Orodes II (died 37/36 bce) was the king of Parthia (reigned c. 55/54–37/36 bce) who helped his brother Mithradates III murder their father, Phraates III, about 57 bce and in turn supplanted Mithradates.
When Mithradates occupied Seleucia and Babylon, Orodes stormed those towns and immediately executed his brother. No less ruthless to his attendants, he put to death Surenas, the general who in 53 bce had crushed the Romans under the triumvir Marcus Licinius Crassus at Carrhae in northern Mesopotamia (now Altınbaşak, Turkey). Parthian raids into Roman Syria were checked by the death of Pacorus, Orodes’ favourite son and perhaps joint king. Orodes, stunned by the loss, was murdered in turn by another son, who became Phraates IV.