After making his way from Halikarnassos to Pergamon, Artaxerxes took command of the Sardis garrison and assaulted the city of Pergamon.
With so many of the defenders dead or weakened from the long siege, Artaxerxes had to do little more than parade his hoplites inside to claim the city.
With kingdom wide heavy taxation program and the riches captured from Pergamon, King Ariobarzanes I began a massive effort to increase Kingdom of Pontos' wealth tenfold within his lifetime. First of many, province of Bithynia began to work on massive mining complexes and supporting infrastructure. Once finished, these would greatly increase the amount of minerals extracted from the bosom of Anatolia.
In the winter of 256 BC Artaxerxes' little brother, Holophernes, was mobilized with all available forces of the eastern kingdom to stand guard against Seleucid forces causing mayhem in the mountains.
Pergamon was being indoctrinated into Pontic way of life. Dispersing much of the population to various Pontic provinces, either through slavery or merely deporting them, greatly helped the process.
In the summer of 255 BC His Highness Ariobarzanes I had travelled to Sardis and commissioned refinement and expansion of current mining facilities and techniques there.
In the capital of Amaseia, his son and heir Mithridates began expanding Pontic military infrastructure.
A husband to one of King's many daughters. Gobryas Sinopeus, a Greek noble from the coastal city of Sinope married into the royal family. With many Greek settlements recently acquired in the west, there certainly were openings for budding young nobles looking to gain favour within royal court.
In autumn the inevitable happened. After capturing the grand city of Antiocheia near our borders, Ptolemaioi were emboldened enough to make war against us once more.
Holophernes quickly moved to intercept the treacherous hellenes and wipe out the army of Kerkeosirites. It could not be allowed to rampage in the heart of the Kingdom.
By winter King Ariobarzanes I had begun the work on mining centres in Nikaia, Sardis, Ipsos, Ankyra and Mazaka. Pergamon already had extensive mining infrastructure in place when it was captured by Artaxerxes. Within the kingdom only the coastal settlement of Tarsos could still have its provincial mines expanded. It would take some years before the work would be finished, but the King was happy. He had made probably his most significant contribution to Pontos. To its future rulers. To his son. His lineage. No longer were they a poor satrap buried deep in the mountains. Riches, and then, Glory would be theirs.