Egypt has been significantly weakened by court …
Years: 225BCE - 214BCE
Egypt has been significantly weakened by court intrigue and public unrest.
The rule of the newly inaugurated Ptolemy IV Philopator begins in 221 BCE with the murder of queen-mother Berenice II.
The young king quickly falls under the absolute influence of imperial courtiers.
His ministers use their absolute power in their own self-interest, to the people's great chagrin.
Antiochus seeks to take advantage of this chaotic situation.
After an invasion in 221 BCE fails to launch, he finally begins the Fourth Syrian War in 219 BCE.
He recaptures Seleucia Pieria as well as cities in Phoenicia, among them Tyre.
Rather than promptly invading Egypt, Antiochus waits in Phoenicia for over a year, consolidating his new territories and listening to diplomatic proposals from the Ptolemaic kingdom.
Ptolemy's minister Sosibius meanwhile begins recruiting and training an army.
The threat from Seleucid Syria is sufficiently grave that, for the first time under the Ptolemaic regime, Sosibus recruits not only from the local Greek population, as Hellenistic armies generally are, but also from the native Egyptians, enrolling at least thirty-thousand natives as phalangites.
This innovation pays off, but it will eventually have dire consequences for Ptolemaic stability.
Ptolemy, after intensive drilling of the reorganized Egyptian army, engages and defeats the long-delayed Antiochus in the summer of 217 BCE in the Battle of Raphia, the largest battle since the Battle of Ipsus over eighty years earlier.
Ptolemy's victory preserves his control over Coele-Syria, and the weak king declines to advance further into Antiochus' empire, even to retake Seleucia Pieria.
The Ptolemaic kingdom will continue to decline over the following years, suffering from economic problems and rebellion.
People
- Achaeus
- Antigonus III Doson
- Antiochus III the Great
- Attalus I
- Berenice II
- Hannibal
- Ptolemy IV Philopator
- Qin Shi Huang
- Seleucus II Callinicus
- Seleucus III Ceraunus
Groups
- Egyptians
- Qi (Shandong), (Chinese) state of
- Yan, (Chinese) state of
- Carthage, Kingdom of
- Qin, (Chinese) state of
- Northern Black Polished Ware culture
- Gauls
- Roman Republic
- Zhao, (Chinese) state of
- Han, Chinese state of
- Aetolian League
- Wei (also Liang), (Chinese) state of
- Greece, Hellenistic
- Greeks, Hellenistic
- Macedon, Antigonid Kingdom of
- Egypt, Ptolemaic Kingdom of
- Pergamon (Pergamum), Kingdom of
- Chu (Chinese state)
- Seleucid Empire
- Qin Dynasty
Topics
- Classical antiquity
- Iron Age China
- Pre-Roman Iron Age of Northern Europe
- Warring States Period in China
- Qin's wars of unification
- Illyrian Wars
- Cleomenean War, or Spartan-Achaean War of 228-226 BCE
- Wei, Conquest of
- Syrian War with Pergamum
- Chu, Conquest of
- Dai, Conquest of
- Qi, Conquest of
- Social War of 229-217 BCE
- Syrian War, Fourth
- Punic War, Second (Hannibalic War)
- Macedonian War, First
- Roman Age Optimum
