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Encyclopedia > Micipsa

Micipsa (c. - c. 118 BC) was the eldest legitimate son of Masinissa, king of Numidia. Centuries: 3rd century BC - 2nd century BC - 1st century BC Decades: 160s BC 150s BC 140s BC 130s BC 120s BC - 110s BC - 100s BC 90s BC 80s BC 70s BC 60s BC Years: 123 BC 122 BC 121 BC 120 BC 119 BC - 118 BC - 117 BC 116 BC... Masinissa, King of Numidia Masinissa or Massinissa (c. ... Numidia was an ancient African Berber kingdom and later a Roman province on the northern coast of Africa between the province of Africa (where Tunisia is now) and the province of Mauretania (which is now the western part of Algerias coastal area). ...


Early life

In 151 BC Masinissa sent Micipsa and his brother Gulussa to Carthage to demand that exiled pro-Numidian politicians be allowed to return, but they were refused entry at the city gates. As the royal party turned to depart, Hamilcar the Samnite and a group of his supporters attacked Micipsa's convoy, killing some of his attendants. This incident led to a retaliatory strike on the Carthaginian town of Oroscopa that heralded the start of the Carthaginian-Numidian War and eventually precipitated the Third Punic War. Ruins of Roman-era Carthage For other uses, see Carthage (disambiguation). ... Combatants Roman Republic Carthage Commanders Scipio Aemilianus Hasdrubal the Boetarch Strength 40,000 90,000 Casualties 17,000 62,000 The Third Punic War (149 to 146 BC) was the third and last of the Punic Wars fought between the former Phoenician colony of Carthage, and the Roman Republic. ...


Succession to the Throne

In the spring of 148 BC Masinissa died and the tripartite division of the kingdom among the elderly king's three sons Micipsa, Gulussa, and Mastarnable took place by Publius Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus, to whom Masinissa had given the authority to administer his estate. With Micipsa recieving as part of his inheritance the Numidian capital of Cirta (along with the royal palace and treasury there in), Gulussa the charge of war and Mastarnable the administration of justice. Constantine or Qustantînah is a city and wilaya in north-east Algeria, slightly inland. ...


The sons continued their father's policy and his support of Rome during its war on Carthage. Though Micipsa wavered somewhat in his support for Rome, "always promising arms and money . . . but always delaying and waiting to see what would happen" (Appian Pun. 111). In 146 B.C. when Mastarnable's illegitimate son Jugurtha was fourteen years old, Carthage was destroyed by the Romans. Shortly thereafter Galussa died and later still Mastarnable, leaving Micipsa control of the entire kingdom. During Micipsa's reign Numidian cultural and commercial progress was aided when thousands of Carthaginians fled to Numidia following the Roman destruction of Carthage.


Micipsa had two natural sons Hiempsal and Adherbal and is reported to have added his illegitimate nephew Jugurtha to his palace household. Jugurtha was treated as the king's son and received a sound military training. Micipsa continued to be a loyal ally to Rome providing military assistance when asked. In 142 BC the Roman commander Quintus Fabius Maximus Servilianus wrote to Micipsa asking for a division of war elephants to help in Rome's struggle against the Lusitanian rebel Viriathus and again in 134 BC Micipsa sent archers, slingers, and elephants to aid Scipio Aemilianus besieging Numantia in Spain, sending Jugurtha to command his units. Hiempsal, was the name of the two kings of Numidia Hiempsal I, the son of Micipsa, was assassinated by Jugurtha. ... Adherbal was a Berber king of Numidia between 118 BC and 112 BC. He shared power with Jugurtha. ... Jugurtha, (c. ... Viriathus (known as Viriato in Portuguese and Castilian) (180 BC - 139 BC) was the most important leader of the Lusitanian tribe that resisted Roman expansion into the regions of Western Iberia, where the Roman province of Lusitania would be established (in the areas comprising Portugal, south of the Douro river...


After the fall of Numantia Jugurtha returned home with a letter from Scipio addressed to his uncle; in it, the commander praised Jugurtha's exploits and congratulated Micipsa for having "a kinsman worthy of yourself, and of his grandfather Masinissa" (Sallust Iug. 9). On this recommendation the king formally adopted Jugurtha and made him co-heir with his own children.


Death

In 118 B.C. Micipsa died and Numidia, following the king's wish, was divided into three parts. A third each ruled by Micipsa's own sons, Adherbal and Hiempsal, and the king's adopted son, Jugurtha.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Jugurtha - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (384 words)
The people of Numidia were semi-nomadic, indistinguishable from the other Berbers in North Africa until the reign of Masinissa, who became a Roman ally in 206 BC, with a kingdom roughly equivalent to modern northern Algeria.
His son Micipsa succeeded him in 148 B.C. Jugurtha, Masinissa's illegitimate grandson, was very popular among the Numidians — so popular that Micipsa sent him away to Spain, but there Jugurtha made influential Roman contacts.
When Micipsa died in 118, the kingdom of Numidia was ruled by Micipsa's two sons Hiempsal (who Jugurtha had assassinated) and Adherbal, and Jugurtha.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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