(Redirected from Lydians)
'Lydia' (in
Greek '') is a historic region of western
Asia Minor, congruent with
Turkey's modern provinces of
İzmir and
Manisa. Its traditional capital was the city of
Sardis (
Turkish: ''Sard''). However, at its greatest extent, the Kingdom of Lydia covered all of western Anatolia. Lydia was later the name for a
Roman province.
Coins were invented in Lydia around
660 BC.
Early history: Maeonia and Lydia

Localization of Lydia
Lydia arose as a
Neo-Hittite kingdom following the collapse of the
Hittite Empire in the twelfth century BC. Its early name was 'Maionia' ('Maeonia'):
Homer (''
Iliad'' ii. 865; v. 43, xi. 431) refers to the inhabitants of Lydia as ''Meiones'' (Μείονες). Homer describes their capital not as Sardis but as ''Hyde'' (''Iliad'' xx. 385); Hyde may have been the name of the district in which Sardis stood.
[1] Later,
Herodotus (''
Histories'' i. 7) adds that they were named after their first king, Lydos (Λυδός), who was believed to be descended from the divine couple
Attis and
Cybele. This
etiological myth served to account for the
Greek ethnic name ''Lydoi'' (Λυδοί). The
Hebrew '' (לודים) of
Jeremiah 46.9 is considered to apply to the Lydians; in Biblical times, the Lydian warriors were also famous archers. Their language,
Lydian, was an
Indo-European language related to
Hittite and a member of the
Anatolian language family. Lydian became
extinct during the
first century BC.
Some Maeones still existed in historical times inhabiting the upland interior along the
River Hermus, where a town called Maeonia existed, according to
Pliny the Elder (''Natural History'' book v:30) and
Hierocles.
==Lydia in
Greek myths==
Main articles: Omphale
Omphale was a ruler of Lydia, whom
Heracles was required to serve for a period of time. During his stay in Lydia Heracles enslaved the Itones, killed Syleus who forced passersby to hoe his vineyard, and captured the
Cercopes. Accounts speak of at least one son born to Omphale and Heracles:
Diodorus Siculus (4.31.8) and
Ovid (''Heroides'' 9.54) mention a son Lamos, while pseudo-Apollodorus (''
Bibliotheke'' 2.7.8) gives the name Agelaus, and
Pausanias (2.21.3) gives Tyrsenus son of Heracles by "the Lydian woman". All three heroic ancestors indicate a Lydian dynasty claiming descent from Heracles: Herodotus (1.7) refers to a Heraclid dynasty of kings who ruled Lydia yet were perhaps not descended from Omphale. Later chronographers who also ignored Herodotus' statement that Agron was the first to be a king and included Alcaeus, Belus, and Ninus in their list of kings of Lydia. Strabo (5.2.2) makes Atys, father of Lydus and Tyrrhenus, to be one of the descendants of Heracles and Omphale.
[2]
The gold deposits in the river Pactolus that were the source of the proverbial wealth of
Croesus (Lydia's last historical king, see below) were said to have been left there when the legendary king
Midas of Phrygia washed away the "Midas touch" in the waters of Pactolus.
Geography

Map of the Lydian empire
The boundaries of historical Lydia varied across the centuries. It was first bounded by
Mysia,
Caria, Phrygia and coastal
Ionia. Later on, the military power of
Alyattes and Croesus expanded Lydia into an empire, with its capital at Sardis, which controlled all Asia Minor west of the River Halys, except
Lycia. Lydia never again shrank back into its original dimensions. After the Persian conquest the
Maeander was regarded as its southern boundary, and under Rome, Lydia comprised the country between Mysia and Caria on the one side and Phrygia and the
Aegean on the other.
According to Herodotus, the Lydians were the first people to introduce the use of gold and silver coin, and the first to establish retail shops in permanent locations.
[3]
The name of Croesus of Lydia became synonymous with wealth. Lydia was the first country to mint
coins (circa
650 BC). Sardis was renowned as a beautiful city. Around 550 BC Croesus paid for the construction of the
temple of Artemis at Ephesus, one of the
Seven Wonders of the ancient world. Croesus was beaten by
Cyrus II of Persia in 546 BC, and the kingdom became a
satrapy.
When Herodotus (i. 7) tells that the "Meiones" (called Maeones by other writers) were named Lydians after
Lydus, the son of
Attis, in the mythical epoch which preceded the rise of the Heracleid dynasty, we may be able to identify a kernel of social history in the purely conventional guise of an
eponym descended from a god. Straightforward deconstruction reveals a social upheaval, perhaps in the early first millennium BC (perhaps even after the age of Homer) in which the cult of Attis, the consort of
Cybele, the Great Goddess of Anatolia, was introduced among the Maeones by a new dynasty.
Language
The
Lydian language was a member of the
Anatolian branch of the
Indo-European language family. The language uses many
prefixes and
particles.
[1]
Autochthonous Dynasties
Main articles: List of Kings of Lydia
Lydia was ruled by three dynasties:
'Atyads' (1300BC or earlier) - 'Heraclids' (Tylonids) (to
687 BC)
According to
Herodotus the Heraclids ruled for 22 generations during the period from 1185 BC lasting for 505 years). Alyattes was the king of Lydia in 776 BC. The last king of this dynasty was Myrsilos or Candaules.
★
Candaules - After ruling for seventeen years he was assassinated by his former friend Gyges, who succeeded him on the throne of Lydia.
'Mermnads'
★
Gyges (687-652BC or (690-657BC) - Once established on the throne, Gyges devoted himself to consolidating his kingdom and making it a military power. The capital moved from Hyde to Sardis, and name for the area becomes Lydia (previously called Maionia), under the protection of the goddess Kybebe (
Cybele), according to
Herodotus. Barbarian
Cimmerians sacked many Lydian cities during this time except for Sardis. Gyges was the son of Dascylus, who, when recalled from banishment in Cappadocia by the Lydian king Mursylos—called Candaules "the Dog-strangler" (a title of the Lydian Hermes) by the Greeks—sent his son back to Lydia instead of himself. Gyges turned to Egypt, sending his faithful Carian troops along with Ionian mercenaries to assist Psammetichus in shaking off the Assyrian yoke. Many Bible scholars believe that Gyges of Lydia was the Biblical figure of
Gog, ruler of Magog, who is mentioned in the Book of Ezekiel and the
Book of Revelation.
★
Ardys II (652-621BC)
★
Sadyattes (621-609BC) or (624-610BC) - Herodotus wrote (in Inquiries) that he fought with
Cyaxares, the descendant of Deioces, and with the
Medes, drove out the
Cimmerians from Asia, took
Smyrna, which had been founded by colonists from Colophon, and invaded
Clazomenae and
Miletus.
★
Alyattes II (609 or 619-560BC) - one of the greatest rulers of Lydia. When Cyaxares attacked Lydia, the kings of
Cilicia and
Babylon intervened and negotiated a peace in 585 BC, whereby the
Halys was established as the Medes' frontier with Lydia. Herodotus writes:
:"On the refusal of Alyattes to give up his supplicants when Cyaxares sent to demand them of him, war broke out between the Lydians and the Medes, and continued for five years, with various success. In the course of it the Medes gained many victories over the Lydians, and the Lydians also gained many victories over the Medes."
The
Battle of the Eclipse was the final battle in a fifteen-year war between Alyattes II of Lydia and Cyaxares of the Medes. It took place on May 28, 585 BC, and ended abruptly due to a total solar eclipse.
★
Croesus (560-546 BC) - the expression "rich as Croesus" came from this king. The Lydian Empire came to an end when Croesus attacked the Persian Empire of Cyrus II and was defeated in 546 BC.
First coinage

Early 6th century BC one-third stater coin
It is considered that the first stamped coins were made by a Lydian king around 600 BC. The first coin was made of
electrum, a naturally occurring
alloy of gold and silver. It was made in the 1/3 stater (''trite'') denomination, meaning that it weighed 4.76 grams. It was stamped with a lion's head, the king's symbol.
14.1 grams of electrum was one
stater (meaning "standard"). A stater was about one month's pay for a soldier. To complement the stater, fractions were made: the ''trite'' (third), the ''hekte'' (sixth), and so forth, including 1/24 of a stater, and even down to 1/48th and 1/96th of a stater. The 1/96 stater was only about 0.14 to 0.15 grams.
Persian Empire
★
546 BC the
Achaemenid king Cyrus II captured Sardis and Lydia became a his satrapy.
Hellenistic Empire
★ It remained a satrapy after Persia's conquest by the Macedonian king
Alexander III of Macedon. When Alexander's empire fell apart after his death, Lydia went to the major Asian diadoch dynasty, the
Seleucids, and when it was unable to maintain its territory in Asia Minor, Lydia fell to the
Attalid dynasty of
Pergamum. Its last king avoided the spoils and ravage of a Roman conquest war by leaving the realm by testament to the
Roman Empire.
Roman province of Asia
When the Romans entered its capital Sardis in 133 BC, Lydia, as the other western parts of the Attalid legacy, became part of the
province of Asia, a very rich
Roman province, worthy of a governor of the high rank of
proconsul.
As the whole west of Asia Minor had
Jewish colonies very early, it is not surprising that Christianity was present soon there (
Acts of the Apostles 16:14 mentions a business woman called Lydia who came from Thyatira from the province of Lydia) and spread generally in the 3rd century AD, centered on the nearby exarchate of Ephesus.
Roman province of Lydia
Under the
tetrarchy reform of Emperor
Diocletian in
296 AD, Lydia was revived as the name of a separate Roman province, much smaller than the former satrapy, with its capital at Sardis. Together with the provinces of Caria, Hellespontus, Lycia, Pamphylia, Phrygia prima and secunda, Pisidia and the Insulae (Ionian islands), it formed the
diocese (under a ''
vicarius'') of Asiana, which was part of the
praetorian prefecture of Oriens, together with the dioceses Pontiana (most of the rest of Asia Minor), Oriens proper (mainly Syria), Aegyptus and Thraciae (on the Balkans, roughly Bulgaria).
Under the Byzantine emperor Heraclius (610-641), Lydia became part of
Anatolikon, one of the original ''
themata'', and later of
Thrakesion.
Although the
Seljuk Turks conquered most of the rest of Anatolia for Islam, forming the Sultanate of Ikonion, Lydia remained part of the Byzantine Empire; and during the occupation of Constantinople in the
First Crusade it continued to be part of the Byzantine orthodox 'Greek Empire' based at
Nicaea.
Under Islamic rule
Lydia finally fell to new Turkish ''
beyliks'', which were all absorbed by the Ottoman state in 1390. The area became part of the Ottoman ''
vilayet'' (province) of
Aydin, ending up as the westernmost part of the modern republic of
Turkey.
Notes
1. See Strabo xiii.626
2. This is likely to have been a careless error rather than independent tradition, as all other accounts place Atys and Lydus and Tyrrhenus brother of Lydus among the pre-Heraclid kings of Lydia.
3. http://www.geocities.com/TimesSquare/Labyrinth/2398/bginfo/geo/anatolia.html
References
★ Goldsborough, Reid.
First Coin"
★ http://www.knaw.nl/publicaties/pdf/20021051.pdf
See also
★
List of Kings of Lydia
★
List of satraps of Lydia
★
Ludim
★
Digda