Olympias II of Epirus

Ancient Greek queen regnant
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroAncient Greek queen regnant
PlacesGreece
isQueen
Work fieldRoyals
Gender
Female
BirthEpirus
Family
Mother:Antigone
Father:Pyrrhus
Siblings:Alexander II of Epirus Ptolemy Helenus
Spouse:Alexander II of Epirus
Children:Ptolemy of Epirus Pyrrhus II of Epirus Phthia of Macedon
The details

Biography

Olympias (in Greek Ὀλυμπιάς, pronounced [olympiás]; lived 3rd century BC) was daughter of Pyrrhus, king of Epirus from his first wife Antigone. She was the wife of her own paternal half-brother Alexander II. After his death she assumed the regency of the kingdom on behalf of her two sons, Pyrrhus II and Ptolemy; and in order to strengthen herself against the Aetolian League she gave before 239 BC her daughter Phthia in marriage to Demetrius II, king of Macedonia. By this alliance she secured herself in the possession of the sovereignty, which she continued to administer till her sons were grown up to manhood, when she resigned it into the hands of Pyrrhus II. But the deaths of that prince and his brother Ptolemy followed in quick succession, and Olympias herself died of grief for her double loss. Such is Justin's statement: according to another account Olympias had poisoned a Leucadian damsel named Tigris, to whom her son Pyrrhus was attached, and was herself poisoned by him in revenge.

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