Ubouzanes

1st century ruler of the Indo-Parthian Kingdom of Arachosia
Coin of the Indian-Parthian king Ubouzanes

Ubouzanes (Greek: ΥΒΟΥΖΑΝΗϹ Ubouzanēs (epigraphic)) was a ruler of the remnants of the Indo-Parthian Kingdom in Arachosia in the first century CE. He was the son of Orthagnes.[1] He was unknown until the late 20th century when a hoard of coins was found in Jammu. Joe Cribb first analyzed them in 1985, discovering some belonged to a new ruler. Cribb placed him between Orthagnes and Pacores[2]

References

  • v
  • t
  • e
Rulers of the Indo-Parthian Kingdom (19–226)
  • Gondophares (19–46)
  • Sarpedones (19–20)
  • Abdagases I (46–60)
  • Gadana (46–55)
  • Sases (mid-1st-century)
  • Ubouzanes (late 1st-century)
  • Pacores (100-135)
  • Sanabares (135-160)
  • Pahares I (Turan) (160-230)
  • Sanabares II (Sakastan) (160-175 CE)
  • Farn-Sasan (Sakastan) (210-226)
  1. ^ Christine Fröhlich. "Indo-Parthian Dynasty." Encyclopædia Iranica.
  2. ^ Josef Wiesehöfer (1998). Arsacid Empire--sources and Documentation. Franz Steiner Verlag. pp. 402–. ISBN 978-3-515-07331-8.