Prusias II of Bithynia

[3] Prusias II married his maternal cousin Apame IV, a sister of Perseus of Macedon and a princess from the Antigonid dynasty,[4] by whom he had a son, Nicomedes II, and a daughter, Apama, who would marry Dyegilos,[5] son of Cotys IV, King of Thrace, and his wife, Semestra.

Prusias II was honoured by the Aetolian League with a stele at Delphi on account of his behavior and benefactions towards them.

[6] Towards the end of his life, Prusias II had children by a later wife, and wanted to make them his heirs in place of Nicomedes.

[9] Prusias had to renounce the kingship in favour of his son and was himself murdered in 149 BC.

[10] This biography of a member of a Middle Eastern royal house is a stub.

Prusias II, King of Bithynia, Reduced to Begging