David Braund
David Braund
David Braund
Braund David. Anagranes the ΤΡΟΦΕΥΣ : the court of caucasian Iberia in the second-third centuries AD . In: Autour de la mer
Noire. Hommage de Otar Lordkipanidzé. Besançon : Institut des Sciences et Techniques de l'Antiquité, 2002. pp. 23-34.
(Collection « ISTA », 862);
https://www.persee.fr/doc/ista_0000-0000_2002_ant_862_1_1953
Two new inscriptions from Georgia shed fresh light on the royal court of
Caucasian Iberia in the Roman period. They offer important new information
particularly about the titulature of the court and about relations between Iberia
and Armenia, including personages hitherto unknown. One such is Anagranes,
who bears the title τροφευς. It seems fitting to offer a study of such a man to
Otar Lordkipanidze, who over the years has provided intellectual τροφή for
so many foreigners engaged with Georgian antiquity, including myself.
The new inscriptions, both in Greek and both on stone plaques, hâve
been unearthed in the course of renewed excavation at Bagineti on the lower
slope of the fortified hill-cum-acropolis usually (and no doubt rightly) identi-
fied with the principal strongpoint of the sprawling city of Mtskheta, namely
the Harmozike of the literary tradition. They were found in association with
a bath-building, itself in close proximity to structures long since identified as
a palace of the Iberian kings, looking northwards across the River Cyrus (mod.
Mtkvari) to the hill of Jvari and the mouth of the River Aragus (mod. Aragvi).
* David Braund.
1. Qaukhchishvili 1996, 1998 and 1999. I am most grateful to Guram Qipiani, deputy director of
the Bagineti expédition, for providing me with photographs.
ττουανλπρ
1. Inscription n° 1.
2. Inscription n° 2.
2. The bath-building will be published in due course. On the random βαλανεΤον, see Nielsen 1993, 9,
with Braund 1994 on baths in Iberia.
II
Seleucids and Ptolemies, where they hâve prompted a good deal of scholarly
discussion. Naturally, we cannot assume blithely that the τροφεΰς Anagranes
was entirely the same in status or function as his earlier Seleucid and Ptolemaic
counterparts. However, it seems worthwhile to consider those counterparts
and possible similarities, especially in view of the (rather neglected) fact that
hellenistic Iberia (as also Armenia) had fallen within the impérial sphère of the
Seleucids. It is entirely likely that Iberian and Armenian court structures owed
something to Seleucid institutions. There is even some reason to suspect that
the Iberian kings were proud of the Seleucid link, which may be hinted at in the
epitaph of an Iberian prince early in the second century AD5.
Our fullest information on the workings of the relationship between the
τροφεΰς and his ward is Polybius' narrative of the résidence in Rome of the
future Demetrius I Soter of Syria in the second century BC. Demetrius had been
sent to Rome from Syria as a boy of some ten years of âge. It has often been
thought that he had been accompanied to Rome by his τροφεΰς, one Diodorus,
whom Polybius describes acting as a key agent of Demetrius after he had
reached adulthood, coming to report to the prince in Rome upon the situation
in Syria. According to Polybius, who was himself very closely involved in thèse
events, it was the arguments of Diodorus the τροφεύς which convinced
Demetrius to escape from Rome and to seize for himself the kingdom of Syria.
And it was Diodorus whom Demetrius sent on ahead (Polyb. 31.12). Polybius'
account nicely illustrâtes the fact that the τροφεύς could retain a spécial
relationship with his ward well after the ward had reached an âge at which
he or she was capable of independent action. A range of inscriptions tends to
confirm the point and to underline the prominent position that a τροφεΰς could
continue to hold, especially no doubt as one particularly trusted by his former
charge. For example, an honorific inscription from Athens orders the érection of
a bronze statue to a τροφεΰς named as [Me]nodorus (or [Ze]nodorus or the like)
in the agora, beside the statue of his former charge, Antiochus (IV ?)6. Similar is
another Seleucid instance from Delos, where Craterus the τροφεύς was
honoured with a statue on the same base as the statue of his former charge
Antiochus IX, in the period 130-117 BC7.
Thèse brief remarks are suggestive for our Iberian case. Anagranes
présents himself as τροφεΰς of royal Drakontis in no.2, in particular15. As we
hâve seen, it was quite usual for the τροφεΰς to retain not only his title but also
much of his significance into the adult life of his former charge. More
challenging is the question of the circumstances in which Anagranes had been
her τροφεΰς at ail. Had he played the rôle in her father's kingdom or abroad ?
Or both ? If Drakontis was indeed the royal female of no.l, as I tend to believe,
and if, as is the likeliest hypothesis16, she is named there as daughter of
Vologaeses, then her father's realm was (or at least included) Armenia. Should
we then consider Anagranes to be an Armenian who accompanied his former
charge to the court of her husband in Iberia, enjoying some prominence there ?
Possibly so, but we are at (indeed, beyond) the limits of our évidence,
particularly as we cannot be completely sure that Drakontis is indeed the royal
female of no.l. And, in any case, we cannot assume that a king would always
appoint a τροφεύς from within his kingdom : an outsider might well be
préférable. Indeed, Anagranes might even be an Iberian !
The identification of Vologaeses and Amazaspus would no doubt
improve our understanding of thèse relationships. Of course, in very gênerai
terms, it is well known that the rulers of Iberia and Armenia often enjoyed close
relations, not only in antiquity, but also in later periods17. The fact that thèse
relations could also become hostile scarcely affects the matter18. However, we
need to identify thèse particular rulers, if we are to make further historical use
of thèse new inscriptions.
As Qaukhchishvili rightly notes19, the name Amazaspus is attested for
several différent personages among the rulers of Iberia, both in the classical
évidence and in the Georgian mediaeval tradition. The évidence for a ruler of
Armenia with the name Vologaeses (Valarsh in the Armenian tradition) is
hardly more restricted. It seems now to be orthodox to date the reign of Valarsh
I as AD 116-144 and Valarsh II as AD 186-198. Qaukhchishvili may well be right
15. It is perhaps worth noting in that context the ambivalence of the adjective τρόφιμος, which can
encompass not only Anagranes' nurturing of Drakontis but also in adulthood her nurturing of him,
for the adjective can be both active and passive in force, as LSJ observes.
16. So too Qaukhchishvili 1998, 12.
17. Qaukhchishvili 1998, 13.
18. For example, see Braund 1994, 224 on the évidence of Tacitus' Annals.
19. Qaukhchishvili 1998, 13.
in opting for the latter, which would place the inscriptions and the baths in the
late second or early third centuries AD. The letter forms of the two inscriptions
(evidently eut by différent masons) cannot be pressed to provide a date,
especially in view of the scanty epigraphical record from the area20, but they
seem to be consonant with a date c. AD 200. On broad historical grounds too,
it is easy enough to imagine development and prosperity in Iberia around this
date, when, for example, the diplomatie silverware of Marcus Aurelius found
its way into a burial at Mtskheta, indeed at Bagineti itself, hard by our bath-
building21. However, for ail that, we need also to find an appropriate
Amazaspus ; indeed a prominent one, if his grandiloquent title is to be given
any substance. Perhaps, as Qaukhchishvili seems to believe, he is to be
identified as the Amazaspus mentioned in the so-called Res Gestae of Shapur I
in the middle of the third century, around AD 26222.
The essential difficulty, which is worth recognizing explicitly, is that we
simply do not hâve information on the rulers of Iberia or Armenia in thèse years
of a type sufficient to provide strong chronology, notwithstanding the efforts
of many fine scholars. While there are a very few firm landmarks in thèse
dynasties, the great mass is a matter of hypothesis and spéculation.
If we accept Qaukhchishvili's reasonable hypothesis on the identity
of Amazaspus, we need a Vologaeses who could be described as king of
Armenia. There is a wide range of possibilities, in part discussed by
Qaukhchishvili, but we should consider also those kings for whom we hâve
no name : it is likely enough that one or two of them were also called
Vologaeses. It is perhaps worth considering in particular the king of Armenia
who was removed by Caracalla around AD 214. The emperor had tricked
him into visiting Rome in the expectation that a dispute between the king
and his children might be settled. Instead Caracalla detained him. It would not
be surprising if at least some of his family accompanied the king to Rome,
for there was a dispute within the family to be settled and subsequently there
is no mention of the king's children playing a rôle in the Armenian
uprising against Caracalla which ensued. We happen to be told that an (the ?)
20. Compare the wide variation in modem dating of the Greek inscription from Aparan in
Armenia : Chaumont 1976, esp. 185-8.
21. Braund 1994, 235-7, with illustration.
22. Braund 1994, 239-41, with the literature there cited.
Armenian queen was among those detained, as well as the king23. Was this
the immédiate family of Drakontis ? Are we to identify her father Vologaeses as
the king dethroned and detained by Caracalla24 ? We cannot know, but the
possibility abides.
If Vologaeses was in place in Armenia until removed by Caracalla around
AD 214, his daughter might well hâve married (whether before or after
her father's removal) the man mentioned in Shapur's court around AD 262.
Moreover, the prominence of Amazaspus at Shapur's court would accord well
with the title "Great", accorded to him in no.l. Accordingly, on thèse arguments,
we might wish to date the inscriptions and the construction of the bath-building
at Bagineti rather later than Qaukhchishvili's c. AD 200, perhaps by several
décades. We need not suppose that Vologaeses was still alive at the time that
the inscriptions were eut. It is to be hoped that the completion and publication
of the more récent excavations at Bagineti will give a stronger idea of the date
at which the bath-building was built.
And what of the relationship between our principal personages ?
Was Drakontis held in Rome with her father and the rest of her family ?
Was Anagranes there too, acting as τροφεύς ? Ail dépends on the date of her
marriage to Amazaspus and the attendant circumstances, about which we can
only wonder. If she was not yet married at the time of her father's (on this
argument) déposition, she will either hâve journeyed with him to Rome and
been kept there for some time, or she will hâve been left in Armenia, unless the
dispute in the family mentioned by Dio was sufficient to send her elsewhere,
even to Iberia. Whatever the case Anagranes will hâve been with her. The
political significance of her marriage is similarly unclear. We might imagine
that her marriage to a king so well-connected with Shapur is to be linked with
anti-Roman tendencies in her family, especially perhaps if the marriage took
place after her father's removal.
With the king dethroned, Anagranes the τροφεύς was no doubt ail
the more significant. That may give a particular meaning to his other title,
επίτροπος. Once again earlier hellenistic practice may be instructive, for we find
single individuals holding both positions in that context too, whether in
23. Dio 78.27.4, with Chaumont 1976, 155-7, esp. 156 n.481.
24. If so, then this was presumably not the king mentioned under Severus : see Chaumont 1976, 155.
Bibliography
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25. Polyb. 28. 21 with Diod. Sic 30.15 on Eulaeus at the Ptolemaic court ; see Walbank 1979, 355-6
and the literature he cites.
26. OGIS 141 with Mooren 1975, 207.
27. Nielsen 1993, 120 n.ll.
28. Crampa 1972, 134.
29. Ginouvès 1962, 220-4 ; Nielsen 1993, 7, esp. n.l7.This article owes much to the help of Joyce
Reynolds ; faults are my own.