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Porus
For the mythological figures, see Porus (Greek mythology) and Porus (Roman mythology).
Porus, the Greek version of the Indian names Puru or Purushottama, was the ruler of a Kingdom that was located between what is now known as the Jhelum and the Chenab rivers (in Greek sources called Hydaspes and Acesines) in the Punjab. Its capital may have been around what is currently the city of Lahore [1].
Unlike his neighbour, Ambhi (in Greek: Omphius), the King of Taxila, Porus resisted Alexander the Great.
Puru fought the battle of the Hydaspes River with Alexander in 326 BC. After he was defeated by Alexander, Alexander reportedly asked him how he wished to be treated. ‘Like a king,’ Porus replied, ‘Everything is contained in the words “like a king”.‘ (Πάντα εν τω βασιλικώς ένεστι.) This answer so appealed to Alexander that he restored the captive to his realms, and Porus became a vassal.
Porus was said to be "5 cubits tall", either the implausible 7½ ft (2.3 m) assuming an 18-inch cubit, or the more likely 6 ft (1.8 m) if a 14-inch Macedonian cubit was meant.
Porus - Death
Porus is supposed to have held the position of a Macedonian subordinate ruler until he was assassinated, sometime between 321 and 315 BC, by the Thracian Eudamus' agents after the death of Alexander (Diodorus Siculus .
After his assassination, his son Malayketu ascended the throne with the help of Eudamus. However, Malayketu was killed in the Battle of Gabiene in 317 BC.
Porus - Additional Reading
- Holt, Frank L. Alexander the Great and the Mystery of the Elephant Medallions, California: University of California Press, 2003, 217pgs. ISBN 0520244834
- Münster, Sebastian. Cosmographia, Basel:House of Sebastian Heinrich-Petri, 1552
Categories: Indian monarchs | Alexander the Great | History of Pakistan
Other related archives326 BC, Alexander the Great, Ambhi, Battle of Gabiene, Chenab, Greek, History of Pakistan, Hydaspes, Indian monarchs, Jhelum, Lahore, Macedonian cubit, Porus (Greek mythology), Porus (Roman mythology), Punjab, Taxila, battle of the Hydaspes River, cubit
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