Mithridates II of Parthia
(重定向自Mithradates II)



Mithridates II (Persian:مهرداد Mehrdād [meɦrˈdɔːd]; Gift of Mithras) was king of Parthian Empire from 121 to 91 BC. He was already known as "the Great" in antiquity. He is the first Parthian ruler to call himself King of Kings on his coinage and thereby attach himself to the Achaemenids. He also referred to himself on his coinage with the Greek titles Epiphanes (God manifest) and Philellen (Friend of the Greeks). Mithridates II is counted as the greatest of the Parthian kings, under whom the empire reached its greatest extent.