- Source: King of Tyre
The King of Tyre was the ruler of Tyre, the ancient Phoenician city in what is now Lebanon. The traditional list of 12 kings, with reigns dated to 990–785 BC, is derived from the lost history of Menander of Ephesus as quoted by Josephus in Against Apion I. 116–127. Josephus asserts that Menander had drawn his list from the chronicles of Tyre itself. Menander-Josephus also contains a list of 9 kings and judges, with reigns dated to 591–532 BC in Against Apion I. 154–160.
Ancient Tyrian rulers based on Hellenic mythology
Late Bronze Age rulers
Kings of the Sidonians (with Tyre as capital), 990–785 BC
The dates for the reconstruction of Menander's Tyrian king list from Abibaal through Pygmalion are established in three places by three independent sources: a Biblical synchronism (Hiram's assistance to Solomon in building the Temple, from 967 BC onwards), an Assyrian record (tribute of Baal-Eser II/Balazeros II to Shalmaneser III in 841 BC), and a Roman historian (Pompeius Trogus, who placed the founding of Carthage or Dido's flight from her brother Pygmalion in the latter's seventh year of reign, in 825 BC, 72 years before the founding of Rome).
Assyrian ascendancy: 8th and 7th centuries BC
The Neo-Assyrian Empire established its control over the area and ruled through vassals who are named in Assyrian records.
Post-Assyrian period
Menander's Tyrian king list also described the period from Ithobaal III through Hiram III. Tyre regained independence with Assyria's demise, although Egypt controlled Tyre during some of the time afterwards. Eventually, Tyre fell under the control of the Neo-Babylonian Empire.
= Shoftim of Tyre
=In the 560s the monarchy was overthrown, and an oligarchic government established, headed by "judges" or shoftim (cf. Carthage). The monarchy was restored with the ascension of Hiram III to the throne. Josephus mentions these judges in his treatise Against Apion (Book I, §21), and which last judge (Hiram III) is said to have been contemporary with Cyrus the Great. According to Josephus, Hiram's reign extended to the fourteenth year of Cyrus', ascension to power in Babylon. Cyrus took control of Babylon on October 29, 539, therefore Hiram III's rule spanned from 551 to 532 BC.
Under Persian control 539–411 BC
Mattan IV fl. c. 490–480
Boulomenus fl. c. 450
Abdemon c.420–411 BC. He ruled Salamis, in Cyprus.
Under control of Cypriot Salamis 411–374 BC
Evagoras of Salamis, Cyprus. He united Cyprus under his rule and achieved independence from the Persian Empire.
Under Persian control 374–332 BC
Eugoras fl. 340s
Azemilcus c.340–332 BC. He was king during the siege by Alexander the Great.
Under the Greeks and Romans
After Alexander the Great conquered Tyre in 332 BC, the city alternated between Seleucid (Syrian Greek) and Ptolemaic (Egyptian Greek) rule. Phoenicia came under the rule of the Roman Republic in the 1st century BC.
Marion (c. 42 BC) was the Roman tyrant of Tyre.
See also
King of Byblos
King of Sidon
Hiram I, for a discussion of the date of Carthage's foundation
Belus of Tyre, a legendary king of Tyre in Vergil's Aeneid
Pygmalion of Tyre, for inscriptional evidence regarding Pygmalion and Baal-Eser II
Dido of Carthage
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Kerub Yehezkiel di Taman Eden
- Willelmus Tyrensis
- Baudouin IV dari Yerusalem
- Evagoras I
- Setan
- Pigmalion dari Tirus
- Malaikat jatuh
- Kerajaan Yerusalem
- William Shakespeare
- Aristander
- King of Tyre
- Hiram I
- Tyre, Lebanon
- Pygmalion of Tyre
- Siege of Tyre (586–573 BC)
- Siege of Tyre (332 BC)
- 730s BC
- 8th century BC
- Apollonius of Tyre
- Tyre District