Jump to content

Pythius

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Pythius(Ancient Greek:Πύθιος) is aLydianmentioned in book VII ofHerodotus'Histories,chh. 27-29 and 38-39. He is the son of Atys, and the grandson ofCroesus,the last native king of Lydia before thePersian conquest.[1]

ThePersiankingXerxes I,son ofDarius I,encounters Pythius, the second most wealthy person after Xerxes, on his way toinvade Greecec. 480 BC.[2][3]Pythius had grown wealthy through his gold mines inCelaenae,Phrygia.[1]He met the Persian king in Celaenae and entertains him before offering to provide money for the expenses of war. This Xerxes politely declines, and instead rewards Pythius' generosity by giving him 7000 golddaricsin order that his fortune might be an even 4,000,000 (ch. 29).[4][5]His five sons accompanied Xerxes.[6]

Later Pythius, emboldened by Xerxes' gift and alarmed at an eclipse of the sun, asks Xerxes to release his eldest son from the army, in order to care for him in his old age, while letting Xerxes retain the other four. Xerxes grows angry, citing his own sacrifice of family members without exception and calling Pythius his slave.[4]Since he has promised to grant the wish, however, he takes the son, cuts him in half and marches his army away between the two halves, put up on either side of the road (ch. 39).[7]

References[edit]

  1. ^abPeck, Harry Thurston (1898)."Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities".perseus.tufts.edu.Harper and Brothers.Retrieved2021-11-14.
  2. ^[G.P. Goold, ed. Herodotus, vol. 3. The Loeb Classical Library, 1922. Note to p. 351.]
  3. ^Morrison, A. D. (2020-01-30).Apollonius Rhodius, Herodotus and Historiography.Cambridge University Press.ISBN978-1-108-49232-4.
  4. ^abDijn, Annelien De (2020).Freedom: An Unruly History.Harvard University Press.ISBN978-0-674-98833-0.
  5. ^Abbott, Jacob (2019-09-25).Xerxes.BoD – Books on Demand.ISBN978-3-7340-7152-2.
  6. ^Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Pythius
  7. ^Hanson, Victor Davis (2007-12-18).Carnage and Culture: Landmark Battles in the Rise to Western Power.Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group.ISBN978-0-307-42518-8.