Eucratides, either a general of Demetrius or …

Years: 167BCE - 167BCE

Eucratides, either a general of Demetrius or an ally of the Seleucids, manages to overthrow the Euthydemid dynasty and establish his own rule around 170 BCE, probably dethroning Antimachus I and Antimachus II.

The Indian branch of the Euthydemids try to strike back.

Demetrius (very likely Demetrius II), king of Bactria, the son and successor of Euthydemus, who ruled, according to some scholars, from about 190 to about 167 BCE, is said to have returned to Bactria with sixty thousand men to oust the usurper, but he apparently is defeated and killed in the encounter in 167.

Eucratides now rules Bactria as military governor, but resistance continues.

The slight historical evidence for the reign of Demetrius s open to varying interpretations.

Demetrius had earlier made such extensive conquests in northern India that for a brief time he virtually reestablished there the great Mauryan Empire that had collapsed about 184.

Other scholars, however, contend that it was a younger Demetrius (likewise a Bactrian king but not directly related to the son of Euthydemus) who made conquests in India, of a less extensive kind, and lost his kingdom to Eucratides after reigning from about 180 to 165.

The fact that one of these two men was the first to strike coins with a bilingual inscription in Greek and Prakrit suggests that he pursued a policy of treating the Indian peoples and the Bactrian Greeks as equals.

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