Antiochus VIII Grypus is a popular king…
116 BCE
Antiochus VIII Grypus is a popular king despite political shortcomings.
His ugly, lazy appearance on coins (common among the last Seleucids), together with stories of his lavish banquets, will lead posterity to believe his dynasty was degenerated and decadent.
This is, however a conscious image, an invocation of the Hellenistic idea Tryphe—meaning good life, which the last Seleucids strive to be associated with, as opposed to the exhausting civil wars and feuds which trouble their reigns in reality.
A story of his luxurious parties claims he sent food home with guests who attended banquets, complete with a camel as beast of burden, as well as a with attendant to carry the guest himself.
This should certainly have caused some strain on the already depleted treasury.
In fact, Grypus has reorganized the Seleucid state and for the past several years has provided stability and financial recovery.
This ends in 116 BCE, when the late Cleopatra Thea's other son, Antiochus IX Cyzicenus, returns to Syria to claim the throne and civil war breaks out again, resulting in a further breakup of the already significantly reduced kingdom.