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== Succession == [[File:Cleopatra Selene of Syria.jpg|thumb|alt= A coin depicting a queen and a king. The queen's portrait is in the front.|The coin of Cleopatra Selene and Antiochus XIII from Seyrig's collection]] It is known from numismatic evidence that Demetrius III eventually succeeded Antiochus{{nbsp}}X in Antioch.{{sfn|Hoover|2007|p= 295}} Eusebius's statement that Antiochus{{nbsp}}X was ejected from the capital by Philip I in 220 SE (93/92 BC) is contradicted by the coins of Demetrius III, who was not mentioned at all by Eusebius.{{sfn|Hoover|2007|p= 290}} Any suggestions that Philip I controlled Antioch before the demise of Demetrius III can be dismissed; in addition to the numismatic evidence, no ancient source claimed that Demetrius III had to push Philip I out of the city.{{sfn|Hoover|2007|p= 294}} In 1949, a jugate coin of Cleopatra Selene and Antiochus XIII, from the collection of the French archaeologist [[Henri Arnold Seyrig]], was dated by the historian [[Alfred Bellinger]] to 92{{nbsp}}BC and ascribed to Antioch.{{sfn|Bellinger|1949|p= 75}} Based on Bellinger's dating, some modern historians, such as Ehling, proposed that Cleopatra Selene enjoyed an ephemeral reign in Antioch between the death of her husband and the arrival of his successor.{{sfn|Dumitru|2016|p= 266}} Bellinger doubted his own dating and the coin's place of issue in 1952, suggesting Cilicia instead of Antioch.{{sfn|Dumitru|2016|p= 267}} This coin is dated by many twenty-first century scholars to 82{{nbsp}}BC.{{sfn|Dumitru|2016|p= 266}}
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