Ariobarzanes (in
Greek Aριoβαρζάνης) is the first known of the line of rulers of the
Greek town of
Cius from which were eventually to stem the kings of
Pontus in the
3rd century BC. He was betrayed by his son
Mithridates to his overlord, the
Persian king. It is highly probable he is the same who conducted the
Athenian ambassadors, in
405 BC, to his sea-town of Cius in
Mysia, after they had been detained three years by order of
Cyrus the Younger; but it's more dubious if he's the same Ariobarzanes who assisted
Antalcidas in
388 BC.
References
- Aristotle, Politics, H. Rackham (translator), Cambridge, MA - London, (1944)
- Smith, William (editor); Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, "Ariobarzanes I", Boston, (1867)
- Xenophon, Cyropaedia, Cambridge, MA - London, (1979-83)
Notes
Xenophon,
Cyropaedia,
viii. 8; Aristotle,
Politics,
v. 10 Xenophon,
Hellenica,
i. 4 Ibid.,
v. 1-------