
Coin of Demetrius I Soter.
'Demetrius I' (r.
162 BC -
150 BC), surnamed '
Soter', was a ruler of the
Hellenistic Seleucid Empire. He had been sent to
Rome as a hostage during the reign of his father,
Seleucus IV Philopator. After his father's death in
175 BC,
Antiochus IV Epiphanes took advantage of Demetrius' captivity to seize the throne. Demetrius escaped from confinement and established himself on the Syrian throne (
162 BC) after overthrowing and murdering King
Antiochus V Eupator, his cousin.
Demetrius acquired his surname of ''Soter'', or Saviour, from the
Babylonians, whom he delivered from the tyranny of the Median
satrap,
Timarchus. Timarchus, who had distinguished himself by defending
Media against the emergent
Parthians, seems to have treated Demetrius' accession as an excuse to declare himself an independent king and extend his realm into Babylonia. His forces were however not enough for the legal Seleucid king: Demetrius defeated and killed Timarchus in
160 BCE, and dethroned
Ariarathes, king of
Capadoccia. The Seleucid empire was temporarily united again.
Demetrius is famous in
Jewish history for his victory over the
Maccabees.
Demetrius' downfall is attributed to Heracleides, a surviving brother of the defeated rebel Timarchus, who championed the cause of
Alexander Balas, a boy he claimed was a natural son of
Antiochus IV Epiphanes. Heracleides convinced the
Roman Senate to support the young pretender against Demetrius, who was defeated and killed in
150 BC.
''This entry incorporates material from the
1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.''