Category:Tigranes the Great (subject)

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Tigranes the Great (Tigranes II; 95-55 BCE) was an Armenian King, who threatened to invade Israel at the time of the Hasmonean Queen Salome Alexandra.

Biography

Under Tigranes' leadership, Armenia became for a short time the strongest empire in the Middle East and a menace to Roman power in the region.

At its height, the Armenian Empire included the regions of Media, Assyria, Cappadocia, Cilicia, Syria, Phoenicia, and Palestine. Tigranes took the title "King of Kings" for himself and ruled as a new Nebuchadnezzar, surrounded by the deposed kings who had to serve him.

The campaigns of the Roman general Lucullus largely reduced Tigranes' power in the region. He ultimately surrendered to Pompey in 66 BCE, receiving in exchange permission to rule Armenia as an ally of Rome, until his death in 55/54 BCE.

Tigranes and the Jews

When Tigranes' army moved south to Phoenicia, the Hasmonean Queen Salome Alexandra submitted and paid tribute, but received only vague promises. After the taking of Ptolemais, Israel was next in line, facing imminent invasion, defenseless against Tigranes' army. Only the intervention of the Roman general Lucullus in Syria saved the Hasmonean State from total capitulation and forced Tigranes to withdraw.

Tigranes in ancient sources

Josephus, Jewish War

Bel I 116 -- Salome Alexandra also prevailed with Tigranes, king of Armenia, who lay with his troops about Ptolemais, and besieged Cleopatra, by agreements and presents, to go away. Accordingly, Tigranes soon arose from the siege, by reason of those domestic tumults which happened upon Lucullus's expedition into Armenia.

Josephus, Jewish Antiquities

Ant XIII 419-421 -- About this time news was brought that Tigranes, the king of Armenia, had made an irruption into Syria with five hundred thousand soldiers, and was coming against Judea. This news, as may well be supposed, terrified the queen (=Salome Alexandra) and the nation. Accordingly, they sent him many and very valuable presents, as also ambassadors, and that as he was besieging Ptolemais; for Selene the queen, the same that was also called Cleopatra, ruled then over Syria, who had persuaded the inhabitants to exclude Tigranes. So the Jewish ambassadors interceded with him, and entreated him that he would determine nothing that was severe about their queen or nation. He commended them for the respects they paid him at so great a distance, and gave them good hopes of his favor. But as soon as Ptolemais was taken, news came to Tigranes, that Lucullus, in his pursuit of Mithridates, could not light upon him, who was fled into Iberia, but was laying waste Armenia, and besieging its cities. Now when Tigranes knew this, he returned home.

Ant XIV 29 -- Pompey sent Scaurus into Syria, while he was himself in Armenia, and making war with Tigranes...

Plutarch, Life of Lucullus

Tigranes reigns, king of kings, and holds in his hands a power that has enabled him to keep the Parthians in narrow bounds, to remove Greek cities bodily into Media, to conquer Syria and Palestine, to put to death the kings of the royal line of Seleucus, and carry away their wives and daughters by violence.

Moses of Khoren (5th century writer, the father of Armenian history)

“[Tigranes] built temples, and in front of the temples he set up altars, ordering all the princes to offer sacrifices and worship. To this the men of the Barartuni family [a Jewish family according to Armenian sources] did not agree, and he cut off the tongue of one of them, called Asud, for dishonoring the images, but he did not torment [them] in any other way, for they agreed on eat [meat] from the king’s sacrifices and also pork, although they themselves did not sacrifice or worship. Therefore he deprived them of the command of the army, but he did not take away the office of aspect with the right of crowning. … Immediately thereafter [Tigranes] attacked Palestine to seek vengeance from Cleopatra [daughter] of Ptolemy for the crimes her son Dionysius against his own father. He took many captives from among the Jews and besieged the city of Ptolemais. But the queen of the Jews, Alexandra—also known as Messalina—who was the wife of Alexander (Jannaeus), son of John (Hyrcanus), son of Simon the brother of Judas Maccabaeus, and who at that time held the throne of the Jews, by giving him many presents turned him back. For he heard a report that a certain brigand called Vaykun [=Lucullus] was causing a tumult in Armenia, holding the inaccessible mountain that up to now is called Vaykunik after the name of the brigand.”

Tigranes in Scholarship

Tigranes the Great is quite a neglected figure in "biblical" and Jewish scholarship.

Tigranes in Fiction

Tigranes might be the "Nebuchadnezzar" of the Book of Judith, whose invasion threatened the independence of the Judean State and was opposed only by the courage of a devout and strong widow (Judith = Salome Alexandra).

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