Darius II Ochus (died 404 BCE), also known as Nothus, was the eighth monarch of the Achaemenid Empire, reigning from 423 to 404 BCE as king of kings over Persia and its vast territories from the Indus Valley to the Aegean Sea.[1][2] Born as the son of Artaxerxes I and a Babylonian concubine, he adopted the throne name Darius upon seizing power from his half-brother Sogdianus (or Secydianus), whom he executed following a brief succession struggle after the murders of Xerxes II and Sogdianus.[1][2] His epithet Nothus, meaning "bastard" in Greek, derived from his non-royal maternal lineage, reflecting ancient perceptions of his legitimacy despite his effective rule.[3]Prior to his accession, Darius II had served as satrap of Hyrcania in northern Persia, a position that provided him provincial experience amid the empire's administrative challenges.[2] His reign was characterized by efforts to consolidate internal authority through the suppression of satrapal revolts, such as that led by Pissuthnes in Lydia around 415 BCE, which was quelled by Tissaphernes, and ongoing conflicts with the Cadusii in the east and unrest in Media.[3][2] Externally, he deepened Persian involvement in the Peloponnesian War between Athens and Sparta, forging alliances with Sparta in 412 BCE and deploying satraps like Tissaphernes and his son Cyrus the Younger to manage Greek coastal cities in Asia Minor, ultimately contributing to Athens' defeat at Aegospotami in 405 BCE through financial and military support.[1][3] These interventions recovered tribute arrears and reasserted Achaemenid influence in the Aegean but strained resources amid rising Egyptian discontent, where Amyrtaeus' revolt in 410 BCE gained momentum, though Egypt remained under nominal Persian control until after his death.[2]Darius II married his half-sister Parysatis, daughter of Artaxerxes I, who wielded significant influence and later favored their son Cyrus the Younger in the succession dispute following the king's death from illness in Babylon in 404 BCE.[1][2] He was succeeded by Artaxerxes II, with Cyrus launching a failed rebellion shortly thereafter, highlighting the fragile dynastic transitions typical of late Achaemenid rule.[3] Historical accounts of his era rely heavily on Greek sources like Ctesias and Xenophon, whose narratives, while detailed on foreign affairs, offer limited insight into Persian internal governance due to cultural biases and the scarcity of contemporary Achaemenid inscriptions.[2] His tomb, identified as the first at Naqsh-e Rostam near Persepolis, underscores the continuity of imperial burial traditions.[3]
Early Life and Background
Birth, Parentage, and Legitimacy
Darius II, whose birth date is not recorded in surviving historical accounts, was the son of Artaxerxes I, king of the Achaemenid Empire from 465 to 424 BCE, and a Babylonian concubine.[2] His given name was Ochos, a designation preserved in classical Greek sources such as those drawing from Ctesias, though the corresponding Old Persian form remains unattested.[3] Upon his accession to the throne, Ochos adopted the regnal name Darius, evoking the lineage of earlier Achaemenid rulers like Darius I, to bolster his royal credentials.[2]The identity of his mother varies slightly across ancient reports but is consistently described as a low-status Babylonian woman, often named Kosmartydene or Andia in fragments attributed to Ctesias and later compilers like Diodorus Siculus. Artaxerxes I had multiple sons by principal wives, including the designated heir Xerxes II, but Ochos's birth to a concubine placed him outside the primary line of succession, reflecting Achaemenid customs that prioritized children of royal or noble wives for inheritance.[3]This parentage fueled perceptions of illegitimacy, earning him the Greek epithet Nothus ("bastard" or "illegitimate"), as noted in sources like Plutarch and applied retroactively to underscore his unconventional rise.[4] Despite this, Artaxerxes I granted Ochos significant authority by appointing him satrap of Hyrcania and possibly other eastern provinces, suggesting paternal favor or strategic utility rather than formal legitimacy as heir.[2] Classical accounts, primarily from Greek historians with access to Persian court informants, uniformly depict his status as secondary, though their reliability is tempered by potential biases against non-Greek rulers and reliance on oral traditions; no contemporary Persian inscriptions contradict or elaborate on these details.[3]
Role as Satrap of Hyrcania
Ochus, who later adopted the regnal name Darius II upon his accession, was appointed satrap of Hyrcania by his father, Artaxerxes I, during the latter's lifetime, likely sometime between 465 and 424 BC.[5] This appointment included the provision of a large army under his command, which enhanced his regional authority and administrative capacity.[6] Hyrcania, encompassing territories along the southeastern shores of the Caspian Sea in northeastern Iran, served as a vital buffer against nomadic incursions from the northern steppes and contributed skilled cavalry forces to the Achaemenid military.[7]In this role, Ochus managed provincial governance, including the collection of tribute in silver, darics, and kind—such as horses and agricultural produce—which formed part of the empire's centralized taxation system outlined in earlier Achaemenid practices.[8] He maintained order among the local Hyrcanian population, known for their equestrian prowess, and coordinated defenses, leveraging the region's mountainous terrain and resources for imperial stability.[7] Classical accounts, primarily from Ctesias—a Greek physician at the Persian court—indicate that Ochus retained his satrapy even after Artaxerxes I's death in 424 BC, during the brief rule of his half-brother Sogdianus, allowing him to consolidate loyalty and resources from Hyrcania's elites and garrisons.[5] This position provided a strategic power base, as the province's military assets and geographic isolation facilitated discreet mobilization against rivals in the ensuing succession crisis.[9]While specific administrative decrees or campaigns by Ochus in Hyrcania are not detailed in surviving records, his tenure exemplified the satrapal system's emphasis on loyalty to the king, with satraps acting as semi-autonomous viceroys responsible for justice, infrastructure maintenance, and troop levies—functions that paralleled those of earlier satraps like Hystaspes in neighboring Parthia.[6] The primary evidence derives from Greek historians like Ctesias, whose Persica, preserved in excerpts by Photius, offers the most direct narrative, though modern scholars note its potential embellishments favoring dramatic intrigue over precise chronology.[5] Babylonian chronicles confirm Ochus's pre-accession activities through his attested name variants but provide scant detail on Hyrcanian specifics.[6] Overall, Ochus's satrapy honed his political acumen, enabling him to orchestrate the overthrow of Sogdianus in 423 BC with Hyrcanian support, marking a pivotal step toward imperial rule.[8]
Ascension to the Throne
Succession Crisis After Artaxerxes I
Artaxerxes I died of natural causes in the winter of 424/423 BCE after a reign of 41 or 42 years, leaving a complex familial situation that precipitated a rapid turnover in the Achaemenid throne.[10][11] He had designated his eldest legitimate son by Queen Damaspia, Xerxes II, as heir, but Artaxerxes also had several sons from concubines, including Sogdianus (also known as Secydianus) and Ochus (later Darius II), whose claims to legitimacy were weaker under Achaemenid norms favoring royal offspring.[12][13]Xerxes II ascended the throne in early 423 BCE but ruled for only 45 days before his assassination, as reported primarily by the Greek historian Ctesias, a physician at the court of Artaxerxes II whose accounts, while detailed, are often criticized for sensationalism and inconsistencies with other evidence.[12] Ctesias claims Sogdianus, collaborating with the eunuch Pharnacyas, poisoned Xerxes II during a drunken feast to seize power, though no contemporary inscriptions or Babylonian records directly corroborate the method or precise circumstances.[12] This murder highlighted vulnerabilities in the succession process, as Sogdianus, born to the concubine Alogyne, lacked the full royal endorsement that Xerxes had enjoyed.Sogdianus proclaimed himself king shortly thereafter, reigning for approximately six months and fifteen days in 423 BCE, but his usurpation failed to consolidate support among the Persian nobility and military elite, exacerbating the crisis.[12][13] Ctesias notes that Sogdianus attempted to bribe key figures and promised leniency to potential rivals, yet his illegitimate status and the patricidal implications of his actions alienated satraps and courtiers, setting the stage for further upheaval.[12] The brevity of these reigns—three kings in under seven months—underscored the fragility of Achaemenid dynastic continuity amid intrigue at the imperial court in Susa.[13]
Overthrow of Sogdianus
Following the assassination of Xerxes II by Sogdianus in early 423 BC, Sogdianus assumed the throne but faced immediate challenges to his legitimacy, as he was also born to a concubine rather than the queen Damaspia.[2] Darius, then known as Ochus and serving as satrap of Hyrcania on the southern Caspian shore, began plotting his overthrow with key supporters including the eunuch Artoxares, chiliarch Arbarios, and general Artahsharu (also called Artoxares in some accounts).[2] These alliances were corroborated by cuneiform documents from Babylonian archives, which reference individuals matching Ctesias' named partisans, such as Artahsharu, involved in administrative roles during the transition.[2]Ochus mobilized an army and advanced toward the heartland, leveraging his provincial forces and noble backing to challenge Sogdianus' tenuous rule, which lasted approximately six to seven months.[12] In a decisive maneuver at Stachres, Ochus extended an invitation to Sogdianus for a banquet, feigning recognition of his kingship to lure him into vulnerability; upon arrival, Sogdianus was seized and executed by suffocation in a pit of hot ashes, a method chosen to fulfill Ochus' vow against killing him by sword, poison, or starvation.[12] Three of Sogdianus' chief supporters—Pharnacyas, Menostanes, and Bagorazos—suffered the same fate, eliminating immediate rivals and consolidating Ochus' control.[2]With opposition neutralized, Ochus proclaimed himself king in February 423 BC, adopting the throne name Darius II (meaning "possessing goodness" in Old Persian) while Greek sources derisively called him Nothus ("bastard") due to his non-royal birth mother, the Babylonian concubine Cosmartidene.[2] Babylonian astronomical diaries and king lists align this accession precisely, noting Darius II's enthronement in the Babylonian month of Addaru (February/March 423 BC), marking the end of the brief succession crisis following Artaxerxes I's death.[2] This coup, primarily detailed by the court physician Ctesias in his Persica, reflects the Achaemenid pattern of intra-familial strife resolved through military intrigue and selective executions, though Ctesias' narrative, preserved in fragments, may emphasize dramatic elements over strict chronology.[12]
Reign (423–404 BC)
Internal Challenges and Rebellions
The most prominent internal rebellion during Darius II's reign (423–404 BC) stemmed from the satrapal discontent in western Asia Minor, initiated by Pissuthnes, satrap of Lydia. Around 415 BC, Pissuthnes revolted against central authority, leveraging his position to challenge royal control, but was defeated and removed by Tissaphernes, who employed treachery to poison him.[14] His illegitimate son, Amorges, persisted with the uprising from fortified positions in Caria, including the coastal stronghold of Iasus, employing Greek mercenaries such as Arcadians and Argives to sustain resistance.[15][14]Amorges secured external support from Athens amid the Peloponnesian War, receiving naval aid in 413 BC as Athenian forces, recovering from their Sicilian disaster, sought to exploit Persian divisions by docking ships at Iasus.[15][14] Darius II responded decisively by commissioning Tissaphernes to suppress the revolt, forging an alliance with Sparta that formalized Amorges as a mutual enemy in a 412 BC treaty.[14] In the winter of 412/411 BC, Spartan forces under Kalligeitos captured Iasus through deception—pretending to be allies before scaling the walls—and delivered Amorges as a prisoner to Tissaphernes, who likely executed him, though records are silent on the precise fate.[15][14] The episode, documented in Thucydides' accounts, underscored vulnerabilities in satrapal loyalty and the empire's reliance on Greek intermediaries for internal pacification.[15]Darius II also confronted lesser revolts in eastern provinces, including Media around 409–410 BC, which royal forces quelled without disrupting broader imperial stability.[16][17] Isolated uprisings in regions like Syria further strained resources, reflecting systemic issues of intrigue and provincial autonomy, though these were rapidly contained through military intervention and administrative purges.[16] Overall, such challenges highlighted the fragility of Achaemenid cohesion under Darius II, reliant on swift royal responses rather than structural reforms, yet none escalated to threaten the throne directly.
Administrative and Economic Policies
Darius II's administrative policies centered on reinforcing central authority over the satrapies amid recurrent challenges to imperial control. Early in his reign, he authorized the suppression of a revolt by the satrap Pissuthnes in Lydia around 422 BCE, entrusting the task to Tissaphernes, who employed Greek mercenaries to restore order and execute the rebel.[2] This action exemplified efforts to curb satrapal autonomy, a persistent issue in the Achaemenid system, though similar unrest persisted, including disturbances in Media and Egypt by 410 BCE.[2] To manage provincial governance, Darius appointed loyal figures, such as his son Cyrus the Younger as karanos (commander-in-chief) of Asia Minor in 407 BCE, supplanting Tissaphernes to streamline military and administrative oversight in western satrapies.[1]Economically, Darius prioritized tribute recovery to sustain imperial finances strained by internal conflicts and external engagements. Following Athens' incursions in Ionia after 413 BCE, he directed satraps Tissaphernes and Pharnabazus to extract overdue payments from Greek coastal cities, reclaiming significant territories and revenues in the process.[1] These measures aligned with broader Achaemenid reliance on fixed provincial contributions, though fiscal pressures manifested in Babylonia, where the Murashu archive records a surge in land mortgages during his second regnal year (ca. 422 BCE), attributed to heightened military expenditures and taxation demands.[2] Darius also subsidized Spartan naval rebuilding through Cyrus the Younger, channeling funds that facilitated the Persian recovery of tribute-paying regions via the Peloponnesian War's outcome at Aegospotami in 405 BCE.[1] No major innovations in coinage or taxation appear under his rule; instead, continuity in the daric and siglos systems supported trade and payments, with satrapal mints in Asia Minor issuing silver coinage to meet local administrative needs.[1]
Foreign Policy and Greek Involvement
Darius II's foreign policy toward the Greek world focused primarily on reasserting Achaemenid control over the Ionian Greek cities in Asia Minor, which had gained de facto autonomy following the Peace of Callias around 449 BC and subsequently aligned with Athens during the Peloponnesian War.[18] The Athenian naval raids on Persian coastal territories, including support for the rebel satrap Amorges in Caria around 412 BC, prompted Darius to intervene decisively against Athens to secure tribute payments and prevent further encroachments.[19] In 413 BC, after Athens's disastrous Sicilian expedition weakened its position, Darius instructed his satraps Tissaphernes of Lydia and Caria, and Pharnabazus of Hellespontine Phrygia, to negotiate alliances with Sparta, marking Persia's entry into the conflict on the Spartan side.[19][18]Tissaphernes initially led these efforts, forging a treaty with Spartan representatives in 412 BC that promised Persian financial and naval support—including the deployment of a Phoenician fleet—in exchange for Sparta's recognition of Persian sovereignty over the Asian Greeks.[18] However, Tissaphernes pursued a cautious strategy, paying Spartan forces irregularly and withholding full commitment to prolong the war and exhaust both Greek powers, thereby minimizing Persian military exposure while reclaiming Ionian cities like Miletus and Chios with minimal resistance.[18] Pharnabazus, operating in the northern satrapy, proved more cooperative with Sparta, providing funds and logistical aid for operations such as the Battle of Cyzicus in 410 BC, where Spartan forces under Alcibiades secured a victory that bolstered Persian influence in the Hellespont region.[19] This divided approach reflected Darius's broader aim of balancing Greek factions to restore tribute flows, estimated at around 400 talents annually from Ionia prior to Athenian interference, without risking a decisive Persian commitment that could unify the Greeks against the empire.[20]By 407 BC, as Athenian resilience persisted and Spartan naval needs intensified, Darius shifted to an aggressive pro-Spartan policy, dispatching his younger son Cyrus as kranos (supreme commander) of Asian forces to supersede Tissaphernes and coordinate directly with Sparta.[18] Cyrus arrived with royal authorization to disburse substantial gold subsidies—reportedly up to 1,000 talents over several years—to finance the construction of over 100 Spartan triremes, enabling key victories such as the Battle of Notium in 406 BC and the decisive defeat of Athens at Aegospotami in 405 BC.[21] This financial intervention proved pivotal, as Sparta's enlarged fleet blockaded Athens, leading to its surrender in 404 BC and the imposition of the Thirty Tyrants oligarchy, which aligned the city with Persian interests.[18] Darius's policy thus exploited Greek infighting to reincorporate Ionian tribute without large-scale Persian troop deployments, though it sowed seeds for future tensions, including Cyrus's later rebellion against Artaxerxes II.[20]
Religious and Cultural Policies
Darius II, as a later Achaemenid king, adhered to Zoroastrianism, the religion of the Persian ruling class, consistent with Greek accounts establishing the faith's prominence among post-Darius I monarchs.[22] No royal inscriptions from his reign (423–404 BC) survive to articulate specific doctrinal emphases, such as invocations of Ahura Mazda seen in earlier kings' texts, but the continuity of practices like fire worship and purity rituals is inferred from broader imperial evidence.[22]The empire under Darius II maintained the Achaemenid policy of pragmatic religious tolerance toward provincial cults, allowing local temples—such as those in Egypt and Mesopotamia—to operate without systematic interference, provided they aligned with imperial fiscal and political demands.[22] This approach, rooted in governance rather than ideological universalism, avoided the sporadic suppressions of "daivas" (false gods) documented under Xerxes I, with no records of such actions during Darius II's time.[23] Culturally, his administration perpetuated the syncretic Achaemenid framework, integrating Persian oversight with regional customs in art, architecture, and bureaucracy, though no innovative cultural initiatives are attested in surviving sources.[22]
Family and Personal Life
Consorts and Marriages
Darius II's chief consort was his half-sister Parysatis, daughter of his father Artaxerxes I, to whom he was married before or early in his reign as king.[24][13] This union aligned with Achaemenid practices of sibling marriage to preserve royal bloodlines and consolidate power within the family.[25] Parysatis held substantial authority, influencing court decisions and dynastic matters, as noted in accounts of harem dynamics where principal wives could dominate lesser consorts and eunuchs.[24]While Achaemenid monarchs customarily maintained multiple wives and a large number of concubines—often numbering in the hundreds for the royal household—no other formal marriages or named consorts for Darius II are attested in primary ancient sources such as Xenophon or Plutarch.[25] Ctesias records harem intrigues involving Darius II but focuses primarily on Parysatis without detailing additional wives.[26] Concubines, drawn from diverse regions including Babylon and Media, served reproductive and advisory roles but lacked the legal status of royal wives.[25]
Children and Dynastic Succession
Darius II's principal consort, Parysatis—a daughter of his half-brother Artaxerxes I—bore him four sons: the eldest Arsaces (who succeeded as Artaxerxes II Mnemon), Cyrus the Younger, Ostanes, and Oxathres.[27][24] These sons represented the core of the Achaemenid royal lineage during his reign, with ancient accounts emphasizing their roles in subsequent dynastic conflicts.[2]Prior to his accession, Darius II (then known as Ochus) had married the daughter of the noble Gobryas and fathered additional sons, though these offspring were marginalized from the throne and received limited mention in historical records.[3] Parysatis exerted significant influence over family affairs, favoring her second son Cyrus for the succession due to his military prowess and administrative capabilities in Asia Minor.[28] However, Darius II explicitly designated Arsaces as heir apparent during his final illness in 404 BC, prioritizing primogeniture amid the empire's internal fragilities.[24]Upon Darius II's death in late 404 BC, Artaxerxes II ascended without immediate familial opposition, consolidating power through swift coronation rituals at Persepolis.[2] Parysatis's advocacy for Cyrus persisted covertly, providing him resources that enabled a rebellion in 401 BC; Cyrus marched against his brother with a mercenary force, but was defeated and killed at the Battle of Cunaxa near Babylon.[28][27] Ostanes faced execution under Artaxerxes II on allegations of conspiracy, while Oxathres survived into obscurity, underscoring the precariousness of Achaemenid fraternal dynamics.[3] This succession reinforced the pattern of elder-son primacy, though maternal intrigue highlighted underlying tensions in royal legitimacy.[2]
Death and Immediate Aftermath
Final Years and Health
In the closing phase of his reign, Darius II directed Persian resources to bolster Sparta against Athens in the Peloponnesian War, culminating in the Spartan victory at Aegospotami in 405 BC, which shattered Athenian naval power. Around this time, while in Babylon, he contracted a severe illness that prompted him to summon his younger son Cyrus from his satrapy in Asia Minor back to the royal court.[28]Ancient historian Ctesias reports that Darius succumbed to this illness after thirty days, dying in Babylon in 404 BC during the nineteenth year of his rule.[5][2] No contemporary medical details survive regarding the nature of the ailment, though Ctesias' narrative, preserved via Photius, describes it as fatal without specifying symptoms or etiology; Ctesias, a Greek physician at the Achaemenid court, drew from court traditions but is noted by scholars for occasional embellishments in chronology and ages.[29] His death occurred amid rising tensions, including nascent unrest in Egypt under Amyrtaeus, though the pharaoh's revolt fully materialized post-mortem.[26] Darius was likely interred at Naqsh-e Rostam, consistent with Achaemenid royal burial practices, though direct epigraphic confirmation for his tomb remains debated among archaeologists.[30]
Succession by Artaxerxes II
Darius II died in Babylon in 404 BC after a reign marked by health decline, and his eldest legitimate son, Artaxerxes II (also known as Arsica), ascended the throne as designated by his father's explicit wish.[31][1] This designation occurred despite efforts by Darius's wife and queen mother, Parysatis—a daughter of Artaxerxes I—to promote their younger son, Cyrus the Younger, as heir; Parysatis, born to royal status ("in the purple"), wielded significant influence but could not override the king's decision.[31][32]Artaxerxes II, who had been involved in administrative roles under his father, was proclaimed King of Kings in Babylon immediately following Darius's death, securing initial loyalty from the Persian nobility and satraps without recorded violent contest at the moment of transition.[31][32] Ancient Greek historians such as Ctesias and Xenophon, drawing from Persian court accounts, note that the succession adhered to Achaemenid tradition of primogeniture among legitimate sons, though Parysatis's favoritism toward Cyrus—evident in her later alleged poisoning attempts against rivals—foreshadowed familial tensions.[31]The smooth proclamation enabled Artaxerxes to consolidate power rapidly, including rituals of enthronement that symbolized continuity of the imperial line; however, Cyrus's subsequent rebellion in 401 BC, launched from his satrapy in Asia Minor with Greek mercenary support, tested this succession within three years, highlighting underlying dynastic intrigue.[31][32] Primary sources like Xenophon's Anabasis describe Cyrus's challenge as an usurpation attempt, ultimately defeated at the Battle of Cunaxa, which affirmed Artaxerxes's legitimacy despite the queen mother's covert support for the rebel.[32]
Legacy and Historical Assessment
Achievements in Stabilization and Diplomacy
Darius II ascended to the Achaemenid throne in 423 BC following the execution of his half-brother Sogdianus, thereby resolving the immediate succession crisis that had destabilized the empire after Artaxerxes I's death.[3] His early reign emphasized internal consolidation, particularly in addressing lingering satrapal disloyalty in Asia Minor. The rebellion initiated by Pissuthnes, satrap of Lydia, around 415 BC, had continued under his son Amorges, who controlled parts of Caria and received military aid from Athens starting in 413 BC.[14] Darius II ordered satraps Tissaphernes and Pharnabazus to suppress the uprising, culminating in Amorges's capture in 412 BC by a combined Persian-Spartan force, which restored royal authority over the rebellious districts without broader provincial fragmentation.[15]In diplomacy, Darius II adeptly intervened in the Peloponnesian War (431–404 BC) to counter Athenian encroachments on Persian spheres in the Aegean. Motivated by Athens's support for Amorges, he authorized satraps to negotiate with Sparta, resulting in three treaties in 412 BC, winter 412/411 BC, and spring 411 BC. These pacts recognized Persian control over territories this or previous kings had held, committed joint opposition to Athens, and provided Sparta with funding for its navy—covering troop pay and ship maintenance in Asia Minor—while ensuring mutual defense against rebels.[33]This financial and strategic backing, channeled through satraps, enabled Sparta to overcome its naval inferiority after Athens's Sicilian disaster (413 BC), tipping the war's balance and securing a Spartan victory at Aegospotami in 405 BC. The outcome allowed Persia to reclaim tribute from Ionian Greek cities, bolstering imperial revenues and stabilizing the western frontier against Greek adventurism for the remainder of his reign (ending 404 BC).[33]
Criticisms of Weakness and Intrigue
Darius II's accession in 423 BCE followed a period of instability, including the brief reigns of Xerxes II and Sogdianus, whom Darius overthrew through a palace conspiracy involving the eunuch Bagoraz and other courtiers, highlighting reliance on intrigue rather than broad legitimacy or military strength from the outset.[34] This coup, detailed in accounts by the Greek physician Ctesias, underscored a pattern of factional maneuvering at court that undermined stable governance, as Darius, possibly born to a concubine and thus dubbed Nothus ("bastard" in Greek), faced ongoing challenges to his authority.[35] Modern historians note that such internal power struggles reflected deeper structural weaknesses in the Achaemenid system, where royal succession increasingly depended on personal alliances and assassinations rather than institutionalized processes.[36]Early in his reign, provincial revolts further exposed Darius II's limited control over satraps, who exploited the empire's vast extent and communication delays to pursue autonomy. The satrap Pissuthnes of Lydia rebelled circa 420 BCE for unclear motives, hiring Greek mercenaries under the Athenian commander Lycon to fortify key positions like Caunus.[37] Darius responded by dispatching Tissaphernes, who suppressed the uprising not through decisive force but by bribing Lycon to abandon Pissuthnes, leading to the satrap's surrender and execution around 415 BCE.[37] Pissuthnes' son Amorges extended the revolt into Ionia and Caria, allying with Athens against Sparta, but was captured in 412 BCE after Spartan-Persian collaboration under Tissaphernes and Pharnabazus.[38] These incidents, requiring concessions to Greek powers and semi-independent satraps, illustrated Darius II's reactive governance and the empire's vulnerability to local ambitions, as satraps like Tissaphernes wielded near-sovereign influence in Asia Minor.[39]Court dynamics amplified perceptions of weakness, with Darius II heavily influenced by his wife Parysatis, who reportedly orchestrated poisonings of rivals and manipulated policy through eunuchs and kin networks.[40] Ancient sources portray her as dominating the king, favoring intrigues that prioritized family vendettas over imperial cohesion, such as her role in elevating Cyrus the Younger despite primogeniture favoring Artaxerxes II.[41] Darius II's own poor health—chronic illnesses that confined him and necessitated regency-like arrangements—further eroded decisive leadership, culminating in his death in 404 BCE during preparations against a threatened Egyptian revolt, leaving the throne amid unresolved tensions.[34] Historians assess this era as emblematic of Achaemenid decline, where intrigue supplanted administrative reform, fostering satrapal fragmentation and reliance on mercenary forces that later enabled figures like Cyrus the Younger to challenge the core.[36]
Scholarly Debates on Legitimacy and Impact
Darius II's legitimacy as an Achaemenid ruler is debated primarily due to his maternal lineage and irregular accession. Born as Ochus to Artaxerxes I and the Babylonian Cosmartidene, he was dubbed Nothus ("bastard") by Greek historians like Ctesias, underscoring his non-Persian royal heritage, which contrasted with the Achaemenid preference for endogamous marriages among Persian nobility.[3] While paternity as Artaxerxes I's son is accepted in modern historiography based on Babylonian chronicles and classical accounts, scholars note he lacked primogeniture, with Xerxes II as the sole legitimate heir from a royal mother; Darius II's rise followed Xerxes II's murder after 45 days (August 424 BCE) and Sogdianus' execution amid a seven-month interregnum, likely orchestrated by Darius with his half-sister-wife Parysatis' aid.[3] This coup, absent direct royal inscriptions affirming his claim—unlike Darius I's Behistun narrative—fuels arguments that his rule undermined dynastic norms, potentially eroding internal loyalty despite his adoption of the throne name Darius to evoke legitimacy.[3]Historiographical assessments of Darius II's impact diverge between views of pragmatic stabilization and incipient decline. Proponents of efficacy credit him with quelling key revolts, including Pissuthnes' in Lydia (c. 420–415 BCE, suppressed via Tissaphernes) and Amorges' in Caria (412 BCE), alongside nominal Egyptian control evidenced by Aramaic papyri attesting Persian officials until Amyrtaeus' uprising in 404 BCE, arguing these actions forestalled fragmentation post-Artaxerxes I.[3][30] Critics, however, highlight how subsidies to Sparta from 412 BCE—totaling thousands of darics annually to prolong the Peloponnesian War—strained treasuries without decisive gains, fostering Greek mercenary proliferation that later challenged Persian authority, as seen in Cyrus the Younger's 401 BCE expedition; combined with ethnic riots in Upper Egypt (410 BCE), this is seen as accelerating satrapal autonomy and fiscal overextension, presaging the empire's 4th-century BCE vulnerabilities.[3] Overall, while Darius II preserved territorial integrity for 19 years (423–404 BCE), debates persist on whether his intrigue-laden policies reinforced or subtly corroded Achaemenid resilience.[3]