Alexander was Macedonian. The whole of the Persian Empire. Modern day Turkey, Egypt, all of Mesopotamia and adjacent lands.
Yes, in fact he was the first ever to conquer all of Greece.
Alexander the Great conquered the eastern Mediterranean from Greece to and including Egypt, and also parts of northwest India.
Alexander was king of Macedonia (not Greece) and he conquered the Persian Empire in order to become king of it. The empire stretched from Greece to Egypt and today's Pakistan.
He conquered Egypt, Persia, Asia Minor, and some parts of India.
Yes. In 332 BC, Egpyt was under the control of Alexander the Great from Greece. He was a large influence there, and founded one of Egypts greatest cities, Alexandria. Greek rule lasted until 30 BC, long after the death of the great conqueror, Alexander.
i dont know i need the same exact question!!:)
i dont know i need the same exact question!!:)
He conquered the Persian Empire from Libya to Central Asia. He conquered it for himself, not for Greece, which he controlled. He was Macedonian, and it was his empire, not Greece, which was a collection of independent city-states, which his father had taken control of, and passed it on the Alexander.
Alexander the Great.
Yes, in fact he was the first ever to conquer all of Greece.
Alexander the Great conquered the eastern Mediterranean from Greece to and including Egypt, and also parts of northwest India.
Alexander was king of Macedonia (not Greece) and he conquered the Persian Empire in order to become king of it. The empire stretched from Greece to Egypt and today's Pakistan.
I believe that the first person to rule all of Greece was Alexander the Great from Macedonia.
Alexander the Great did not conquer Greece. Greece was a collection of independent city-states, most of which were conquered by Alexander's father, Philip of Macedon. Alexander inherited Greece from his father.
He didn't conquer Greece; he was established as hegemon of the League of Corinth when he ascended the throne.
greek is the greece's nationality.
Greece did not conquer Phoenicia. Macedonian king Alexander took it over as part of his conquest of the Persian Empire in 334 BCE.