Bocchus I (flourished late 2nd and early 1st centuries bc—died between 91 and 81 bc) was the king of Mauretania in North Africa from about 110 to between 91 and 81 bc; he was probably the father-in-law of Jugurtha, king of Numidia, directly to the east of Mauretania.
At the beginning of the war between Jugurtha and the Romans (112–105), Bocchus attempted unsuccessfully to make a treaty with Rome. He later joined Jugurtha, and in 107–106 they fought successfully against Gaius Marius. In 105 Bocchus was persuaded by Marius’s quaestor Sulla to betray Jugurtha and hand him over to Sulla. Bocchus was allowed to keep western Numidia as far as the Mulucha River (present-day Moulouya River in Morocco), which Jugurtha had ceded to him, and he became an ally of Rome. On the Capitoline Hill he dedicated in 91 (with the permission of the Senate) a group of statues depicting Jugurtha’s surrender to Sulla; Marius was furious and almost turned against Sulla in a civil war.