Template:Short description Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox royalty Laodice I (Template:Langx, Laodíkē, meaning "justice of the people";<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> flourished 3rd century BC) was a Greek noblewoman of Anatolia who was a close relative of the early Seleucid dynasty and was the first wife of the Seleucid Greek King Antiochus II Theos.<ref name=LiviusLaodice>Laodice I article at Livius.org</ref>

Family backgroundEdit

Laodice was the daughter of Achaeus, a wealthy nobleman who owned estates in Anatolia. Her mother is unknown. Her family had power in Anatolia with strong royal connections.<ref>Grainger, A Seleukid prosopography and gazetteer p.8</ref> She had one sister, Antiochis, who mothered Attalus I of Pergamon.<ref>Smith, A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, Volume 2 p.718</ref>

Her father, Achaeus, was the second son of King Seleucus I Nicator and his first wife, Apama I.<ref>Seleucid genealogy</ref><ref>Seleucus I Nicator article at Livius.org</ref> Her name implies a strong Seleucid connection,<ref>Billows, Kings and colonists: aspects of Macedonian imperialism p.97</ref> as she was the namesake of her paternal aunt and her paternal great-grandmother of this name.

Life and marriageEdit

Her birth date is unknown,<ref name=AntiochusII>Seleukid Genealogies and Biographies - Antiochos II Template:Webarchive</ref> and little is known on her early life. Laodice I married her paternal first cousin Antiochus II Theos before 266 BC as his first wife.<ref name=AntiochusII/> She married Antiochus II before he was the heir to the Seleucid throne.<ref name=GraingerP47/>

When her paternal uncle Antiochus I Soter died in 261 BC, Antiochus II succeeded his father. Through her marriage, Laodice I became a Seleucid queen. Little is known on her relationship with Antiochus II. Laodice I bore her husband two sons: Seleucus II Callinicus and Antiochus Hierax, and three daughters: Apama, Stratonice of Cappadocia and Laodice.<ref>Biographical information on Antiochus II Theos</ref>

Divorce with Antiochus IIEdit

In 252 BC after the Second Syrian War, Antiochus II was obliged to make peace with the Egyptian Greek Pharaoh Ptolemy II Philadelphus. Antiochus made peace with the Pharaoh by divorcing Laodice and marrying the daughter of Ptolemy II, Berenice, with the understanding that any children born from their union would inherit the Seleucid throne.<ref name=Bromiley>Bromiley, International Standard Bible Encyclopedia: A-D p.144</ref>

Although she was no longer queen, Laodice was still a very powerful and political influential figure. In their divorce settlement, Antiochus gave Laodice various land grants throughout Anatolia which are known through inscriptions.<ref>Billows, Kings and colonists: aspects of Macedonian imperialism p.126</ref> Laodice I owned a large estate in the Hellespont,<ref name=GraingerP47>Grainger, A Seleukid prosopography and gazetteer p.47</ref> other properties near Cyzicus,<ref name=LiviusLaodice/> Ilion and in Caria.<ref name=GraingerP47/> In a royal record at Sardis mentions her land titles were to be kept as royal land in disposal in grants or sales.<ref>Billows, Kings and colonists: aspects of Macedonian imperialism p.p.114-5</ref>

In a clause in the divorce settlement, Laodice was allowed to sell or donate land in which she had the right to choose which attachment of a city were to be passed on to the new landlord, unless Laodice had taken care of the matter herself.<ref>Aperghis, The Seleukid royal economy: the finances and financial administration of the Seleukid empire p.102</ref> Antiochus gave her a grace period to settle matters on her land before she decided whether to hold on to the land or dispose it.<ref name=Aperghis>Aperghis,The Seleukid royal economy: the finances and financial administration of the Seleukid empire p.103</ref> She may have been given the revenue of two harvests with which to pay a nominal purchase price to set at the valuation of the land for tax purposes.<ref name=Aperghis/> When Laodice was able to make payment, the land she intended to purchase could remain part of royal land and couldn't be made as a part of an attachment to a city. The only one who could order to reallocate or rearrange land lots was the King.<ref name=Aperghis/>

When Laodice sold a land attachment, the new owner was not permitted to remove it from the city or attach it to another. As she was a former queen, as a part of a land sale she possessed everything on the land that was transferred to her during the sale. She collected revenue from annual agriculture harvests and other forms from her lands. Antiochus, on one occasion, granted Laodice a complete property tax exemption.<ref>Aperghis,The Seleukid royal economy: the finances and financial administration of the Seleukid empire p.144</ref>

Deaths of Antiochus II and his second familyEdit

During Antiochus II's marriage to Berenice, they had a son called Antiochus. Laodice lived at Ephesus.<ref name=GraingerP47/> On 28 January 246 BC, Ptolemy II died,<ref name=LiviusLaodice/> and was succeeded by Ptolemy III Euergetes. After the death of Ptolemy II, Antiochus II left his second family in Antioch and returned to Laodice. He named his first son with Laodice as his successor to the throne.<ref name=Bromiley/>

In July 246 BC, Antiochus II died (some suggest that he was poisoned by a revengeful Laodice) leaving a confusing dynastic situation. Seleucus II succeeded his father as king and his brother Antiochus Hierax was named co-ruler in Sardis. They lived with Laodice at Ephesus.<ref name=LiviusLaodice/> Laodice, either for revenge or to prevent civil war, had Berenice and her son murdered in the late summer of 246 BC.<ref name=Bromiley/>

Out of his outrage, the brother of Berenice, Ptolemy III, declared war the same year and invaded the Seleucid Empire. His suspicions about the deaths of his sister and nephew were firmly grounded and were a part of the cause of the Third Syrian War also known as the ‘Laodicean War’ or the ‘War of Laodice’.<ref name=GraingerP47/> During the war, while Seleucus was fighting Ptolemy, Laodice supported the revolt of her second son against her first son. This occurred in 244 BC which caused a civil war for the next 17 years between Seleucus II and Antiochus Hierax.<ref name=GraingerP47/> Eventually, Ptolemy captured Laodice and had her killed.<ref name=Bromiley/> This happened no earlier than 236 BC because there are two honorific inscriptions in Babylon dedicated to her dated to 247 BC and 237 BC.Template:Clarify

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