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Sophytes

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Sophytes
ΣΩΦΥΤΟΥ
Ruler or Satrap
Coin of Sophytes.
Obv: Sophytes in profile with tight helmet and wreath.
Rev: Cock standing to right, with caduceus, and legend in Greek: ΣΩΦΥΤΟΥ "of Sophytes".
Reigncirca 300 BCE

Sophytes, or Saubhuti,[1] was the name of a king in Bactria or the northwestern Indian subcontinent during the time of the Alexander's invasion. Sophytes surrendered to Alexander and was allowed to retain his kingdom. Probably another Sophytes, who was satrap in the eastern territories conquered by Alexander the Great, minted his own coins in the Greek style circa 300 BCE.[2][3][4] Rapson and some others have considered them as the same person.[1][5]

Sophytes the Iranian ruler

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Sophytes is described in classical sources as a ruler in the Bactria and Punjab region between the Hydraotes and the Hyphasis in the area of the Salt Range, who submitted to Alexander and was, thereby, permitted to retain his realms.[6] He made a demonstration of four Indian dogs fighting a lion to Alexander.[6][7] Sophytes is described as ruling along the Indus during the campaigns of Alexander the Great, in the Bibliotheca of Diodorus Siculus. Curtius also records an interview between the tall and handsome Sophytes and Alexander.

"Next he undertook a campaign against the cities under the rule of Sopeithes. These are exceedingly well-governed. All the functions of this state are directed toward the acquiring of good repute, and beauty is valued there more than anything. (...) Their king Sopeithes was strikingly handsome and tall beyond the rest, being over four cubits in height. He came out of his capital city and gave over himself and his kingdom to Alexander, but received it back through the kindness of the conqueror. Sopeithes with great goodwill feasted the whole army bountifully for several days." Bibliotheca of Diodorus Siculus Book 17[8]

Sophytes is mentioned by Diodorus (XVII.91-92), Curtius (IX.1.24-35) and Arrian (VI.3).

Sophytes the satrap

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Sophytes may have succeeded Stasanor in Bactria or ruled in a neighboring area.

Possibly another Sophytes is also known from his abundant Greek coinage dated circa 300 BCE. Little is known about him and hypotheses are numerous: Sophytes may have been a Hellenistic satrap who replaced Stasanor in Bactria-Sogdiana, or may have ruled in a neighboring area;[9] he may also have been a Satrap of Arachosia.[10]

His rich and formal Greek coinage is however generally considered as Bactrian due to the distribution of the finds, and due to the coin types, of Athena with owl and eagle reverses, which are a clear continuation of the Attic coinage and the preceding anonymous Bactrian coin types derived from it.[9] The coinage of Sophytes is often dated to 305-294 BCE[11]

Sophytes may also have been the Mauryan Empire satrap of Arachosia, succeeding Sibyrtius, after Seleucus had ceded the Hellenistic territory of Arachosia to Chandragupta Maurya in the Seleucid–Mauryan war (305–303 BCE).[12]

Ethnicity

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Coin of Sophytes. Obv: Sophytes in profile with tight helmet and wreath. Rev: Cock standing to right, with caduceus, and legend in Greek: ΣΩΦΥΤΟΥ "Sophytes".

Sophytos is not a Greek name.[13] Scholars, including Sylvain Lévi, have suggested, based on Panini, that the name Sophytes may be equated with the name Saubhūti, but there is no conclusive proof of this. It is not clear if this king Sophytes is the same as the individual named Sophytes on coins discovered in the northwest of the Indian subcontinent, or whether he was a later dynast based in Bactria. E.J. Rapson thinks that they are one and the same.[7]

Sophytes has been subject to a lot of speculation, with Indian origin at one end of the spectrum and Greek at the other. Cunningham identifies him with the Indian King Fobnath of "Sangala," (a name some read as "Saka-town") while A. C. L. Carlleyle connects him with the same king's son Suveg, which is more likely in light of the identification of Fobnath as a royal title rather than a name; potentially making him a Madra of Saka/Iranian origin. Cunningham believes the Sobii and Kathaei to have been his subjects, whom he asserts were Turanians, making them of the same stock as the Saka or Indo-Scythians. Sagala was the capital of the later Indo-Greek dynasty of Menander I for several generations, and that Menander himself struck several coins with a similar reverse, suggesting that his dynasty inherited the older king's mints when he took the city for himself.

John D. Grainger however, identifies him as a Greek dynast; Frank L. Holt speculating that he was a mercenary captain who minted coins simply to meet the needs of his troops. In light of his coin type, he may have been a local official, installed (although he may have been an older official, reinstated or simply recognized) by Seleucus after he took the region.

Another Sophytes is known from the Kandahar Sophytos Inscription, who may or not have been related to this Sophytes.[10]

Alexandrian appraisal

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According to Strabo, a mining survey by Alexandrian mining engineer Gorgus of the region under the newly conquered land from Sophytes by Alexander the Great had plenty of gold and silver, implying the lack of expertise in mining technology of the Indians under Sophytes.[14]

Sources

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  • Age of the Nandas and Mauryas, Nilakantha Shastri, Motilal Banarsidass (1967)
  • Hellenism in Ancient India, Gauranga Nath Banerjee, Munshiram Manoharlal.
  • Archaeological Survey of India - Report of Tours in the Central Doab and Gorakhpur in 1874-75 and 1875-76, A. C. L. Carrleyle and Maj. General Arthur Cunningham, Calcutta: Office of the Superintendent of Government Printing.
  • Symbols: Their Migration and Universality, Count Eugene Goblet d'Alviella, Dover Publications.
  • The Greeks in Bactria and India, Sir W. W. Tarn, Ares Publishers.
  • A Seleukid Prosopography and Gazetter, John D. Grainger, Brill.
  • Thundering Zeus: The Making of Hellenistic Bactria, Frank L. Holt, University of California Press.

References

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  1. ^ a b Rapson, Edward James (1955), The Cambridge History of India, Volume 1, CUP Archive, pp. 23–, GGKEY:FP2CEFT2WJH
  2. ^ Holt, Frank Lee (1988). Alexander the Great and Bactria: The Formation of a Greek Frontier in Central Asia. Brill Archive. pp. 96–97. ISBN 9004086129.
  3. ^ Sastri, Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Nilakanta (1988). Age of the Nandas and Mauryas. Motilal Banarsidass. p. 127. ISBN 9788120804661.
  4. ^ Frye, Richard Nelson (1984). The History of Ancient Iran. C.H.Beck. p. 163. ISBN 9783406093975.
  5. ^ Sastri, Kallidaikurichi Aiyah Nilakanta (1988). Age of the Nandas and Mauryas. Motilal Banarsidass. pp. 126–127. ISBN 9788120804661.
  6. ^ a b Who's Who in the Age of Alexander the Great: Prosopography of Alexander's Empire, Waldemar Heckel John Wiley & Sons, 2008, p.267 [1]
  7. ^ a b Ancient India: From the Earliest Times to the First Century AD, E. J. Rapson Cambridge University Press, 2011, p.152 [2]
  8. ^ Bibliotheca of Diodorus Siculus Book 17 [3]
  9. ^ a b c Alexander the Great and Bactria: The Formation of a Greek Frontier in Central Asia, Frank Lee Holt, Brill Archive, 1988, p.97 [4]
  10. ^ a b Histoires grecques, Maurice Sartre, Le Seuil
  11. ^ http://www.wildwinds.com/coins/greece/baktria/kings/sophytes/ [bare URL]
  12. ^ Bernard, Paul; Pinault, Georges-Jean; Rougemont, Georges (2004). "Deux nouvelles inscriptions grecques de l'Asie centrale". Journal des Savants. 2 (1): 301 ff. doi:10.3406/jds.2004.1686.
  13. ^ The Muse at Play: Riddles and Wordplay in Greek and Latin Poetry, Jan Kwapisz, David Petrain, Mikolaj Szymanski, Walter de Gruyter, 2013, p.284-287 [5]
  14. ^ Who's Who in the Age of Alexander the Great by Waldemar Heckel ISBN 978-1-4051-1210-9

Further reading

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