Deniyos Archonter

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Deniyos Archonter
Deniyos.PNG
Deva-Hellene Queen
De-facto dictator110 - 142
PredecessorPosition established
SuccessorLabdakos
Born74 CE
Mansuriyyah
Died142 CE
Parilla
ReligionHellene-Buddhism

Deniyos Archonter (74 - 142 CE), or Deniyos the Archon, was a Symmerian noble, strategos (general), and usurper who overthrew the Zelusian Dynasty of the Symmerian Empire to establish the Boulekratos, or "council rule". Although this officially transformed the empire from a hereditary monarchy to an oligarchic republic, in reality Deniyos ruled as a dictator while styling himself as a mere overseer. His detractors labeled him Eupatridae kréas, "nobility butcher", for his purges of Symmerian royalty and nobles.

Much of Deniyos' early life is unknown. He was born in Mansuriyyah in 74 to Pinder, who was recorded as serving in the Borean War as the commander of a cavalry taxis (brigade). Deniyos was a Polyhaemates, allegedly of Seyhad blood, Deniyos was allegedly related to Kephissa of the Deva-Hellene Kingdom of Arosiananda, though it is uncertain whether this is true or just an invented history. Deniyos became a hetairoi, a companion to the basileus (king) under Aneristos in the final years of his reign. When Aneristos died and was succeeded by Nikoteles, Deniyos was appointed as the Archon of Symmerian Mansuriyyah. Like many Syaran nobles of the time, he was a practitioner of Symmerian Buddhism.

Nikoteles' reign was marked by extravagant spending that demanded excessive taxation and tribute that quickly drained the Symmerian treasury, sparking rebellious sentiment across the Empire as he demanded increasingly more revenue to support his spending habits. Narrowly averting a rebellion among the Sahrat al-kabir, Deniyos was among the Archons who pleaded with Nikoteles to reign in the expenditures of the empire, which he refused to do. In response, Deniyos and two other archons, Hyrieos of Ruvelka and Evelthon of Boreas, started the Archon Rebellion. Deniyos mobilized the tribes of Manrusi and mercenaries from the Hayren Kingdoms and the Hannashka Empire to join the effort. He crossed the Matra Mountains in 109 to join Hyrieos and Evelthon in Syara, but both were defeated and killed by Nikoteles. Deniyos camped near Dateva, faced with the prospect of retreating back to Mansuriyyah and attempting to negotiate terms or continuing the rebellion alone. In 110 he marched north into Zemplen and met Nikoteles near modern-day Sopron. Despite being outnumbered 2-to-1, Deniyos triumphed, forcing Nikoteles to withdraw to Parilla.

Deniyos offered to negotiate, and met Nikoteles in Parilla. Upon their meeting Deniyos promptly killed him, and slaughtered the rest of the Zelusian family members present in the capitol. What survivors managed to escape Syara fled to Boreas, seeking refuge with friendly tribes. Having secured effective control of the Empire, Deniyos proclaimed the abolishment of the monarchy and the formation of the Boulekratos, in which the empire would be governed by a council composed of representatives from the various provinces of the Empire. Deniyos convened the first council in the summer of 111, resulting in the passage of a number of laws and edicts dictating fiscal and domestic policy. Despite these reforms, Deniyos continued to wield more or less complete power over the Empire; subsequent council proceedings typically just produced a rubber-stamp of Deniyos' decrees.

Deniyos faced opposition to his rule from Symmerian nobles, resulting in multiple purges and confiscation of estates. Domestically Deniyos toured the Realm and imposed numerous reforms to the political makeup of the provinces. Most of these lacked a coherent philosophical or ideological consistency, and instead were pragmatic responses to local developments. Many of these reforms were based on his own conceptions of rule and governance and did not last long after his death. The nature of Deniyos' reign was at times difficult to distinguish from its monarchist predecessors; contemporary commentary from the Acrean Empire indicates the Acreans had not recognized a change in government or administration within Symmeria.

Deniyos attempted to make peace with Symmeria's neighbors but in 131 war broke out with the Guan Dynasty, who invaded Symmerian Shirvaniya. Deniyos defeated multiple Guan incursions, but struggled to maintain control over the Empire's holdings in eastern Shirvaniya which frequently rebelled and were in turn supported by the Guan. After a seven year conflict a peace treaty was negotiated between the two powers, setting the stage for decades of Guan-Symmerian conflict. Exhausted by the war, Deniyos' health faded shortly after peace was established and he died in 142. Power over the empire was passed to his son, Labdakos. The Boulekratos did not last long after his death; already weakened by fighting and a growing instability in the Empire's politics, Labdakos was overthrown and killed by Thrasyllus, who restored the Zelusians to power.

Deniyos' reign has been subject to much study and discussion. While some scholars hold that Deniyos represented a fundamental change in the path of the Symmerian Empire, the majority of historians hold that his power grab was just another form of the autocratic mannerism of the Empire. While consider a capable general, his administration left little mark; most of his reforms were revoked or simply ignored after his death.