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382:"Elfinspell: Book VIII, Heliodorus - Chariclea's Trial, from Aethiopica by Heliodorus -An Aethiopian Romance, translated by Thomas Underdowne (anno 1587), revised and partly rewritten by F. A. Wright, [with additional corrections in the online edition by S. Rhoads;] 300 AD Greek Novel, prose fiction, adventure and romance, third century Greek Literature, online text, free e-book on Elfinspell.com"
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Bagoas sought to remain in office by replacing
Artaxerxes with his son, Arses (Artaxerxes IV), whom he thought easier to control. Arses remained little more than a puppet-king during the two years of his reign while Bagoas acted as the power behind the throne. Eventually, disgruntled by this state of
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affairs and possibly influenced by the nobles of the Royal Court, who generally held Bagoas in contempt, Arses started planning Bagoas' murder. However, Bagoas again acted first in order to protect himself and managed to poison and kill Arses. Bagoas then raised a cousin of Arses to the throne as
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When Darius attempted to become independent of the powerful vizier, Bagoas tried to poison him too; but Darius was warned and forced Bagoas to drink the poison himself (Diod. xvii. 5; Johann. Antioch, p. 38, 39 ed. Müller; Arrian ii. 14. 5; Curt. vi. 4. 10).
95:, and with his help succeeded in once again making Egypt a province of the Achaemenids, probably from 342 BCE. Mentor became general of the maritime provinces, suppressed the rebels in Egypt and sent Greek mercenaries to the king, while Bagoas administered the
117:, was poisoned along with most of his family by Bagoas with the assistance of a physician, when the vizier fell out of favour with him. A cuneiform tablet in the British Museum (BM 71537), however, suggests Artaxerxes III died from natural causes.
150:, murdered his brother Jesus in the temple, Bagoas (who had supported Jesus) put a new tax on the Jews and entered the temple, saying that he was purer than he who was murdered in the temple (Joseph. Ant. xi. 7.1).
228:. In the novel, he is portrayed as a trusty eunuch servant of the Persian satrap of Memphis. In the course of events, he is captured by the Ethiopian king and assimilated as a servant in the Ethiopian court.
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III and Atossa and was not expected to succeed to the throne. His unexpected rise to the throne came in 338 BCE as a result of the death of his father, who, according to the Greek work of
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and gained such power that he was almost the real master of the Empire towards the end of
Artaxerxes III's reign (Diod. xvi. 50; cf. Didymus,
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reports an angry letter from
Alexander to Darius, naming Bagoas as one of the persons who organized the murder of his father,
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and giving them back to the priests for large bribes (Diod. XVI. 51). When the high priest of
Jerusalem,
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A later story, that Bagoas was an
Egyptian and killed Artaxerxes III because he had killed the living
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For the younger Bagoas, lover of Darius and
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as the cause of the narrator's enslavement and castration.
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From Cyrus to
Alexander: A history of the Persian Empire
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184:, with the best species of palms, are mentioned by
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16:Persian Achaemenid Empire vizier (died 336 BC)
317:"Collection online - Museum number 71537"
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79:who later became vizier to
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367:Encyclopædia Britannica
282:. Eienbrauns. pp.
231:Bagoas is mentioned in
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135:Bibliotheca historica
319:. The British Museum
204:Philip II of Macedon
180:39); his gardens in
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226:Heliodorus of Emesa
217:ancient Greek novel
170:Alexander the Great
386:www.elfinspell.com
91:mercenary general
440:Ancient murderers
415:by Jona Lendering
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190:Hist. Plant
31:Old Persian
429:Categories
419:Aethiopica
413:Livius.org
391:2015-11-04
323:2017-12-19
246:References
221:Aethiopica
210:In fiction
194:Nat. Hist.
159:Var. Hist.
123:Darius III
111:Artaxerxes
83:. In this
455:Regicides
235:'s novel
174:Parmenion
157:(Aelian,
97:satrapies
71:Biography
63:) of the
35:Bagāvahyā
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200:Plutarch
148:Johannes
103:vi. 5).
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93:Mentor
77:eunuch
57:vizier
48:Bagōas
43:Βαγώας
27:Bagoas
178:Alex.
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155:Apis
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