Pelops (Ancient Greek: Πέλοψ) was an official in the third century Ptolemaic kingdom, son of Pelops, son of Alexander, who had himself been a Ptolemaic official.
Under King Ptolemy III, Pelops held an official position in Cyrene - probably, he was the governor (Libyarches).[1] From 217 BC, he served Ptolemy IV as governor (strategos) of Cyprus, as we know from three inscriptions found on the island. He is the earliest Ptolemaic governor to be attested epigraphically. He was still in post shortly after the birth of Ptolemy V on 9 October 209 BC.[2] He probably remained in charge of the island until spring 203 BC, when Ptolemy IV died and Queen Arsinoe III was murdered by Sosibius and Agathocles, who then took over the regency for the young king. Pelops had been openly opposed to Sosibius and Agathocles, so he was appointed ambassador to the Seleucid King Antiochus III by Agathocles in order to keep him away from the Ptolemaic court in Alexandria.[3] He is not attested again after this. Polycrates of Argos replaced him as governor of Cyprus.
Pelops was married to Myrsine daughter of Hyperbassas, who was honoured with a statue in the temple of Aphrodite in Paphos on account of her husband's service to the Father-loving gods (Ptolemy IV and Arsinoe III).[4] Her sister Iamneia held the priestly role of 'basket-bearer' (canephorus) of Arsinoe II in 243/2 BC and athlophorus of Berenice II in 196/5 BC.[5] Pelops and Myrsine had a son called Ptolemy.
References
edit- ^ SEG 18.734.
- ^ Christian Blinkenberg: Lindos. Fouilles et recherches 1902–1914. Band 2: Inscriptions. De Gruyter, Berlin 1941, No. 139.
- ^ Polybius, Histories 15.25.13.
- ^ Terence Bruce Mitford: "The Hellenistic Inscriptions of Old Paphos." The Annual of the British School at Athens. 56 (1961) p. 15, no. 39.
- ^ Terence B. Mitford in Gerald A. Wainwright: "Keftiu" The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology (JEA) 17 (1931) pp. 31–32.
Bibliography
edit- Terence Bruce Mitford: "Ptolemy Son of Pelops." The Journal of Egyptian Archaeology. (JEA) 46 (1960) pp. 109–111.