Seleucus II Callinicus
Seleucus II Callinicus (c. 265–225 BC) was a king of the Seleucid Empire who reigned from 246 to 225 BC as the successor to his father, Antiochus II Theos, and his first wife, Laodice I.[1][2]
His epithet Callinicus, meaning "Gloriously Victorious," belied a rule plagued by external invasions and internal divisions, beginning with the murder of his half-brother and stepmother by his mother's partisans, which ignited the Third Syrian War (246–241 BC) against Ptolemy III Euergetes of Egypt.[1][2]
Defeated decisively, Seleucus lost swathes of Syria, Mesopotamia, and Asia Minor to Ptolemaic forces, though he retained the imperial core after Ptolemy's withdrawal.[1][2]
A subsequent civil war with his brother Antiochus Hierax further fragmented the empire, ceding western Asia Minor west of the Taurus Mountains and enabling local powers like Attalid Pergamon to expand.[1][2]
In the east, revolts in Parthia and Bactria eroded control, yet Seleucus repelled Parni nomads in Khorasan and attempted restorations, dying ultimately from injuries sustained in a fall from his horse.[1][2]
He was the first Seleucid monarch depicted bearded on coinage, married his niece Laodice II, and fathered future kings Seleucus III Soter and Antiochus III the Great.[1][2]