Pontos

760 BCE-
750 BCE

Amisos founded by settlers from Miletos.

550 BCE

Amisos captured by the Persians and made part of the satrapy of Cappadocia.

315 BCE

Antigonos Monophthalmos sends his nephew Ptolemy to relieve the siege of Amisos by soldiers under Kassander.

301 BCE

Amaseia and Amisos are incorporated into the Kingdom of Pontus when Mithridates I Ktistes establishes the Pontic Kingdom. Amaseia is chosen as the capital, due to its strategic location in a defensible valley along the Iris River.

183 BCE

Mithridates V Euergetes is born in Amaseia. He later becomes a key ruler of Pontus and expands the kingdom’s influence.

70 BCE

Amaseia, Amisos, and Amastris are captured by Romans under Lucullus.

63 BCE

Following the defeat of Mithridates VI by Pompey the Great, Amastris, Amisos, and Amaseia are integrated into the Roman province of Bithynia et Pontus.

48 BCE

Julius Caesar visits the region following his victory over Pharnaces II (son of Mithridates VI) at the Battle of Zela (near modern-day Zile, close to Amaseia). He reportedly utters the famous phrase “Veni, vidi, vici” (“I came, I saw, I conquered”) after his swift victory.

48 BCE-
47 BCE

Amisos falls to Pharnakes II after a long resistance. Julius Caesar recognizes this and declares the city’s freedom.

36 BCE

Marc Antony installs the tyrant Strato in Amisos.

31 BCE

Augustus removes Strato, tyrant of Amisos.

26 BCE

The Pontic Kingdom is officially annexed to the Roman Empire. Amaseia is no longer the capital because it is reorganized into the province of Galatia.

135 CE

Arrian, a Roman governor, visits the Pontic region, including Amaseia, and documents information about Pontus in his work, “Periplus of the Euxine Sea.”