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| - The War between Armenia and Iberia (AD 51) is known chiefly through its description in Tacitus' Annals. The war took place as a delicate balance of power between the Roman and Parthian Empires was in place in the Caucasus. Rome was then ruled by Claudius, Parthia by Vologases I. Two brothers then ruled the Caucasian kingdoms, Pharasmanes I in Iberia, Mithridates in Armenia. They were both dependent on Roman support, which had encouraged the Iberian conquest of Armenia (then a Parthian dependency) in 35 AD and subsequent coronation of Mithridates. However, 15 years later, trust between the brothers had deteriorated, which Tacitus blames on the intrigues of Pharasmanes' son Rhadamistus.
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abstract
| - The War between Armenia and Iberia (AD 51) is known chiefly through its description in Tacitus' Annals. The war took place as a delicate balance of power between the Roman and Parthian Empires was in place in the Caucasus. Rome was then ruled by Claudius, Parthia by Vologases I. Two brothers then ruled the Caucasian kingdoms, Pharasmanes I in Iberia, Mithridates in Armenia. They were both dependent on Roman support, which had encouraged the Iberian conquest of Armenia (then a Parthian dependency) in 35 AD and subsequent coronation of Mithridates. However, 15 years later, trust between the brothers had deteriorated, which Tacitus blames on the intrigues of Pharasmanes' son Rhadamistus. Fearing usurpation by Rhadamistus, his father convinced him to make war upon his uncle and claim the Armenian throne for himself. The Iberians invaded with a large army and forced Mithridates to retreat into the fortress of Gorneas (Garni), which was garrisoned by the Romans under the command of Caelius Pollio, a prefect, and Casperius, a centurion. Rhadamistus was unable to take the fortress by assault or by siege. Pollio, swayed by bribery from Rhadamistus, induced the Roman soldiers to threaten the capitulation of the garrison. Under this threat, Mithridates left the fortress in order to make peace with Rhadamistus. Rhadamistus then executed Mithridates and his sons, despite a promise of non-violence, and became King of Armenia. Of this usurpation, Tacitus wrote "Rhadamistus might retain his ill-gotten gains, as long as he was hated and infamous; for this was more to Rome's interest than for him to have succeeded with glory". However, faced with this upset of the regional balance and fearing that after Pharasmane's death Iberia and Armenia would unite as a single powerful kingdom in the hands of Rhadamistus, the Parthians reacted by invading Armenia in 53 AD. After 2 years of war, the Armenian nobility revolted and replaced Rhadamistus with the Parthian prince Tiridates. This was unacceptable to Rome, and started the Roman–Parthian War of 58–63.
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