''For the kingdom, please see
Kingdom of Sophene.''
'Sophene' ( - ''Tsopk'') was a province of the
Armenian Kingdom and of the
Roman Empire, located in the south-west of the kingdom. It currently lies in the in modern-day southeastern
Turkey.
[1]
According to
Anania Shirakatsi's ''Ashkharatsuyts'' ("World Atlas," 7th century), Tsopk was the 2nd among the 15 provinces of
Greater Armenia. It consisted of 8 cantons (''gavars''): Khordzyan, Hashtyank, Paghnatun, Balahovit, Tsopk (Shahunyats), Andzit, Degiq, and Gavreq (Goreq).
[2]
Tsopk was part of the kingdom of
Urartu in the 8th-7th cc BC. After unifying the region with his kingdom in the early 700s BC, king
Argishtis I of Urartu resettled many of its inhabitants to his newly built city of
Erebuni (modern day Armenian capital
Yerevan). Around 600 BC, Tsopk became part of the newly emerged ancient
Armenian Kingdom of
Orontids.
After
Alexander the Great's campaigns in 330s BC and the subsequent collapse of the
Achaemenid Empire, Tsopk remained part of the newly independent kingdom of Greater Armenia. In the early 200s BC, at the instigation of the Seleucid Empire, which was trying to weaken the Armenian kingdom, Sophene, split from Greater Armenia, forming the
Kingdom of Sophene. The kingdom was ruled by a branch of the Armenian royal dynasty of
Orontids. Tsopk later split from the Tsopk-Commagene kingdom as well, forming an independent kingdom.
Commagene was part of Sophene at this time.
Around 200 BC, in his attempt to finally subjugate Armenia, Seleucian king Antiochus III conquered both Greater Armenia and
Tsopk, installing Armenian generals
Artaxias I and
Zariadres as governors-strategoses respectively in each kingdom. Following Antiochus' defeat by Romans at the battle of Magnesia in 190 BC, both Zareh and Artashes declared themselves independent kings. Zareh and his descendants ruled the kingdom of Tsopk until it was reunified with Greater Armenia by
Tigranes the Great in the 80s BC.

Roman province of ''Sophene'', in the year
120
Pompey gave Sophene to
Tigranes, after defeating his father
Tigranes the Great.
[3]
Sophene later become part of the Roman Empire, and was made into a
province of the
Roman Empire. The capital was
Amida (modern
Diyarbakır). Around
54, the province was ruled by Gaius Julius Sohaemus.
[4]
In 530, Sophene was included into the province of Armenia.
[5]
See also
★
Kingdom of Sophene
References
1. The History of Rome By Theodor Mommsen, William Purdie Dickson
2. Anania Shirakatsi, Geography
3. Richardson, Peter, ''Univ of South Carolina Press'', 1996, p. 96
4. Swain, Simon, ''Hellenism and Empire: Language, Classicism, and Power in the Greek World, Ad 50-250'', Oxford University Press, 1996, p. 304.
5. Joshua, ''The Chronicle of Pseudo-Joshua the Stylite'', Liverpool University Press, 2001, p. 54