Apame (daughter of Spitamenesa)


Apame, Apame I, (4th century BC) - a Siddhartha princess, daughter of the Spitamenes satrap, wife of Seleucus I with whom she reigned as one of the most powerful Hellenistic dynasties of the East - the Seleucids.

In 324, p.n.e. She married a Macedonian general Alexander III of Seleucus at a ceremony in Suez. At the same event, many of the commanders married the Iranian princesses, pursuing the political intent of Alexander the Great. He sought to make the Iranian aristocracy an equal pillar of power in the created empire, similarly to the Macedonians. These actions were not well received by most of his generals. Mass marriages were meant to strengthen mutual relations because, in the opinion of Alexander III, power in such a large empire is impossible without the support of local Iranian elites. After the death of the conqueror, Seleucus was one of the few who did not dismiss his wife, continuing his policy, thereby gaining the favor of indigenous peoples. Several cities have been named in her honor, among others. Apamea.

Apame with Seleukos I had three children, daughter: Apame; Two sons: Antiochus I, Achajos the Elder.

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