C. (age -21--10) King of Bactria
Birth 0170 B.C. (est) Bactria (Afghanistan)
Occupation King of Bactria
Death Bactria (Afghanistan)

Wife: Alexandria of BACTRIA

Name: Alexandria of BACTRIA
Sex: Female
Father: -
Mother: -
Birth 0195 B.C.

Child 1: Agathocleia

Name: Agathocleia
Sex: Female
Spouse: Menander (c. 170- )
Birth 0165 B.C. (est) Bactria (Afghanistan)
Occupation Princess of Bactria
Title Princess of Bactria1
Death Bactria (Afghanistan)

Note on Husband: Agathocles

Agathocles Dikaios was a Buddhist Indo-Greek king, who reigned between around 190 and 180 BCE. He might have been a son of Demetrius and one of his sub-kings in charge of the Paropamisade between Bactria and India. In that case, he was a grandson of Euthydemus whom he qualified on his coins as "Basileas Theos" (Greek for "God-King").

 

Agathocles was contemporary with or a successor of king Pantaleon. He seems to have been attacked and killed by the usurper Eucratides, who took control of the Greco-Bactrian territory. Little is known about him, apart from his extensive coinage.

Pedigree coinageAgathocles issued a series of "pedigree" dynastic coins, probably with the intent to advertise his lineage and legitimize his rule, linking him to Alexander the Great, a king Antiochus Nikator ( "Victorious", probably intended is Antiochus III), the founder of the Greco-Bactrian kingdom Diodotus and his son Diodotus II, Euthydemus, Pantaleon, and Demetrius.

 

 

The pedigree coinage has been seen as a token of his ancestry, but a critical view might be considered. All the associations provide a contradictory image. The Euthydemid kings (Demetrius and Euthydemus) are not known to be related to Diodotus – in fact, Euthydemus I overthrew Diodotus II! The Seleucids were enemies of the Euthydemids as well – in fact king Antiochus III had besieged Bactra for almost three years before claiming victory over Euthydemus I. Nevertheless, Antiochus III is known to have used the epithet "Nikator" ( Greek for "Victorious")[1]

 

Finally, the association with Alexander was a standard move for usurpers in the Hellenistic world, such as the pseudo-Seleucids Alexander Balas and the Syrian general Diodotus Tryphon.

 

All in all, the coins might well support the view of an usurper, or more probable a member of a minor branch of a dynasty, anxious to gather support from all quarters with his various memorial coins. However, the similarities between his coinage and that of Pantaleon make it probable that Agathocles was indeed a relative of the latter, who in that case might have been a usurper as well.

 

Also, Agathocles and Pantaleon, along with their contemporary Euthydemus II, are unique in the ancient world, in that they were the first in the world to issue copper-nickel (75/25 ratio) coins 1, an alloy technology only known by the Chinese at the time (some weapons from the Warring States Period were in copper-nickel alloy 2 ). These coins are indicative of the existence of trade links with China around that time (see Greco-Bactrian kingdom). Copper-nickel would not be used again in coinage until the 19th century in the United States.

 

 

Indian coinage of Agathocles, with Buddhist lion and Lakshmi.At the same time, Agathocles issued an intriguing range of bilingual coinage, displaying what seems to be Buddhist as well as Hinduist symbolism. The coins, manufactured according to the Indian standard, using either Brahmi, Greek or Kharoshthi (a first in the Greek world), and displaying symbols of the various faiths in India, tend to indicate a considerable willingness to accommodate local languages and beliefs, to an extent unseen in subsequent Indo-Greek kings. They may be indicative of the considerable efforts of the first Indo-Greek kings to secure support from Indian populations and avoid being perceived as invaders, efforts which may have subsided once the Indo-Greek kingdoms were more securely in place

The Buddhist coinage of Agathocles is in the Indian standard (square or round copper coins) and depicts Buddhist symbols such as the stupa, the "tree in railing", or the lion. These coins sometimes use Brahmi, and sometimes Kharoshthi, whereas later Indo-Greek kings only used Kharoshthi.

 

The Hinduist coinage of Agathocles is few but spectacular. Six Indian-standard silver drachmas were discovered at Ai-Khanoum in 1970, which depict Hindu deities.

 

These are the first known representations of Vedic deities on coins, and they display early Avatars of Vishnu: Balarama-Sankarshana and Vasudeva-Krishna.

 

The dancing girls on some of the coins of Agathocles and Pantaleon are also sometimes considered as representations of Lakshmi, the consort of Vishnu.2,3

Sources

1Kirk Rappe, "The Greco-Bactrian Mirage: Reconstructing a History of Hellenistic Bactria".
2W.W. Tam, "The Greeks in Bactria and India" (Cambridge University Press).
3H.G. Rawlinson, "Bactria - the History of a Forgotten Empire" (Probhstain and Co, London, 1912).