The Attalid Dynasty of Pergamon
started with Philetairos in 282 BC, roughly fifty years after the death of Alexander.
It remains difficult to imagine the wealth Alexander
had accumulated from his conquest of Asia. The rise of the Ptolemaic and Seleucid dynasties can hardly be compared to that of Lysimachos, who did not draw the best cards. The War of the Diadochi was a very intricate and complex bickering and conniving from which all parties did not profit equally. However, Lysimachos put his share of the booty to good use and his trusted treasury keeper, Philetairos, did the same giving Pergamon the jump start it needed. The starting date of the Pergamon Dynasty is much later than for the empires of Seleucos in 312 BC, and Ptolemy in 305 BC founded at the end of the War of the Diadochy.
Philetairos was a eunuch who had served under Antigonus Monophtalmos. In 302 BC he deserted him to join Lysimachos,
the king of Northwest Asia Minor.
At the death of Antigonus,
Lysimachos rewarded Philetairos for
his loyalty by putting him in charge of his treasury (inherited from Alexander) in Pergamon.
One year into his kingship, Eumenes defeated the Seleucid King Antiochus near Sardes,
which enabled him to create an independent city-state of Pergamon. Eumenes did not have children either and the throne
went to his nephew and cousin, Attalus,
who went down into history as Attalus I Soter. Attalus
ruled from 241 to 197 BC and many historians still consider him as the founder
of the Attalid Dynasty, with Pergamon as its capital.
The reign of
Attalus
I was all but peaceful.
The Seleucids had lost
power over Lysimachos' territories of Pergamon,
Bithynia, Nicomedia, and Cappadocia,
which gained their independence. Attalus expanded his territory but lost much of it to Seleucos II later on. However, he managed to save Pergamon from the
attacks of the Galatians on his northern border and to establish friendly
relations with the Romans. That’s how he got involved in the Second Macedonian
War (200-197 BC) that opposed the weakening kingdom of Macedonia to Rome, as an ally of
Pergamon.
Attalus suffered a stroke during peace negotiations in
Thebes and was brought back to
Pergamon where he died in 197 BC.
Eumenes II took over where his father left off but mingling in the affairs of the
Seleucids in
Syria did
not sit well with the Senate of
Rome.
No reason for
Eumenes to be distracted from carrying out his own large expansion program in
Pergamon,
where he built the unique Great Altar and the massive Library, second only to
that of
Alexandria.
The Romans resented the power and independence
Eumenes displayed, which in their eyes reduced their own sphere of influence in
Asia Minor. Sadly, although still in his early sixties,
Eumenes’
health began to deteriorate and he appointed his brother
Attalus
II as a co-ruler. One year later, in 159 BC,
Eumenes died. His own son was still an infant and consequently,
Attalus
II, who conveniently married his widow, became the new king. He also
adopted his brother’s young son, who was to become the future
Attalus III.
Attalus
II continued Eumenes’
building projects in Pergamon,
this time including the Palace. He also funded the construction of a new temple
to Hera Basileia between the lower Agora and the Gymnasium.
He was familiar with the political situation he
inherited. He had no real enemies and was careful to recognize the authority of
Rome.
Instead of going to war,
Attalus II
expanded his influence by spending lavish amounts of money on prestige
projects. For instance, he contributed to the construction of a splendid Stoa
in the Agora of
Athens,
at the foot of the Acropolis. This is the Stoa of
Attalus II
that was restored/ reconstructed by the
American School
of Classical Studies in the early 1950s. Another Stoa carrying his name was built in
Termessos next to the Corinthian temple.
As always, all kinds of taxes were raised to pay for these grand expenses but Attalus equally improved trade in his kingdom, building markets and safe harbors. He certainly needed reliable access to a harbor, and Attalus
attempted to subdue Side.
In the wake of this failed attempt, he added part of Pamphylia to
his kingdom, where he founded an entirely new port. He named it Attaleia, after himself, i.e., modern Antalya. Attalus
II died at the blessed age of 81 or 82 in 138 BC.
His successor was his nephew and
adopted son, Attalus III. However, the new king was not interested in his
kingship or in
Pergamon.
No wonder that he was rather unpopular among his citizens.
When he died five years later of disease, he bequeathed Pergamon
to Rome
which made it the capital of their Provincia Asia.
Although there may have been one last pretender to
the throne, a supposed illegitimate son of Eumenes
II, the Attalid Dynasty came to an abrupt end in 133 BC.
In hardly 150
years, the Attalids had built one of the greatest Hellenistic centers for culture and art,
mainly under the reigns of Eumenes
II and Attalus
II, which still intrigue us.
The end of Pergamon was all but glorious. After
being hit by a severe earthquake in 262 AD, its decline was set in motion. The
Muslims sacked what remained standing during their raid of 663 AD. More setbacks
followed after the conquests by the Byzantine Empire and around 1300 AD by the Ottoman Empire. Slowly the majestic site deteriorated to
the point it was abandoned and forgotten until the first explorers of the 18th
and the 19th centuries rediscovered Pergamon.
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