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Third Syrian War (246-241; Laodicean War)
Syrian Wars: series of conflicts between the Seleucid and Ptolemaic empires in the third and second centuries BCE; at stake was an area called Coele Syria, which is more or less identical to modern Israel, the Palestine territories, Lebanon, and southern Syria.
Course of events
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Early July 246: Antiochus II Theos dies, leaving a confused dynastic situation.
- From his first marriage, with Laodice II, he had two sons Seleucus II Callinicus (immediately recognized as king) and Antiochus Hierax (co-ruler in Sardes); they live in Ephesus
- From his second marriage, with the Ptolemaic princess Berenice Phernephorus, he had a five-year old son Antiochus; they live in Antioch
- Late summer 246: the child Antiochus is killed by partisans of Laodice
- September 246: king Ptolemy III Euergetes decides to avenge his relative: outbreak of the Third Syrian War. He captures Seleucia and Antioch, but cannot prevent that Berenice is killed by the populace
- December 246: Ptolemy proceeds to Babylon; he is still there in February 245 (Ptolemy III Chronicle; BCHP 11)
- 245: Seleucus' sister "Laodice" marries Mithridates II of Pontus; Phrygia is awarded to him as a marriage gift; Pontus supports the Seleucid empire
- Ptolemy, still in Babylon, receives tokens of subjection from eastern noblemen
- Revolt of Andragoras in Parthia
- 245, Summer: Seleucus crosses the Taurus to the south, and forces Ptolemy to retreat; Seleucus reconquers Babylonia
- Antigonus II Gonatas of Macedonia attacks the Egyptian possessions in the Aegean (battle of Andros: Egypt loses the Cyclades)
- 243: Aratus, leader of the Achaean League, supported by Ptolemy, seizes Corinth from its Macedonian garrison; the Ptolemaic possessions in the Aegean are now left alone
- Seleucus proceeds to the south, but is defeated
- 241: End of the Third Syrian War; the Ptolemies have gained the Syrian coast and have lost some of their Aegean possessions
Note
- This war is also known as the Laodicean War