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81:. While he eliminated some other rivals, by 357 BC Cersobleptes was forced to agree to a partitioning of the kingdom with Amadocus II and Berisades, who had secured Athenian support: Cersobleptes kept eastern Thrace, Amadocus II central Thrace, and Berisades western Thrace. The area under Amadocus II's control is generally identified as laying west of the river
93:
belonged to him. In 354 or 353 BC, Cersobleptes and Philip planned joint action against
Amadocus and the Athenians. When this plan failed, Cersobleptes made an alliance with the Athenians, luring them away from their arrangement with Amadocus, and attacked Amadocus by himself. Now Philip intervened,
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in the late 380s or early 370s BC may refer to him rather than to his father. Soon after the murder of Cotys I in
September 360 BC, his son and successor
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Vulpe 1976: 32; Tacheva 2006: 107; Topalov 1994: 137 supports the testimony of this source with evidence from the rulers' coin types.
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attacking and defeating
Cersobleptes in 352 BC. About this time Amadocus disappears from the sources. He was succeeded by
69:. It is unclear when Amadocus II first laid claim to the throne, and numismatic evidence for an Amadocus as a rival to
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65:, which specifies that there were two kings named Amadocus, father and son, of whom the son was a contemporary of
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210:
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P. Delev, Thrace from the
Assassination of Kotys I to Koroupedion (360-281 BCE), in Valeva et al. (eds.),
89:. It is likely that the fortified residence of a Thracian ruler on Kozi Gramadi Peak above the village of
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323: This article incorporates text from a publication now in the
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Hammond, N. G. L.; "Philip's
Actions in 347 and Early 346 B.C." in
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The
Odrysian Kingdom from the Late 5th to the Mid-4th C. B.C.,
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was faced with several opponents, including
Amadocus II and
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Tacheva 2006: 146–147 sees Cotys' rival as
Amadocus I.
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Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Biography and Mythology
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Dictionary of Greek and Roman
Biography and Mythology
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203:G. Mihailov, The Inscriptions, in: Fol et al.,
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169:Mihailov 1989: 54–55; Topalov 1994: 161–163.
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232:The Kings of Ancient Thrace. Book One,
61:(Medocus), according to a fragment of
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54:, who ruled from 360 to c. 351 BC.
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200:, v. 44 (1994), pp. 367–374.
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332:, ed. (1870). "Amadocus (2)".
246:A Companion to Ancient Thrace,
184:A Companion to Ancient Thrace,
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412:4th-century BC Greek monarchs
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365:. You can help Knowledge by
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16:4th-century BC Thracian king
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57:Amadocus II was the son of
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271:Odrysian kingdom of Thrace
131:Lexicon of the Ten Orators
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244:J. Valeva et al. (eds.),
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46:, also Amatokos) was an
361:–related article is a
205:The Rogozen Treasure,
191:The Rogozen Treasure,
422:Ancient Thrace stubs
119:Speeches and Letters
67:Philip II of Macedon
253:Studia Thracologica
207:Sofia, 1989: 46–71.
198:Classical Quarterly
186:Wiley, 2015: 48–58.
255:, Bucharest, 1976.
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307:Succeeded by
133:, s.v. "Amadokos"
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248:Wiley, 2015.
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241:Sofia, 1994.
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234:Sofia, 2006.
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230:M. Tacheva,
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193:Sofia, 1989.
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127:Harpocration
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75:Cersobleptes
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406:Categories
251:R. Vulpe,
177:References
63:Theopompus
59:Amadocus I
310:Teres III
115:Isocrates
96:Teres III
79:Berisades
50:ruler in
35:translit.
304:360–351
227:, (1867)
91:Starosel
87:Maroneia
48:Odrysian
42:Amadokos
29:Ἀμάδoκoς
20:Amadocus
327::
295:Cotys I
286:Unknown
279:Unknown
71:Cotys I
282:
225:Boston
83:Hebrus
52:Thrace
38:
357:This
284:Died:
277:Born:
102:Notes
24:Greek
363:stub
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223:,
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32:,
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394:e
387:t
380:v
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123:6
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