at the opposite side of the peninsula on the straits
leading from the Black Sea to the Sea of Azov, governed
since the year 457 by hereditary burgomasters, afterwards
called kings of the Bosporus, the Archaeanactidae,
Spartocidae, and Paerisadae. The culture of
corn and the fisheries of the Sea of Azov had rapidly
raised the city to prosperity. Its territory
still in the time of Mithradates embraced the lesser
eastern division of the Crimea including the town
of Theodosia, and on the opposite Asiatic continent
the town of Phanagoria and the district of Sindica.
In better times the lords of Panticapaeum had by
land ruled the peoples on the east coast of the Sea
of Azov and the valley of the Kuban, and had commanded
the Black Sea with their fleet; but Panticapaeum was
no longer what it had been. Nowhere was the
sad decline of the Hellenic nation felt more deeply
than at these distant outposts. Athens in its
good times had been the only Greek state which fulfilled
there the duties of a leading power—duties
which certainly were specially brought home to the
Athenians by their need of Pontic grain. After
the downfall of the Attic maritime power these regions
were, on the whole, left to themselves. The
Greek land-powers never got so far as to intervene
seriously there, although Philip the father of Alexander
and Lysimachus sometimes attempted it; and the Romans,
on whom with the conquest of Macedonia and Asia Minor
devolved the political obligation of becoming the
strong protectors of Greek civilization at the point
where it needed such protection, utterly neglected
the summons of interest as well as of honour.
The fall of Sinope, the decline of Rhodes, completed
the isolation of the Hellenes on the northern shore
of the Black Sea. A vivid picture of their position
with reference to the roving barbarians is given to
us by an inscription of Olbia (near Oczakow not far
from the mouth of the Dnieper), which apparently may
be placed not long before the time of Mithradates.
The citizens had not only to send annual tribute to
the court-camp of the barbarian king, but also to
make him a gift when he encamped before the town or
even simply passed by, and in a similar way to buy
off minor chieftains and in fact sometimes the whole
horde with presents; and it fared ill with them if
the gift appeared too small. The treasury of
the town was bankrupt and they had to pledge the temple-jewels.
Meanwhile the savage tribes were thronging without
in front of the gates; the territory was laid waste,
the field-labourers were dragged away en masse, and,
what was worst of all, the weaker of their barbarian
neighbours, the Scythians, sought, in order to shelter
themselves from the pressure of the more savage Celts,
to obtain possession of the walled town, so that numerous
citizens were leaving it and the inhabitants already
contemplated its entire surrender.
Mithradates Master of the Bosphoran Kingdom