Midas (flourished 700 bc?) was the king of Phrygia, an ancient district in west-central Anatolia. He was first mentioned in extant Greek literature by Herodotus as having dedicated a throne at Delphi, before Gyges—i.e., before or little after 700 bc. Later reports that he married a daughter of Agamemnon, king of Aeolic Cyme, and that Midas, or Midacritus (a Greek sailor named for his royal patron?), traded with a western Tin Island, suggest the picture of a real king with commercial interests. The name Midas appears on the facade of one of the great rock-cut monuments of the upper Sangarius (Sakarya) region (in present-day northwestern Turkey); and before 700 bc Assyrian troops fought in the Taurus region (in southern Turkey) with the troops of “Mita of Mushki,” probably the same Midas, known there as king of a more easterly people, the Moschi (the biblical Meshech).
The name Midas was probably dynastic, alternating in Phrygia with Gordieus. Both names are perpetuated in those of towns near the upper Sangarius, “Midas city” (Midaeion, or Midaeum) being about 60 miles (97 km) west of the more famous Gordium.