Knowledge (XXG)

Octamasadas

Source 📝

141:
brother had fled to Thrace, Octamasadas gathered his army and headed for Thrace. When Octamasadas arrived at the river Ister, the Thracian army was waiting for him. The two sides were about to engage in battle when Sitalces sent a message to Octamasadas by a herald. Sitalces proposed a trade; Sitalces would surrender Scyles if Octamasadas handed over one of Sitalces' brothers, who had taken refuge with the Scythians because he feared Sitalces. Octamasadas/
330: 140:
Octamasadas became king after the Scythians broke out into revolt. The Scythians revolted because then-king Scyles, Octamasadas' half-brother, admired Grecian culture and did not behave in a traditional Scythian fashion. When Scyles heard of this revolt, he fled to Thrace. After hearing that his
395: 154:
between the Scythians and the Thracians – though tragic for Scyles - led to the stabilization among these players as regional powers along with the
371: 272: 215: 188: 400: 112: 150:
After the exchange, Sitalces left with his brother, while Octamasadas beheaded Scyles as soon as he received him. This
262: 205: 297: 390: 364: 405: 103: 50: 357: 123: 30: 231: 91: 318: 312: 292: 268: 211: 184: 155: 341: 78:, who lived around 446 BC. He came to power after he deposed and replaced his half-brother 235: 384: 151: 39: 75: 20: 71: 86:’s daughter, making Octamasadas Teres’ grandson. Teres I was the father of 87: 19:
This article is about the king of Scythia. For the king of Sindica, see
337: 83: 181:
The History of Central Asia: The Age of the Steppe Warriors, Volume 1
79: 55: 307: 287: 329: 61: 147:
accepted the terms and surrendered his own uncle to Sitalces.
43: 117: 244:
Annali dell'Università degli Studi di Napoli l'Orientale
345: 142: 127: 33: 158:, which resulted to a period of economic prosperity. 132:, meaning "possessing greatness through his words." 238:[Scythian Personal Names in Herodotus] 319:The History of Herodotus at Fordham University 365: 8: 236:"Die skythischen Personennamen bei Herodot" 65: 372: 358: 166: 7: 326: 324: 174: 172: 170: 183:. London: I.B.Tauris. p. 245. 344:. You can help Knowledge (XXG) by 14: 396:People from the Bosporan Kingdom 328: 308:The History of Herodotus, vol. 2 288:The History of Herodotus, vol. 1 143: 122:) is the Hellenisation of the 94:(448–440 BC), Thracian kings. 1: 82:. Octamasadas was the son of 128: 118: 56: 34: 16:5th-century BC Scythian king 422: 323: 179:Baumer, Christoph (2012). 107: 44: 18: 267:. Charles River Editors. 298:George Campbell Macaulay 261:Herodotus (2018-03-22). 210:. ReadHowYouWant.com. 74:king, the son of King 66: 401:5th-century BC people 156:Thracian Spartocids 204:Herodotus (2006). 353: 352: 313:Project Gutenberg 293:Project Gutenberg 116: 90:(431–424 BC) and 54: 413: 374: 367: 360: 332: 325: 315: 296:(translation by 295: 279: 278: 258: 252: 251: 241: 232:Schmitt, Rüdiger 228: 222: 221: 201: 195: 194: 176: 146: 145: 131: 121: 111: 109: 69: 59: 49: 47: 46: 37: 421: 420: 416: 415: 414: 412: 411: 410: 381: 380: 379: 378: 305: 285: 282: 275: 260: 259: 255: 239: 230: 229: 225: 218: 203: 202: 198: 191: 178: 177: 168: 164: 138: 100: 24: 17: 12: 11: 5: 419: 417: 409: 408: 403: 398: 393: 391:Scythian kings 383: 382: 377: 376: 369: 362: 354: 351: 350: 333: 322: 321: 316: 302: 301: 281: 280: 273: 253: 223: 216: 196: 189: 165: 163: 160: 137: 134: 126:language name 99: 96: 15: 13: 10: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 418: 407: 406:History stubs 404: 402: 399: 397: 394: 392: 389: 388: 386: 375: 370: 368: 363: 361: 356: 355: 349: 347: 343: 340:article is a 339: 334: 331: 327: 320: 317: 314: 310: 309: 304: 303: 299: 294: 290: 289: 284: 283: 276: 274:9781614308294 270: 266: 265: 264:The Histories 257: 254: 249: 246:(in German). 245: 237: 233: 227: 224: 219: 217:9781442937536 213: 209: 208: 200: 197: 192: 190:9781780760605 186: 182: 175: 173: 171: 167: 161: 159: 157: 153: 152:rapprochement 148: 136:Rise to power 135: 133: 130: 125: 120: 114: 105: 104:Ancient Greek 97: 95: 93: 89: 85: 81: 77: 73: 68: 63: 58: 52: 41: 40:Ancient Greek 36: 32: 28: 22: 346:expanding it 335: 306: 300:, 1852–1915) 286: 263: 256: 247: 243: 226: 206: 199: 180: 149: 139: 101: 26: 25: 207:The History 129:*Uxtamazatā 119:Oktamasadēs 108:Ὀκταμασάδης 76:Ariapeithes 67:Octamasades 57:Oktamasadēs 45:Ὀκταμασάδης 35:*Uxtamazatā 27:Octamasadas 21:Octamasades 385:Categories 162:References 144:Uxtamazatā 102:The name ( 92:Sparadocus 113:romanized 51:romanized 234:(2003). 124:Scythian 88:Sitalces 72:Scythian 70:) was a 31:Scythian 338:history 250:: 1–31. 115::  84:Teres I 271:  214:  187:  80:Scyles 336:This 240:(PDF) 62:Latin 342:stub 269:ISBN 212:ISBN 185:ISBN 98:Name 311:at 291:at 387:: 248:63 242:. 169:^ 110:, 106:: 64:: 60:; 48:, 42:: 38:; 373:e 366:t 359:v 348:. 277:. 220:. 193:. 53:: 29:( 23:.

Index

Octamasades
Scythian
Ancient Greek
romanized
Latin
Scythian
Ariapeithes
Scyles
Teres I
Sitalces
Sparadocus
Ancient Greek
romanized
Scythian
rapprochement
Thracian Spartocids



ISBN
9781780760605
The History
ISBN
9781442937536
Schmitt, Rüdiger
"Die skythischen Personennamen bei Herodot"
The Histories
ISBN
9781614308294
The History of Herodotus, vol. 1

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.