404:
93:
and his mercenaries. Xenophon describes
Medocus/Amadocus I as Seuthes I's overlord and protector, and records that he lived in the interior of the country, some twelve days from the coast. Seuthes II eventually rebelled against Medocus/Amadocus I: Seuthes despised and attacked his overlord, and the
84:
described the
Thracian kings Medocus and Seuthes as his allies. Medocus/Amadocus I made his ward Seuthes II a subordinate king in part of southeastern Thrace, but without restoring all of the territory that had once belonged to Seuthes II's father
192:
For example, Vulpe 1976: 29; Topalov 1994: 13–14; Zahrnt 2015: 42–44, and the various other contributors to Valeva 2015; Tacheva 2006 considers these different rulers, reigning c. 404–390 BC and c. 390 – after 384 BC,
418:
156:
89:, some of which remained in the hands of a certain Teres II. In the winter of 400/399 BC Seuthes II received the services of the Athenian commander
68:
on the
Odrysian throne, and is named as king of the Odrysians already in 405 BC, alongside a Seuthes, who is generally identified as
30:, Amadokos, also Amatokos, perhaps more accurately Μήτοκος/Μήδοκος, Mētokos/Mēdokos, of which the Latin form would be Medocus) was a
435:
450:
445:
440:
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151:
143:
105:) on the coins of Odrysian rulers, continued on the issues of several members of his branch of the dynasty.
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had to reconcile
Medocus/Amadocus I and Seuthes II and to renew their alliance with Athens in 390/389 BC.
53:
specifies that there were two kings named
Amadocus, father and son, of whom the son was a contemporary of
174:
Topalov 1994: 50–64, 73, 212–213; Vulpe 1976: 29–30 had reached the same conclusion on other grounds.
161:
338:
M. Zahrnt, Early
History of Thrace to the Murder of Kotys I (360 BCE), in: J. Valeva et al. (eds.),
202:
For example, Zahrnt 2015: 42; Tacheva 2006: 82, 90–91 sees this as one last reference to
Seuthes I.
460:
455:
119:
23:
41:
On the basis of circumstantial evidence, Medocus/Amadocus I has been identified as the son of
280:
216:
73:
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38:
in the late 5th to early 4th century BC (attested from before 405 BC to after 390/389 BC).
8:
234:
115:
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354:
275:
211:
45:
and a representative of the so-called "junior" branch of the
Odrysian dynasty.
61:. Most modern historians consider Medocus and Amadocus I the same individual.
429:
408:
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Medocus/Amadocus I introduced the "heraldic" device of a double-headed axe (
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58:
407: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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50:
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270:
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65:
46:
31:
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90:
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42:
35:
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The
Odrysian Kingdom from the Late 5th to the Mid-4th C. B.C.
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refers to him as "Amadokos the Elder," while a fragment of
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Medocus/Amadocus I probably died soon after 390/389 BC.
419:
Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Biography and Mythology
157:
Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology
427:
293:Topalov 1994: 38–42, 50–64; Tacheva 2006: 91–96.
64:Medocus/Amadocus I apparently succeeded
428:
412:
312:The Kings of Ancient Thrace. Book One
256:1312a8–14, ed. Gottling, vol. 8: 182.
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136:
16:5th and 4th-century BC Thracian king
57:. Amadocus I is thus the father of
13:
183:Tacheva 2006: 107; Vulpe 1976: 32.
14:
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296:
287:
416:, ed. (1870). "Amadocus (I)".
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1:
436:4th-century BC Greek monarchs
340:A Companion to Ancient Thrace
326:A Companion to Ancient Thrace
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451:4th-century BC Greek people
446:5th-century BC Greek people
10:
477:
388:before 405 – after 390 BC
355:Odrysian kingdom of Thrace
27:
390:
383:
375:
348:
324:J. Valeva et al. (eds.),
162:Little, Brown and Company
80:statesman and commander
441:5th-century BC monarchs
160:. Vol. 1. Boston:
126:is named for Amadocus.
120:South Shetland Islands
342:, Wiley, 2015: 35–47.
281:Bibliotheca historica
217:Bibliotheca historica
74:Battle of Aegospotami
72:. At the time of the
55:Philip II of Macedon
333:Studia Thracologica
335:, Bucharest, 1976.
238:7.2.32, 7.3.16–17.
400:
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391:Succeeded by
116:Livingston Island
94:Athenian general
468:
423:
406:
405:
376:Preceded by
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302:Zahrnt 2015: 44.
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276:Diodorus Siculus
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212:Diodorus Siculus
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29:
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385:King of Thrace
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76:in 405 BC, the
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461:Odrysian kings
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456:390s BC deaths
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414:Smith, William
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389:
382:
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373:
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344:
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328:, Wiley, 2015.
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321:, Sofia, 1994.
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314:, Sofia, 2006.
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164:. p. 135.
148:"Amadocus (I)"
144:Smith, William
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3:
2:
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409:public domain
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24:Ancient Greek
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370:after 390 BC
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317:S. Topalov,
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310:M. Tacheva,
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112:Amadok Point
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63:
40:
34:king of the
19:
18:
394:Hebryzelmis
350:Amadocus I
96:Thrasybulus
59:Amadocus II
430:Categories
331:R. Vulpe,
130:References
124:Antarctica
82:Alcibiades
70:Seuthes II
51:Theopompus
20:Amadocus I
379:Seuthes I
271:Hellenica
248:Aristotle
220:13.105.3.
66:Seuthes I
47:Isocrates
284:14.94.2.
274:4.8.26;
266:Xenophon
253:Politics
235:Anabasis
230:Xenophon
146:(1867).
91:Xenophon
87:Maesades
78:Athenian
43:Sitalces
32:Thracian
28:Ἀμάδοκος
411::
363:Unknown
154:(ed.).
118:in the
36:Odrysae
366:
103:labrys
368:Died:
361:Born:
150:. In
114:on
432::
278:,
268:,
250:,
232:,
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26::
422:.
22:(
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