(Redirected from Mesene):'''Mesene' redirects here. For the
genus of
metalmark butterflies, see ''
Mesene (butterfly).
'Characene', also known as 'Mesene', was a kingdom within the
Parthian Empire at the head of the
Persian Gulf. Its capital was
Charax Spasinou, "The Fort of Hyspaosines". The city was an important port in the trade from
Mesopotamia to
India and provided port facilities for the great city of
Susa, further up the
Tigris River.
Characene was founded around
127 BC under Aspasine, known in Classical writings as
Hsypaosines, formerly a
satrap installed by
Antiochus IV Epiphanes. Characene existed through the break-up of the
Seleucid Empire and continued as an essentially independent kingdom under the Parthians, until it was conquered by the
Sassanians in the beginning of the
3rd century CE.
After the Parthian conquest it remained a semi-autonomous country with its own kings. It disappeared as a separate kingdom with the fall of the Parthian Empire.
Trajan, the Roman emperor, visited Charax in
116 AD, during his invasion of Parthia, and watched the ships leaving for India. He reportedly lamented the fact that he wasn't younger so that he could, like
Alexander, have gone there himself.
The kings of Characene are mainly known by their coins, consisting mainly of silver
tetradrachms with
Greek and later
Aramaic inscriptions. These coins are dated (following the
Seleucid era) providing a secure framework for the chronological placements of the kings.
Kings of Characene

Hyspaosines (209-124 BCE), founder and king of Characene.
★
Hyspaosines c. 127-124 BC
★ Apodakos c. 110/09-104/03 BC
★ Tiraios I 95/94-90/89 BC
★ Tiraios II 79/78-49/48 BC
★ Artabazos 49/48-48/47 BC
★ Attambelos I 47/46-25/24 BC
★ Theonesios I c. 19/18
★ Attambalos II c. 17/16 BC - AD 8/9
★ Abinergaos I 10/11; 22/23
★ Orabazes I c. 19
★ Attambalos III c. 37/38-44/45
★ Theonesios II c. 46/47
★ Theonesios III c. 52/53
★ Attambalos IV 54/55-64/65
★ Attambalos V 64/65-73/74
★ Orabazes II c. 73-80
★
Pakoros (II) 80-101/02
★ Attambalos VI c. 101/02-105/06
★ Theonesios IV c. 110/11-112/113
★ Attambalos VII 113/14-117
★ Meredates c. 131-150/51
★ Orabazes II c. 150/51-165
★ Abinergaios II (?) c. 165-180
★ Attambalos VIII c. 180-195
★ Maga (?) c. 195-210
★ Abinergaos III c. 210-222
Further reading
★ Schuol, Monika: Die Charakene. ''Ein mesopotamisches Königreich in hellenistisch-parthischer Zeit'' (= Oriens et occidens 1), Stuttgart 2000, ISBN 3-515-07709-X
★ Sheldon A. Nodelman, A Preliminary History of Charakene, ''Berytus'' 13 (1959/60), 83-121, XXVII f.,