Lucullus. following the Roman occupation of eastern …
Years: 71BCE - 71BCE
Lucullus. following the Roman occupation of eastern Pontic Cappadocia in the autumn of 71, sends his brother-in-law Appius Claudius to find Armenian allies and demand Mithridates from Tigranes.
Appius’ manner and speech offend Tigranes, the self-styled King of Kings, who for more than twenty years has been accustomed to groveling oriental court ceremony.
This is not just everday Roman frankness, but Claudian arrogance and appietas.
Tigranes refuses, stating he will prepare for war against the Republic.
Lucullus had perhaps sent young Appius with deliberate purpose, knowing full well that his manner was likely to be ill received at the court of the King of Kings.
He might have sent L. Fannius or L. Magius, both of whom had experience at the Pontic court, and his letter to Tigranes addressing him simply as King, rather than King of Kings, was almost certainly a deliberate insult of the more refined diplomatic sort.
Tigranes certainly regarded it as such.
Locations
People
Groups
Topics
- Classical antiquity
- Roman Republic, Crisis of the
- Mithridatic War, Third
- Roman-Armenian War of 72-66 BCE
