soldiers too were disinclined to enter on the hopeless
Italian expedition. Mithradates had constantly
been surrounded by suspicion and treason; he had not
the gift of calling forth affection and fidelity among
those around him. As in earlier years he had
compelled his distinguished general Archelaus to seek
protection in the Roman camp; as during the campaigns
of Lucullus his most trusted officers Diodes, Phoenix,
and even the most notable of the Roman emigrants had
passed over to the enemy; so now, when his star grew
pale and the old, infirm, embittered sultan was accessible
to no one else save his eunuchs, desertion followed
still more rapidly on desertion. Castor, the
commandant of the fortress Phanagoria (on the Asiatic
coast opposite Kertch), first raised the standard
of revolt; he proclaimed the freedom of the town and
delivered the sons of Mithradates that were in the
fortress into the hands of the Romans. While
the insurrection spread among the Bosporan towns,
and Chersonesus (not far from Sebastopol), Theudosia
(Kaffa), and others joined the Phanagorites, the king
allowed his suspicion and his cruelty to have free
course. On the information of despicable eunuchs
his most confidential adherents were nailed to the
cross; the king’s own sons were the least sure
of their lives. The son who was his father’s
favourite and was probably destined by him as his
successor, Pharnaces, took his resolution and headed
the insurgents. The servants whom Mithradates
sent to arrest him, and the troops despatched against
him, passed over to his side; the corps of Italian
deserters, perhaps the most efficient among the divisions
of Mithradates’ army, and for that very reason
the least inclined to share in the romantic—and
for the deserters peculiarly hazardous—expedition
against Italy, declared itself en masse for the prince;
the other divisions of the army and the fleet followed
the example thus set.
Death of Mithadates
After the country and the army had abandoned the king,
the capital Panticapaeum at length opened its gates
to the insurgents and delivered over to them the old
king enclosed in his palace. From the high wall
of his castle the latter besought his son at least
to grant him life and not imbrue his hands in his father’s
blood; but the request came ill from the lips of a
man whose own hands were stained with the blood of
his mother and with the recently-shed blood of his
innocent son Xiphares; and in heartless severity and
inhumanity Pharnaces even outstripped his father.
Seeing therefore he had now to die, the sultan resolved
at least to die as he had lived; his wives, his concubines
and his daughters, including the youthful brides of
the kings of Egypt and Cyprus, had all to suffer the
bitterness of death and drain the poisoned cup, before
he too took it, and then, when the draught did not
take effect quickly enough, presented his neck for
the fatal stroke to a Celtic mercenary Betuitus.
So died in 691 Mithradates Eupator, in the sixty-eighth
year of his life and the fifty-seventh of his reign,
twenty-six years after he had for the first time taken
the field against the Romans. The dead body,
which king Pharnaces sent as a voucher of his merits
and of his loyalty to Pompeius, was by order of the
latter laid in the royal sepulchre of Sinope.