Recorded: May 29, 2019
Event: Ancient Iran and the Classical World, An International Symposium
Citation: Richter, Sonja. "Seleucid Encounters with the Iranian World: Religious and Cultic Elements in the Administration and Ruling of the Seleucid East," Ancient Iran and the Classical World, An International Symposium. May 29, 2019.
by Sonja Richter (University of Duisburg-Essen)
Seleucid Encounters with the Iranian World: Religious and Cultic Elements in the Administration and Ruling of the Seleucid East
Among the successors of Alexander III the Seleukids were the only Hellenistic kingdom which had to deal intensively with local indigenous structures and traditions while establishing their imperial rule. In contrast to the Western territories, which had close contact to the Graeco-Macedonian world, the territories beyond Mesopotamia were militarily subjected by Alexander III, but the Macedonian ruler did not establish any new structures of control. Therefore, the Seleukid kings rather followed in the footsteps of the Achaimenid kings when facing the huge challenge of developing a concept of imperial rule, which accounted for the needs and demands of both the Western and the Eastern territories. In order to achieve this, the Seleukid kings relied heavily on local structures, especially in the Eastern territories where they tried to connect the encountered indigenous traditions and networks of power with Graeco-Macedonian elements to establish a concept of imperial rule, in which every part of the population was represented. Two aspects of this concept stand out: In contrast to the other Hellenistic dynasties the Seleukid kings were very late in introducing a Seleukid ruler cult. This element reveals a clear sensitivity for the Perso-Iranian world of worship, which was unfamiliar with cults for a living person. In addition, the adoption title ‘Great King’ under Antiochos III followed Seleukid ruling aspects and not Achaimenid ones. A similar trend can be found in the iconographic program of the Seleukid coins minted in the Eastern territories. On the one hand, there is a great diversity concerning the iconographic elements, especially in comparison with the coins minted in the Western territories. On the other hand, elements and images with an Iranian origin or an indigenous semantic level can be found in abundance, which were also understood and well known in the Mediterranean world. Thus, it can be surmised the Seleukid focus, especially in the Eastern territories, did not rest on the accurate adoption of every local and established tradition but on a case-by-case assessment of the practicability of each measure. The Seleukid concept of imperial rule should be understood as a combination of the adoption and transformation of proven elements with new specific Seleukid ruling practices.
About the Speaker
From 2003 till 2008, Sonja Richter studied History with a special focus on the core themes of Classical Philology and Evangelical Theology at the Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Germany. After receiving her B.A. and M.A. degrees in 2006 and 2008 respectively, she worked as an assistant teacher at the Chair of Roman History in Bochum. In 2009 she became research assistant to Professor Josef Wiesehöfer and PhD candidate at the Christian-Albrechts-Universität zu Kiel with thesis on ‘Die Seleukiden und Iran. Die seleukidische Herrschaftspolitik in den östlichen Satrapien’. Her PhD was earned in 2012 and she subsequently worked as teaching staff for special duties at the departments of Ancient History of the universities of Bochum and Siegen until 2014, when she accepted a tenured teaching position for special duties at the University of Duisburg-Essen.