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In the third century BC, the Attalid dynasts of Pergamon in north-western Asia Minor were relatively minor players in Hellenistic great-power politics. This all changed in 188 BC, when, under the terms of the treaty of Apameia, the Attalids were granted the greater share of the former Seleukid territories in western and inner Anatolia. At a stroke, the Attalids were elevated to the status of one of the major powers of the eastern Mediterranean; but this new-found prominence came at a price. The vast expanse of Attalid Asia Minor had been won not by conquest, but through a pragmatic and humiliating grant by Roman commissioners. As a result, the ideological and bureaucratic structures through which the second-century Attalid rulers administered their kingdom differed sharply from those of the other major Hellenistic dynasties.
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Attalid Asia Minor Money International Relations And The State
2012, Oxford University Press, USA, Oxford University Press
in English
0199656118 9780199656110
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- Created October 14, 2016
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| July 23, 2025 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
| September 16, 2024 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
| February 11, 2023 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
| November 12, 2020 | Edited by MARC Bot | import existing book |
| October 14, 2016 | Created by Mek | Added new book. |

