In 260, the Persians wiped out the Roman
army at Edessa in Syria. They took
Roman Emperor Valerian prisoner and hauled him off to an unknown
fate, but some stories say that he ended up skinned and taxidermied by
his captors,
on display in a Persian temple.
With the Roman provinces in the east leaderless and defenseless, Odaenathus,
a Roman vassal king ruling from Palmyra in Roman Syria, took
it upon himself to stop the Persians before they overran the
whole of the Roman East. He beefed up his army and marched
against the Persians. He scored a few victories but got assassinated,
so his kingdom went to his widow, Zenobia..[*Footnote]
*Footnote: Technically
speaking, the kingdom went to their young son, and Zenobia
ruled as regent. At some point, the son disappeard from coins and
engravings, and Zenobia was ruling in her own name.
She took over the Palmyrene army and ran wild with it. Her husband had
never entirely made it clear whether he was fighting for the Romans or
for himself. He was probably waiting to see how quickly the Romans
recovered before he challenged them openly, and the Romans weren't
going to press the issue until they rebuilt their shattered army and
decided among themselves who was in charge. At first Zenobia was vague
on her intentions
as well, but finally threw off all pretense and began openly conquering
Roman territory north and south,
into Asia Minor and Egypt, assembling the largest independent kingdom
seen in this part of the world in several centuries.
By 272, the Romans had finally settled on a new emperor, Aurelian, who
set
out to bring the Palmyrenes back under control. After a hard campaign,
he overwhelmed Zenobia's army and sacked Palmyra. They dragged Zenobia
back to Rome in chains to be paraded and displayed for the people to
mock. No one knows what happened to her after that. Some sources
suggest that the Romans allowed her a comfortable retirement under
house arrest out of respect for her audacity
and courage. Other sources have her beheaded.
Note on the illustration:
I asked three different AIs to give it a shot, and they came up with
three different intrpretations, but they all agreed on one thing. When
I
instructed them to depict her in chains in the ruins of Palmyra, they
all decided
to show the chains as a fashion accessory,
not as a restraint.