(Ὀροίτης,) a Persian, was made satrap of Sardis by Cyrus, and retained the government of it till his death. Like many other Persian governors, he seems to have aimed at the establishment of an independent sovereignty, and it was probably as one step towards this that he decoyed POLYCRATES into his power by specious promises, and put him to death in B. C. 522. For this act Herodotus mentions two other motives, not incompatible either with one another or with the one above suggested; but certainly the power of the Samian tyrant would have been a barrier to any schemes of aggrandizement entertained by Oroetes ; and, in fact, Samos, from its position and consequence, would, perhaps, be the natural enemy of any Lydian potentate. Thus, when Amnasis, as a vassal of Babylon, was compelled to take part with Croesus against Cyrus, he found it necessary to abandon his alliance with Polycrates, which, for purposes of commerce, he would, doubtless, have preferred; and the Lacedaemonians were naturally urged to their connection with Croesus by their hostility to Polycrates as a tyrant. (Comp. Hdt. 1.69, 70,77, 2.178, 3.39, &c.; Thuc. 1.18; Arist. Polit. 5.10. ed. Bekk.) The disturbed state of affairs which followed the death of Cambyses, b. c. 521, further encouraged Oroetes to prosecute his designs, and le put to death MITROBATES, viceroy of Dascyleiom, in Bithynia, regarding him probably as a rival, or, at least, as a spy, and caused a messenger, who brought an unwelcome firman from Dareius Hystaspis, to be assassinated on his way back to court. Dareius, however, succeeded in procuring his death through the agency of BAGAEUS. (Herod. 3.120_128; Luc. Contempl. 14.)
[E.E]A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology
Smith, William
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology. William Smith, LLD, ed. 1890