Sibyrtius (satrapa)
Sibyrtius (Graece Σιβύρτιος), qui saeculo IV a.C.n. exeunte floruit, Alexandri Macedonis miles, iussu huius regis anno 325 satrapa Carmaniae, mox autem Gedrosiae et eodem tempore Arachosiae meruit; duas satrapias etiam Alexandro mortuo gubernavit. Ab anno 315 a.C.n., iussu imprimis Antigoni Monophthalmi, postea Seleuci, Arachosiam retinuit; fuit amicus Megasthenis qui pro Seleuco legatus in Indiam missus est.
Fontes
recensere- Arrianus, Anabasis Alexandri 5.6.2, 6.27.1
- Arrianus, Historia post Alexandrum 1.36
- Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica 18.3.3, 19.14.6, 19.23.4, 19.27.4, 19.48.3
- Q. Curtius Rufus, Historiae 9.10.20
- Iustinus, Epitome historiarum Pompei Trogi 13.4.22
- Dexippus FGrHist 100 F 8.6
- Plutarchus, "Vita Eumenis" 19
- Polyaenus, Strategemata 4.6.15
Bibliographia
recensere- Helmut Berve, Das Alexanderreich auf prosopographischer Grundlage (Monaci: Beck, 1926) i.703, vol. 2 p. 353
- "Prosopography of Antigonos's Friends and Subordinates" in Richard A. Billows, Antigonos the One-Eyed and the Creation of the Hellenistic State (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1990) no. 106, p. 432
- F. Geyerin, "Sibyrtios (1)" in Paulys Real-Enzyklopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft edd. G. Wissowa et alii (Stuttgart, 1893-1972 ~ ~)
- L. Schober, Untersuchungen zur Geschichte Babyloniens und der Oberen Satrapien von 323-303 v. Chr. (Francofurti, 1981) passim