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Mihrdat I of Iberia : ウィキペディア英語版 | Mihrdat I of Iberia
Mithridates I (Mihrdat I) ((グルジア語:მითრიდატე I)) was the 1st-century king of Iberia (Kartli, Georgia) whose reign is evidenced by epigraphic material. Cyril Toumanoff suggests 58–106 as the years of his reign. == Armazi inscriptions == Two inscriptions unearthed at Armazi, Georgia. One bilingual in Aramaic and Greek. The Greek inscription identifies Mithridates I as the son of the "great king" Pharasmanes (P'arsman), apparently the Pharasmanes I of Iberia of Tacitus’s ''Annals'' (In the same work Tacitus also mentions Mithridates I himself). The stone inscription in Greek speaks of Mithridates I as "the friend of the Caesars" and the king "of the Roman-loving Iberians". It also reports that the Roman emperor Vespasian fortified Armazi for the Iberian king in 75.〔Suny, Ronald Grigor (1994), ''The Making of the Georgian Nation'', p. 15. Indiana University Press, ISBN 0-253-20915-3〕 His mother was an unnamed Armenian Princess of the Artaxiad Dynasty being the daughter of the Artaxiad Armenian Monarchs Tigranes IV and his sister-wife Erato.
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