Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Alexander the Great

 
Who2 Biography: Alexander the Great, Emperor
Alexander the Great
Alexander the Great
Click to enlarge

  • Born: 356 B.C.
  • Birthplace: Pella, Macedonia (now Greece)
  • Died: 323 B.C.
  • Best Known As: The Macedonian conqueror of the ancient world

A towering figure in ancient history, Alexander the Great came close to conquering the entire civilized world of his day. The son of King Phillip II of Macedon, Alexander was educated by the philosopher Aristotle and first led troops at age 18. After his father's death he took command of the Macedonian army, whipped the superpower Persians, and then went on to conquer much of the civilized world. At the peak of his powers, his empire stretched from the western edge of modern-day India across to Egypt (where he founded the city of Alexandria and named it for himself). He died at age 33, after days of fever following a bout of heavy drinking; some suggest he was poisoned, though no cause of death has ever been proved. He was entombed in a golden coffin in Alexandria, where his tomb attracted travelers for centuries.

His mother was Olympias, a princess from Empiris in western Greece... Alexander's favorite horse Bucephalus is one of history's famous steeds... Ancient legend claimed that Alexander was the son of the god Zeus.

Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Britannica Concise Encyclopedia: Alexander the Great
Top

(born 356 BC, Pella, Macedonia — died June 13, 323 BC, Babylon) King of Macedonia (336 – 323) and the greatest military leader of antiquity. The son of Philip II of Macedonia, he was taught by Aristotle. He soon showed military brilliance, helping win the Battle of Chaeronea at age 18. He succeeded his assassinated father in 336 and promptly took Thessaly and Thrace; he brutally razed Thebes except for its temples and the house of Pindar. Such destruction was to be his standard method, and other Greek states submitted meekly. In 334 he crossed to Persia and defeated a Persian army at the Granicus River. He is said to have cut the Gordian knot in Phrygia (333), by which act, according to legend, he was destined to rule all Asia. At the Battle of Issus in 333, he defeated another army, this one led by the Persian king Darius III, who managed to escape. He then took Syria and Phoenicia, cutting off the Persian fleet from its ports. In 332 he completed a seven-month siege of Tyre, considered his greatest military achievement, and then took Egypt. There he received the pharaohs' double crown, founded Alexandria, and visited the oracle of the god Amon, the basis of his claim to divinity. In control of the eastern Mediterranean coast, in 331 he defeated Darius in a decisive battle at Gaugamela, though Darius again escaped. He next took the province of Babylon. He burnt Xerxes' palace at Persepolis, Persia, in 330, and he envisioned an empire ruled jointly by Macedonians and Persians. He continued eastward, quashing real or imagined conspiracies among his men and taking control to the Oxus and Jaxartes rivers, founding cities (most named Alexandria) to hold the territory. Conquering what is now Tajikistan, he married the princess Roxana and embraced Persian absolutism, adopting Persian dress and enforcing Persian court customs. By 326 he reached the Hyphasis in India, where his weary men mutinied; he turned back, marching and pillaging down the Indus, and reached Susa with much loss of life. He continued to promote his unpopular policy of racial fusion, a seeming attempt to form a Persian-Macedonian master race. When his favourite, Hephaestion (324), died, Alexander gave him a hero's funeral and demanded that divine honours be given at his own funeral. He fell ill at Babylon after long feasting and drinking and died at age 33. He was buried in Alexandria, Egypt. His empire, the greatest that had existed to that time, extended from Thrace to Egypt and from Greece to the Indus valley.

For more information on Alexander the Great, visit Britannica.com.

Military History Companion: Alexander 'the Great'
Top

Alexander ‘the Great’ (336-323 bc), son of Philip II and king of Macedon, was the greatest military commander of the ancient world; his achievements inspired envy and imitation from Roman generals such as Pompey, Caesar, and Trajan, and achieved legendary status in the Christian and Islamic worlds through the Romance of Alexander. The main surviving sources were written between 300 and 500 years after Alexander's death by the Greek authors Plutarch, who wrote a biography and also wrote two encomiastic essays; Arrian, whose history focuses on military action; and Diodorus and Curtius (Roman), whose interconnected accounts merit attention for preserving some darker aspects of Alexander's reign.

Aristotle was among his teachers and imparted a love for Homer as well as general intellectual curiosity. In 340 Alexander briefly served as royal regent, in 338 he led the decisive cavalry charge at Chaeronea and, in spite of dynastic tensions in 337-336, he was the only serious candidate to succeed when Philip was assassinated in 336. Alexander at once consolidated his hold with characteristic energy: an important Macedonian enemy, the nobleman Attalus, was murdered, the Thessalians elected him as leader, and the Greek states in the League of Corinth recognized his hegemony. In 335 Alexander marched north to impose his authority over Balkan neighbours, demonstrating strategic skill, tactical resourcefulness in response to sudden challenges, and a desire to surpass all previous achievements. Thebes rebelled during his absence, but his speed of movement disconcerted his Greek opponents; the Macedonians captured the city after fierce resistance and everything, except for temples and the house of the poet Pindar, was razed; survivors were sold into slavery. This severe treatment, which Alexander had his Greek allies confirm, cowed potential opponents such as Athens.

Alexander was now ready for the campaign against Persia which Philip had planned; Antipater remained in Macedon as regent and supervisor of Greek affairs. In 334 Alexander crossed the Hellespont with somewhat over 40, 000 infantry and 5, 000 cavalry; the crack troops were Macedonian, though there were also important units of Thessalian cavalry, and archers and javelin men from Crete and Thrace. His first undertaking was a pilgrimage to Troy, part of his heroic image building: Alexander was the new Achilles (a maternal ancestor), to whom his companion Hephaestion played Patroclus. Military matters then impinged, and the local Persians were overwhelmed at the Granicus. This allowed Alexander to dominate western Asia Minor, where the Greek cities welcomed their self-proclaimed liberator with mixed enthusiasm; Miletus attempted to remain neutral and was besieged, while the Persian garrison at Halicarnassus defended the citadel even after the loss of the lower town. As Alexander secured territory he ensured that Persian administrative arrangements were maintained, under Macedonian supervision, for financial and logistical reasons.

Alexander was now embarrassed by Persian supremacy at sea: his own naval forces were limited, since he could not rely on Athenian help; he focused on securing coastal cities but could do little to contain a Persian offensive in the Aegean during 333. The balance only shifted when the dynamic Memnon of Rhodes died and Darius recalled the Greek mercenaries to bolster his land army. In 333 Alexander rapidly traversed central Asia Minor, without imposing effective control on a marginal area, but was then detained in Cilicia by serious illness. The rout of Darius at Issus in November left the whole of the Levant open to Alexander, and 332 was spent securing the cities of Phoenicia: Tyre, apparently safe on its island, only succumbed after a six-month siege which demonstrated all Alexander's considerable determination and skill; Gaza too held out bravely, and the black side to Alexander's heroic character was revealed in the mutilation of the gallant enemy commander. Control of the Levant brought with it the submission of the last Persian naval contingents. Alexander's final action before leaving the Mediterranean world was to visit Egypt, where he was recognized as pharaoh; more important for his image was the trip to the oracle of Ammon, located in the desert at the Siwah Oasis—stories about miracles during the desert crossing and the welcome and responses he received at the shrine were all intended to elevate him above the normal run of humanity.

In 331 Alexander turned east for the decisive confrontation with Darius at Arbela. Victory opened up the Persian heartland: the capitals and treasuries of Babylon and Susa were occupied, and before winter Alexander forced his way across the Zagros range to reach the upland capital of Persepolis. In Caria and Egypt Alexander had already appointed locals as provincial governors, and this policy was now extended to his former Iranian enemies, though usually with Macedonian garrison commanders as overseers. In spring 330 Alexander left Persepolis, after burning the palace—symbolic revenge for the Persian destruction of the Athenian Acropolis in 480, but also a product of the excessive consumption of alcohol in which Macedonians frequently indulged. Alexander closely pursued the fleeing Darius, who was deserted and killed by his entourage; Alexander honoured the corpse, and set about establishing his succession to Darius as Lord of Asia by securing the north-eastern satrapies: here Bessus, murderer of Darius, had proclaimed himself king and a protracted rebellion ensured tough campaigning in harsh conditions. Alexander was reasserting royal authority, but also exceeding the boundaries of predecessors' achievements, including those of his divine ancestor Heracles.

Alexander now encountered a series of challenges at court. In 330 Philotas succumbed to intrigue, and was adjudged guilty of treason for failing to report a conspiracy; his execution entailed the death also of his father Parmenio, loyal lieutenant of Philip and Alexander's second-in-command. Philotas may have been innocent, but his family had become disenchanted with the self-glorification of Alexander at the expense of other Macedonians; it also had jealous rivals at court. Macedonian resentment was increasingly fuelled by Alexander's progressive acceptance of oriental customs and dress. Tensions exploded in another drunken banquet after the 328 campaign season: Clitus the Black articulated the opposition of traditionalists to Alexander's innovations, and his increasing tendency to disparage Philip as his father in favour of divine parentage from Ammon. In drunken rage Alexander himself speared Clitus, but then collapsed in remorse. In 327 a further plot, this time involving the royal pages, was uncovered; the extension of oriental customs to include prostration was a key factor. The culprits were stoned to death and Callisthenes, the court historian, who was alleged to have encouraged them, was also killed.

In 326 Alexander advanced into India, again with a tenuous claim to reassert Persian control, with support from the ruler of Taxila. King Porus failed to prevent the crossing of the Hydaspes, and victory appeared to open the route eastwards towards the Ganges, but at the Hyphasis (Beas) the long-suffering troops eventually mutinied: monsoon rains and rumours of powerful kingdoms demoralized them, and Alexander was forced to abandon plans to reach the ocean via the Ganges. Reluctantly instead he turned south down the Indus and, in some of the most bloodthirsty campaigning of a gory career, overwhelmed various tribes. Among the Malli he received a serious chest wound, and the danger to his life produced an outpouring of loyalty from his troops.

From the mouth of the Indus Alexander returned west; part of the army was dispatched by a northern route, and Nearchus was appointed to sail the fleet up the Persian Gulf, while Alexander himself marched directly across the Gedrosian Desert (Makran) —rivalry with predecessors was again the spur: in a rare lapse Alexander's commissariat failed to respond to the enormous challenge, and there were severe losses, particularly among the camp followers. Back in the Persian heartland, Alexander turned to administrative matters neglected during his long absence, but also prepared for future campaigns: geographical discovery on the Caspian, conquest of Arabia because the inhabitants refused to worship him, and probably an attack on Carthage. His army was remodelled with the honorific discharge of numerous veterans and the incorporation of Persians trained in Macedonian ways: these developments provoked a fresh mutiny by the Macedonians, who felt they were being abandoned. Death anticipated full implementation of these developments. Hephaestion had already died in Iran in autumn 324, and Alexander succumbed at Babylon in June 323; circumstances prompted rumours of poisoning, but apart from repeated wounds his constitution had also been undermined by heavy drinking. There was no obvious successor, though his Bactrian wife Roxanne was pregnant and soon produced a son. Within two years the empire was rent by conflicts between the powerful successor generals, whose ambitions had only been repressed by their devotion to the authority of Alexander. The Macedonian army was the key to Alexander's success; his courage, endurance, and sharing of sufferings merited its loyalty. There were few breaks in the hard fighting, but the Macedonians enjoyed their profession and responded to their leader's talent and charisma.

Bibliography

  • Bosworth, A. B., Conquest and Empire (Cambridge, 1988).
  • Fuller, J. F. C., The Generalship of Alexander the Great (London, 1958).
  • Lane Fox, R., Alexander the Great (London, 1973)

— L. Michael Whitby

Music Encyclopedia: Meister Alexander
Top

(fl late 13th century). Poet-composer from south Germany. He was an important composer of secular song, mainly Sprüche and Minnesang. In some of his Sprüche he criticized the times in which he lived; his Minnesang poetry follows the classical theme of chivalry. His melodies are often individual and forward-looking.



Biography: Alexander the Great
Top

Alexander the Great (356-323 B.C.) was the king of Macedon, the leader of the Corinthian League, and the conqueror of Persia. He succeeded in forging the largest Western empire of the ancient world.

With his Macedonian forces Alexander subdued and united the Greeks and reestablished the Corinthian League after almost a century of warfare between the Greek city-states following the Peloponnesian War. Thus Alexander set the stage for his conquest of the Persian Empire, motivated both by personal ambition and by the Greeks' centuries-old hatred for their perennial Asian foes since the Persian Wars. His campaigns were not only wars of liberation of Greek colonies in Asia Minor but also revenge for Persian depredations in Greece in years past. Within 11 years Alexander's empire stretched from the Balkans to the Himalayas, and it included most of the eastern Mediterranean countries, Mesopotamia, and Persia. He died in Babylon contemplating the conquest of Carthage and perhaps Rome. His legacy was a fragmented empire, but he had inspired a new Hellenistic age of cosmopolitan culture.

Alexander was born in 356 B.C. to King Philip II of Macedon and Queen Olympias, the daughter of Neoptolemus, King of the Molossians. Alexander's sister was born the following year, and the two children grew up at the royal court in Pella. Since his paternal grandmother, Eurydice, was an Illyrian, Alexander was barely Macedonian in blood but clearly so in temperament. Of average height, he had deep-set dark eyes which shone out beneath a heavy brow, and a mass of dark, curly hair. As a youth, Alexander rarely saw his father, who was embroiled in long military campaigns and numerous love affairs. Olympias, a fierce and overly possessive mother, consequently dominated her son's early years and filled him with a deep resentment of his father and a strong dislike for women and wine, in which his father heavily indulged.

Education by Tutors

One of Alexander's first teachers was Leonidas, a relative of Olympias, who struggled to curtail the uncontrollable and defiant boy. Philip had hired Leonidas to train the youth in arithmetic, horsemanship, and archery. Alexander's favorite tutor was the Acarnian Lysimachus, who devised a game whereby Alexander impersonated the hero Achilles. This delighted Olympias, for her family claimed the hero as an ancestor. In Alexander's youthful mind, Achilles became the epitome of the aristocratic warrior, and Alexander modeled himself after this hero of Homer's Iliad.

In 343 Philip summoned the philosopher and scientist Aristotle from Lesbos to tutor Alexander. For 3 years in the rural Macedonian village of Mieza, Aristotle instructed Alexander and a small group of friends in philosophy, government, politics, poetry and drama, and the sciences. Aristotle prepared a shortened edition of the Iliad, which Alexander always kept with him. Aristotle believed in despotic control of the Persians, but Alexander agreed with the ideas expressed in Isocrates's Philip that Macedon should free the barbarians from despotism and offer them Greek protection and care.

Beginnings of the Soldier

The education at Mieza ended in 340. While Philip campaigned against Byzantium, he left the 16-year-old prince as regent in Pella. Philip's general Antipater cautiously but strongly advised Alexander, but other generals looked on Alexander as a pawn, more easily managed than Philip. Within a year Alexander undertook his first expedition against the Thracian tribes, and in 338 he led the Companion Cavalry and helped his father smash the Athenian and Theban forces at Chaeronea.

The brief relationship and military cooperation with his father ended soon after Philip had united all the Greek states except Sparta into the Corinthian League, over which Philip then governed as military leader. When Philip married Cleopatra, the daughter of his general Attalus, and expelled Olympias, Alexander with his mother and his closest friends fled Macedon and lived in Epirus with Olympias's family until Demaratus of Corinth brought about a reconciliation between father and son.

Alexander as King

In the summer of 336 at the ancient Macedonian capital of Aegai, Alexander's sister married her uncle Alexander, the Molossian king. In the festival procession Philip was assassinated by a young Macedonian noble, Pausanias. The reason for the act was never discovered.

Alexander sought the acclamation of the Macedonian army for his bid for kingship, and the generals, Antipater, and Alexander's own troops which had fought at Chaeronea proclaimed him king. Alexander then systematically killed all possible royal claimants to the throne, and Olympias murdered the daughter of Philip and Cleopatra and forced Cleopatra to commit suicide.

Although elected feudal king of Macedon, Alexander did not thus automatically gain command of the Corinthian League. The southern Greek states rejoiced at Philip's assassination, and Athens, under the staunch democrat Demosthenes, sought to lead the League. Throughout Greece independence movements arose. Immediately Alexander led his armies southward, and Thessaly quickly recognized him as leader. Alexander summoned members of the League to Thermopylae and received their recognition of his command. At Corinth in the autumn of 336 Alexander renewed the treaties with the member states. Sparta refused to join. The League entrusted Alexander with unlimited military powers to campaign against Persia.

A Panhellenic Leader

A spirit of Panhellenism ruled the first stages of Alexander's career. A united Greece free of petty wars would bring to the barbarian worlds the Hellenic culture. As the descendant of Achilles, Alexander would correct the ills Persia had created for Greece and remove Persian intervention in Greek affairs. Although he became a Panhellenic leader, he nevertheless remained a Macedonian king bent upon conquering new territories.

Alexander did not prepare for war with Persia immediately. In the spring of 335 he conquered the Thracian Triballians south of the Danube. He secured Macedon and its northern borders without the help of the general Parmenion, who was already in Asia Minor, and Antipater, who governed as Alexander's regent in Macedon.

Destruction of Thebes

In Asia, Darius III, King of Persia, had become aware of Parmenion's presence in Asia and of Alexander's future plans. Darius attempted to bribe the Greek states to revolt, but only Sparta accepted the gold. However, when a rumor spread that Alexander was dead, Demosthenes prodded the Athenian assembly to unilaterally consider the Corinthian League defunct and Athens independent. Thebes at once rejoiced and slew its Macedonian garrison. Alexander, very much alive, raced southward and besieged Thebes. In the name of the League, Alexander waged war against the rebellious members but still attempted to negotiate peace. When Thebes rejected Alexander's demands, he leveled the city, killed the soldiers, and sold the women and children into slavery, sparing only the temples and the house of the poet Pindar. Alexander destroyed the city to warn others of the price of rebellion. Athens revoked its declaration of withdrawal from the League, honored Alexander, and offered to surrender Demosthenes.

Asiatic Campaign

In October 335 Alexander returned to Macedon and prepared his Asiatic expedition. In numbers of troops, in ships, and in wealth, Alexander's resources were markedly inferior to those of Darius. Parmenion was recalled to Pella to be Alexander's chief aide. The army was not Panhellenic but essentially Macedonian, led by a Macedonian king, and the expedition quickly became the royal Macedonian's personal campaign for aggrandizement and empire.

In the early spring of 334 the army crossed the Hellespont (modern Dardanelles) to Abydos, and Alexander visited ancient Troy. There he sacrificed and prayed, dedicated his armor to Athena, and took an antique sacred shield for his campaign. Not far away at the Granicus River, Alexander met Darius's army in May, employed for the first time his oblique battle formation, and defeated the Persians. To commemorate the victory, Alexander sent 300 sets of Persian armor to the Parthenon in Athens with the dedicatory inscription: "Alexander the son of Philip, and the Greeks, all but the Spartans [dedicated these] from the barbarians who inhabit Asia." Alexander thus maintained the official propaganda that he was not only a king but the Panhellenic leader.

Western Asia Minor and Darius's capital at Sardis fell easily, followed by Miletus and Halicarnassus. The territories Alexander conquered retained their satrapal administrations, continued to pay the same taxes as before, and formed the foundations of his Asian empire.

By autumn Alexander had crossed the southern coast of Asia Minor, and Parmenion had entered Phrygia. Both armies spent the winter at the Phrygian capital of Gordium. Divine portents and miracles were ascribed to Alexander by the local peoples, Greeks, and barbarians. When Alexander cut the famous Gordian Knot to fulfill a prophecy, he himself started to believe the myths circulated about him.

When news reached Alexander of Greek naval victories in the Aegean, he sped eastward to the passes of the Taurus and Syria. By the late summer of 333 Alexander was in Cilicia, south of Darius and his armies. At Issus the two kings met in battle. Alexander was outnumbered, but utilizing the oblique formations he rushed the Persian center line and Darius turned his chariot and fled. The Persian line crumbled. In November, Alexander attacked the Persian royal camp, gained hoards of booty, and captured the royal family. He treated Darius's wife, mother, and three children with respect. Darius's army was beaten, and the King became a fugitive. Alexander publicly announced his personal claim to the throne of Persia and proclaimed himself king of Asia.

But before he could pursue his enemy into Persia, he needed to control the seas and the coastal territories of Phoenicia, Palestine, and Egypt to secure his chain of supply. Aradus, Byblos, and Sidon welcomed Alexander but Tyre resisted. In January 332 Alexander began his long and arduous siege of Tyre. He built moles to the island city, employed siege machines, fought off the Tyrian navy and army, and 8 months later seized the fortress.

Darius now sought to come to terms with Alexander and offered a large ransom for his family, a marriage alliance, a treaty of friendship, and the part of his empire west of the Euphrates. Alexander ignored Darius's offer, planning to conquer all.

Campaign in Egypt

From Tyre, Alexander marched south through Jerusalem to Gaza, besieged that city, and pushed on into Egypt. Egypt fell to Alexander without resistance, and the Egyptians hailed him as their deliverer from Persian hegemony. In every country Alexander had respected the local customs, religions, and peoples. In Jerusalem he had retained the priestly rule of the Temple, and in Egypt he sacrificed to the local gods. At Memphis the Egyptian priesthood recognized him as pharaoh, offered him the royal sacrifices, and invested him as king on the throne of Ptah. They hailed Alexander as a god. When Alexander visited the oracle of the Phoenician god Ammon at Siwa, the priest greeted him as the son of Ammon. From this time he seems to have accepted the idea of his own divinity. All across his Asian empire, oracles confirmed Alexander's divinity, and the people paid him divine honors.

Alexander promoted Greek culture in Egypt. In 331 he founded the city of Alexandria, which became the center of Hellenistic culture and commerce. Devoted to science, Alexander dispatched an expedition up the Nile to investigate the sources of the river and the true explanation for its inundations.

Arbela, Babylonia, and Persia

In September 331 Alexander defeated the Persians at Arbela (modern Erbil); the event is also called the Battle of Gaugamela. The Persian army collapsed, and Alexander pursued Darius into the Kurdish mountains.

Abandoning the chase, Alexander systematically explored Babylonia, the rich farmlands, palaces, and treasuries which Darius had abandoned. In Babylon, Alexander celebrated the New Year's Festival in honor of the god Marduk, whereby the god extended his divine pleasure and confirmed the lawful monarchy. Alexander became "King of Babylon, King of Asia, King of the Four Quarters of the World."

The royal palace of Susa and its treasuries fell to Alexander in the summer of 331, and he set out for Persepolis, the capital of the Persian Empire. To prevent a royal uprising and to exact punishment for the Persian destruction of Athens in 480, Alexander burned Persepolis, a rash but symbolic act. In the spring of 330 he marched to Darius's last capital, Ecbatana (modern Hamadan). There Alexander left Parmenion in charge of the vast confiscated treasuries and all communications and set off in pursuit of Darius.

Darius had fled beyond the Caspian Gates with his eastern satraps. When Alexander caught up with them in July 330, the satraps had assassinated Darius. Alexander ordered a royal funeral with honors for his foe. As Darius's successor and avenger, Alexander captured the assassins and punished them according to Persian law. Now Persian king, Alexander began to wear Persian royal clothing and adopted the Persian court ceremonials. As elsewhere, Alexander employed local officials in his administration. He did, however, maintain his position of leader of the Corinthian League toward the Greek ambassadors.

Iran and India

At the Caspian Sea, Alexander became occupied with geography, the location of the Eastern Ocean, and its relation to the Caspian Sea. Consequently, he pushed eastward and for 3 years campaigned in eastern Iran. He secured the region, founded cities, and established colonies of Macedonians. In the spring of 327 he seized the almost impregnable high rock fortress of Ariamazes and captured the Bactrian prince Oxyartes. Alexander married Oxyartes's daughter Rhoxana to bind his Eastern empire more closely to him in a political alliance.

The Macedonians began to resent Alexander's Oriental customs and dress and his demand that they prostrate themselves before him. Parmenion's son Philotas conspired against Alexander, who executed the traitor according to Macedonian law and also ordered the death of Parmenion on false charges.

In the summer of 327 Alexander marched to the Punjab and the Indus Valley. The following year his first son died in India. In northern India, Alexander defeated the armies of King Porus. Impressed with his bravery and nobility, Alexander reestablished Porus as king and gained his loyalty. Continuing his progress eastward, Alexander reached the Ganges, where his armies refused to go farther, and after 2 days of struggle Alexander turned back. The army returned westward along the Indus, but when Alexander was seriously wounded while fighting the fierce Malli warriors, his army was overwhelmed with grief. They cheered his recovery, and all animosities were forgiven.

By July 325 the army and its fleet had reached the Indus Delta. The fleet continued north in the Persian Gulf, while the army began to march along the barren and inhospitable coast. Hardship and death brought havoc to the army, which joined up with the fleet weeks later. In January 324 Alexander reached Persepolis, which he had left 5 years earlier, and in February he was in Susa. But disorder had spread throughout the empire during Alexander's campaigns in the East.

Festival at Susa

Greatly concerned with the rule of his empire and the need for soldiers, officers, and administrators, Alexander attempted to bind the Persian nobility to the Macedonians to forge a ruling class. At Susa he ordered 80 of his Macedonian companions to marry Persian princesses. Alexander, although married to Rhoxana, married Stateira, a daughter of Darius, to legitimize his sovereignty.

When Alexander incorporated 30,000 Persians into the army, his soldiers grumbled. At Opis that summer, when he decided to dismiss his aged and wounded Macedonian soldiers, the angry soldiers condemned his Persian troops and his Persian manners. Alexander arrested 13 of their leaders and executed them. He then addressed the army and movingly reminded them of their glories and honors. After 3 days the Macedonians repented, and in a thanksgiving feast the Persians joined the Macedonians as forces of Alexander - but not as brothers.

Alexander's Death

In the spring of 323 Alexander moved to Babylon and made plans to explore the Caspian Sea and Arabia and then to conquer northern Africa. On June 2 he fell ill with malaria, and 11 days later, at the age of 32, he was dead. A few months later his wife Rhoxana bore him a son, who was assassinated in 309.

Alexander's empire was little more than a vast territory improperly ruled by the king and his bureaucrats. Nations and peoples did not blend harmoniously together but were governed by Macedonians for their King. The empire collapsed at his death, and nations and generals vied for power. The Greek culture that Alexander introduced in the East had barely developed. But in time, and under the "successor" kingdoms, the Oriental and Greek cultures blended and flourished as a by-product of the empire.

Further Reading

The most thorough study of Alexander, and perhaps the most accurate interpretation, is Ulrich Wilcken, Alexander the Great (1931; trans. 1932). Andrew R. Burn, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Empire (1947; 2d ed. 1962), is a delightful brief sketch and a fine interpretation of Alexander. W. W. Tarn, Alexander the Great (2 vols., 1948-1950), misrepresents Alexander's goals. Charles A. Robinson, Jr., has compiled a good general study of Alexander, The History of Alexander the Great (2 vols., 1953-1963). See also Kurt Emmrich, Alexander the Great: Power as Destiny (1965; trans. 1968). John W. Snyder discusses Alexander's military campaigns in Alexander the Great (1966). Margarete Bieber, Alexander the Great in Greek and Roman Art (1964), considers his portraits. A well-illustrated biography is Peter Bamm, Alexander the Great (1968). See also F. A. Wright, Alexander the Great (1934); Lewis V. Cummings, Alexander the Great (1940); and J. F.C. Fuller, The Generalship of Alexander the Great (1958).

Irish Literature Companion: Mrs Alexander
Top

Alexander, Mrs, see Annie French Hector.

Archaeology Dictionary: Alexander the Great
Top

[Na]

Leader of the Macedonians. Born in 356 bc , Alexander was tutored in his early years by Aristotle before succeeding his father Philip as king of Macedonia and the mainland of Greece in 336 bc. Early in his reign he set about releasing the Greeks from Persian domination, but continued his campaigns into a programme of imperialist aggrandizement that eventually created a massive, albeit short-lived, empire from India to Egypt. After his death from fever in 323 bc his hastily constructed dominion fell apart, the most lasting tribute to his achievement being the town of Alexandria, which he founded in Egypt in 331 bc.

 
Columbia Encyclopedia: Alexander the Great
Top
Alexander the Great or Alexander III, 356-323 B.C., king of Macedon, conqueror of much of Asia.

Youth and Kingship

The son of Philip II of Macedon and Olympias, he had Aristotle as his tutor and was given a classical education. Alexander had no part in the murder of his father, although he may have resented him because he neglected Olympias for another wife. He succeeded to the throne in 336 B.C. and immediately showed his talent for leadership by quieting the restive cities of Greece, then putting down uprisings in Thrace and Illyria. Thebes revolted on a false rumor that Alexander was dead. The young king rushed south and sacked the city, sparing only the temples and Pindar's house.

Conquests

Greece and the Balkan Peninsula secured, Alexander then crossed (334) the Hellespont (now the Dardanelles) and, as head of an allied Greek army, undertook the war on Persia that his father had been planning. The march he had begun was to be one of the greatest in history. At the Granicus River (near the Hellespont) he met and defeated a Persian force and moved on to take Miletus and Halicarnassus. For the first time Persia faced a united Greece, and Alexander saw himself as the spreader of Panhellenic ideals. Having taken most of Asia Minor, he entered (333) N Syria and there in the battle of Issus met and routed the hosts of Darius III of Persia, who fled before him.

Alexander, triumphant, now envisioned conquest of the whole of the Persian Empire. It took him nearly a year to reduce Tyre and Gaza, and in 332, in full command of Syria, he entered Egypt. There he met no resistance. When he went to the oasis of Amon he was acknowledged as the son of Amon-Ra, and this may have contributed to a conviction of his own divinity. In the winter he founded Alexandria, perhaps the greatest monument to his name, and in the spring of 331 he returned to Syria, then went to Mesopotamia where he met Darius again in the battle of Guagamela. The battle was hard, but Alexander was victorious. He marched S to Babylon, then went to Susa and on to Persepolis, where he burned the palaces of the Persians and looted the city.

He was now the visible ruler of the Persian Empire, pursuing the fugitive Darius to Ecbatana, which submitted in 330, and on to Bactria. There the satrap Bessus, a cousin of Darius, had the Persian king murdered and declared himself king. Alexander went on through Bactria and captured and executed Bessus. He was now in the regions beyond the Oxus River (the present-day Amu Darya), and his men were beginning to show dissatisfaction. In 330 a conspiracy against Alexander was said to implicate the son of one of his generals, Parmenion; Alexander not only executed the son but also put the innocent Parmenion to death. This act and other instances of his harshness further alienated the soldiers, who disliked Alexander's assuming Persian dress and the manner of a despot.

Nevertheless Alexander conquered all of Bactria and Sogdiana after hard fighting and then went on from what is today Afghanistan into N India. Some of the princes there received him favorably, but at the Hydaspes (the present-day Jhelum River) he met and defeated an army under Porus. He overran the Punjab, but there his men would go no farther. He had built a fleet, and after going down the Indus to its delta, he sent Nearchus with the fleet to take it across the unknown route to the head of the Persian Gulf, a daring undertaking. He himself led his men through the desert regions of modern Baluchistan, S Afghanistan, and S Iran. The march, accomplished with great suffering, finally ended at Susa in 324.

Discord and Death

At Susa Alexander found that many of the officials he had chosen to govern the conquered lands had indulged in corruption and misrule. Meanwhile certain antagonisms had developed against Alexander; in Greece, for instance, many decried his execution of Aristotle's nephew, the historian Callisthenes, and the Greek cities resented his request that they treat him as a god. Alexander's Macedonian officers balked at his attempt to force them to intermarry with the Persians (he had himself married Roxana, a Bactrian princess, as one of his several wives), and they resisted his Eastern ways and his vision of an empire governed by tolerance. There was a mutiny, but it was put down. In 323, Alexander was planning a voyage by sea around Arabia when he caught a fever and died at 33. After his death his generals fell to quarreling about dividing the rule (see Diadochi). His only son was Alexander Aegus, born to Roxana after Alexander's death and destined for a short and pitiful life.

Legacy

Whether or not Alexander had plans for a world empire cannot be determined. He had accomplished greater conquests than any before him, but he did not have time to mold the government of the lands he had taken. Incontestably, he was one of the greatest generals of all time and one of the most powerful personalities of antiquity. He influenced the spread of Hellenism throughout the Middle East and into Asia, establishing city-states modeled on Greek institutions that flourished long after his death. There are many legends about him, e.g., his feats on his horse Bucephalus and his cutting of the Gordian knot. The famous Greek sculptor Lysippus did several studies of Alexander.

Bibliography

Arrian and Plutarch wrote biographies of him in ancient times, and the literature of the Middle Ages romanticized his life. See also study by D. W. Engels (1978); modern biographies by C. B. Welles (1970), R. L. Fox (1974), N. G. L. Hammond (1981), and A. B. Bosworth (1989).

History Dictionary: Alexander the Great
Top

A ruler of Greece in the fourth century b.c. As a general, he conquered most of the ancient world, extending the civilization of Greece east to India. Alexander is said to have wept because there were no worlds left to conquer. In Alexander's youth, the philosopher Aristotle was his tutor.

  • Before beginning his conquests, Alexander allegedly unloosed the Gordian knot by cutting through it. It was believed that the person who unfastened the Gordian knot would rule a vast territory in Asia. Alexander founded the city of Alexandria, which became a great center of learning in Egypt.

  • Quotes By: Alexander The Great
    Top

    Quotes:

    "In faith and hope the world will disagree, But all mankind's concern is charity."

    "How great are the dangers I face to win a good name in Athens."

    "A tomb now suffices him for whom the whole world was not sufficient."

    "There is nothing impossible to him who will try."

    "I am dying from the treatment of too many physicians."

    "If I were not Alexander, I would be Diogenes."

    See more famous quotes by Alexander The Great

    Wikipedia: Alexander the Great
    Top
    Alexander the Great
    Basileus of Macedon
    BattleofIssus333BC-mosaic-detail1.jpg
    Alexander fighting the Persian king Darius III. From Alexander Mosaic, from Pompeii, Naples, Naples National Archaeological Museum
    Reign 336–323 BC
    Full name Alexander III of Macedon
    Greek Μέγας Ἀλέξανδρος (Mégas Aléxandros)
    Ἀλέξανδρος ὁ Μέγας (Aléxandros o Mégas)
    Titles Hegemon of the Hellenic League, Shahanshah of Persia, Pharaoh of Egypt and King of Asia
    Born 20 or 21 July 356 BC
    Birthplace Pella, Macedon
    Died 10 or 11 June 323 BC (aged 32)
    Place of death Babylon
    Predecessor Philip II of Macedon
    Successor Alexander IV of Macedon
    Philip III of Macedon
    Wives Roxana of Bactria
    Stateira of Persia
    Offspring Alexander IV of Macedon
    Dynasty Argead dynasty
    Father Philip II of Macedon
    Mother Olympias of Epirus

    Alexander III of Macedon (356–323 BC), popularly known as Alexander the Great (Greek: Μέγας Ἀλέξανδρος, Mégas Aléxandros), was a Greeki[›] king (basileus) of Macedon who created one of the largest empires in ancient history. Born in Pella in 356 BC, Alexander received a classical Greek education under the tutorship of famed philosopher Aristotle, succeeded his father Philip II of Macedon to the throne in 336 BC after the King was assassinated, and died thirteen years later at the age of 32. Although both Alexander's reign and empire were short-lived, the cultural impact of his conquests lasted for centuries. Alexander is one of the most famous figures of antiquity, and is remembered for his tactical ability, his conquests, and for spreading Greek civilization into the East.

    Philip had brought most of the city-states of mainland Greece under Macedonian hegemony, using both military and diplomatic means. Upon his death, Alexander inherited a strong kingdom and an experienced army. He succeeded in being awarded the generalship of Greece and with his authority firmly established, launched the military plans for expansion left by his father. He invaded Persian-ruled Asia Minor, and began a series of campaigns lasting ten years. Alexander repeatedly defeated the Persians in battle, marched through Syria, Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia, and Bactria and in the process he overthrew the Persian king Darius III and conquered the entirety of the Persian Empire.ii[›] Following his desire to reach the "ends of the world and the Great Outer Sea", he invaded India, but was eventually forced to turn back by the near-mutiny of his troops, who had tired of war.

    Alexander died in Babylon in 323 BC, before having the chance to realize a series of planned campaigns, beginning with an invasion of Arabia. In the years following Alexander's death, his empire was torn apart in a series of civil wars, which resulted in the formation of a number of states ruled by Macedonian aristocracy (the Diadochi). Remarkable though his conquests were, Alexander's lasting legacy was not his reign, but the cultural diffusion engendered by his conquests. The import of Greek colonists and culture to the East, initiated by Alexander, resulted in a new Hellenistic culture, aspects of which were still evident in the traditions of the Byzantine Empire up until the mid-15th century. Alexander himself became legendary, as a classical hero in the mould of Achilles, and features prominently in the history and myth of Greek and non-Greek cultures. He became the measure against which generals, even to this day, compare themselves, and his tactical exploits are still taught in military academies throughout the world.iii[›]

    Early life

    Lineage and childhood

    "The night before the consummation of their marriage, she dreamed that a thunderbolt fell upon her body, which kindled a great fire, whose divided flames dispersed themselves all about, and then were extinguished. And Philip, some time after he was married, dreamed that he sealed up his wife's body with a seal, whose impression, as be fancied, was the figure of a lion. Some of the diviners interpreted this as a warning to Philip to look narrowly to his wife; but Aristander of Telmessus, considering how unusual it was to seal up anything that was empty, assured him the meaning of his dream was that the queen was with child of a boy, who would one day prove as stout and courageous as a lion."
    Plutarch describing Olympias and Philip's dreams.[1]

    Alexander was born on 20 (or 21) July 356 BC,[2][3] in Pella, the capital of the Kingdom of Macedon. He was the son of Philip II, the King of Macedon. His mother was Philip's fourth wife Olympias, the daughter of Neoptolemus I, the king of the north Greek state of Epirus.[1][4][5][6] Although Philip had either seven or eight wives, Olympias, was his principal wife for a time.

    As a member of the Argead dynasty, Alexander claimed patrilineal descent from Heracles through Caranus of Macedon.iv[›] From his mother's side and the Aeacids, he claimed descent from Neoptolemus, son of Achilles;v[›] Alexander was a second cousin of the celebrated general Pyrrhus of Epirus, who was ranked by Hannibal as, depending on the source, either the best[7] or second best (after Alexander)[8] commander the world had ever seen.

    According to the ancient Greek historian Plutarch, Olympias, on the eve of the consummation of her marriage to Philip, dreamed that her womb was struck by a thunder bolt, causing a flame which spread "far and wide" before dying away. Some time after the marriage Philip was said to have seen himself, in a dream, sealing up his wife's womb with a seal upon which was engraved the image of a lion.[1] Plutarch offers a variety of interpretations of these dreams; that Olympia was pregnant before her marriage, indicated by the sealing of her womb; or that Alexander's father was Zeus. Ancient commentators were divided as to whether the ambitious Olympias promulgated the story of Alexander's divine parentage, some claiming she told Alexander, others that she dismissed the suggestion as impious.[1]

    On the day that Alexander was born, Philip was preparing himself for his siege on the city of Potidea on the peninsula of Chalkidiki. On the same day, Philip received news that his general Parmenion had defeated the combined Illyrian and Paeonian armies, and that his horses had won at the Olympic Games. It was also said that on this day, the Temple of Artemis in Ephesus—one of the Seven Wonders of the World—burnt down, leading Hegesias of Magnesia to say that it burnt down because Artemis was attending the birth of Alexander.[2][5][9]

    Alexander fighting an Asiatic lion with his friend Craterus (detail). 3rd century BC mosaic, Pella Museum.

    In his early years, Alexander was raised by his nurse, Lanike, the sister of Alexander's future friend and general Cleitus the Black. Later on in his childhood, Alexander was tutored by the strict Leonidas, a relative of his mother, and by Lysimachus.[10][11]

    When Alexander was ten years old, a horse trader from Thessaly, brought Philip a horse which he offered to sell for thirteen talents. The horse refused to be mounted by anyone and Philip ordered it to be taken away. Alexander, however, detected the horse's fear of his own shadow and asked for a turn to tame the horse, which he eventually managed. According to Plutarch, Philip, overjoyed at this display of courage and ambition, kissed him tearfully, declaring: "My boy, you must find a kingdom big enough for your ambitions. Macedon is too small for you", and bought the horse for him.[12] Alexander would name the horse Bucephalus, meaning 'ox-head'. Bucephalus would be Alexander's companion throughout his journeys as far as India. When he died (due to old age, according to Plutarch, for he was already thirty), Alexander named a city after him (Bucephala).[13][14][15]

    Adolescence and education

    Aristotle tutoring Alexander.

    When Alexander was thirteen years old, Philip decided that Alexander needed a higher education and he began to search for a tutor. Many people were passed over including Isocrates and Speusippus, Plato's successor at the Academy of Athens, who offered to resign to take up the post. In the end, Philip offered the job to Aristotle, who accepted, and Philip gave them the Temple of the Nymphs at Mieza as their classroom. In return for teaching Alexander, Philip agreed to rebuild Aristotle's hometown of Stageira, which Philip had razed, and to repopulate it by buying and freeing the ex-citizens who were slaves, or pardoning those who were in exile.[16][17][18][19]

    Mieza acted like a boarding school for Alexander and the children of Macedonian nobles, such as Ptolemy and Cassander. Many of the pupils who learned by Alexander's side would become his friends and future generals, and are often referred to as the 'Companions'. At Mieza, Aristotle educated Alexander and his companions in medicine, philosophy, morals, religion, logic and art. From Aristotle's teaching, Alexander developed a passion for the works of Homer, and in particular the Iliad; Aristotle gave him an annotated copy, which Alexander was to take on his campaigns.[17][20][21][22]

    Philip's heir

    Regency and ascent of Macedon

    A bust depicting Philip II of Macedon, Alexander's father

    When Alexander became sixteen years old, his tutorship under Aristotle came to an end. Philip, the king, departed to wage war against Byzantium and Alexander was left in charge as regent of the kingdom. During Philip's absence, the Thracian Maedi revolted against Macedonian rule. Alexander responded quickly; he crushed the Maedi insurgence, driving them from their territory, colonised it with Greeks and founded a city named Alexandropolis.[23][24][25][26]

    After Philip's return from Byzantium, he dispatched Alexander with a small force to subdue certain revolts in southern Thrace. During another campaign against the Greek city of Perinthus, Alexander is reported to have saved his father's life. Meanwhile, the city of Amphissa began to work lands that were sacred to Apollo near Delphi, a sacrilege which offered Philip the opportunity to further intervene in the affairs of Greece. Still occupied in Thrace, Philip ordered Alexander to begin mustering an army for a campaign in Greece. Concerned with the possibility of other Greek states intervening, Alexander made it look as if he was preparing to attack Illyria instead. During this turmoil, the Illyrians took the opportunity to invade Macedonia, but Alexander repelled the invaders.[27]

    Philip joined Alexander with his army in 338 BC, and they marched south through Thermopylae, which they took after a stubborn resistance from its Theban garrison. They went on to occupy the city of Elatea, a few days march from both Athens and Thebes. Meanwhile, the Athenians, led by Demosthenes, voted to seek an alliance with Thebes in the war against Macedonia. Both Athens and Philip sent embassies to try to win Thebes's favour, with the Athenians eventually succeeding.[28][29][30] Philip marched on Amphissa (theoretically acting on the request of the Amphicytonic League), captured the mercenaries sent there by Demosthenes, and accepted the city's surrender. Philip then returned to Elatea and sent a final offer of peace to Athens and Thebes, which was rejected.[31][32][33]

    Statue of Alexander in Istanbul Archaeology Museum.

    As Philip marched south, he was blocked near Chaeronea, Boeotia by the forces of Athens and Thebes. During the ensuing Battle of Chaeronea, Philip commanded the right, and Alexander the left wing, accompanied by a group of Philip's trusted generals. According to the ancient sources, the two sides fought bitterly for a long time. Philip deliberately commanded the troops on his right wing to backstep, counting on the untested Athenian hoplites to follow, thus breaking their line. On the left, Alexander was the first to break into the Theban lines, followed by Philip's generals. Having achieved to breach the enemy cohesion, Philip ordered his troops to press forward and quickly routed his enemy. With the rout of the Athenians, the Thebans were left to fight alone; surrounded by the victorious enemy, they were crushed.[34]

    After the victory at Chaeronea, Philip and Alexander marched unopposed into the Peloponnese welcomed by all cities; however, when they reached Sparta, they were refused, and they simply left.[35] At Corinth, Philip established a "Hellenic Alliance" (modelled on the old anti-Persian alliance of the Greco-Persian Wars), with the exception of Sparta. Philip was then named Hegemon (often translated as 'Supreme Commander') of this league (known by modern historians as the League of Corinth). He then announced his plans for a war of revenge against the Persian Empire, which he would command.[36][37]

    Exile and return

    "At the wedding of Cleopatra, whom Philip fell in love with and married, she being much too young for him, her uncle Attalus in his drink desired the Macedonians would implore the gods to give them a lawful successor to the kingdom by his niece. This so irritated Alexander, that throwing one of the cups at his head, "You villain," said he, "what, am I then a bastard?" Then Philip, taking Attalus's part, rose up and would have run his son through; but by good fortune for them both, either his over-hasty rage, or the wine he had drunk, made his foot slip, so that he fell down on the floor. At which Alexander reproachfully insulted over him: "See there," said he, "the man who makes preparations to pass out of Europe into Asia, overturned in passing from one seat to another."
    — Plutarch, describing the feud at Philip's wedding.[23]

    After returning to Pella, Philip fell in love with, and married Cleopatra Eurydice, the niece of one of his generals, Attalus. This marriage made Alexander's position as heir to the throne less secure, since if Cleopatra Eurydice bore Philip a son, there would be a fully Macedonian heir, while Alexander was only half Macedonian.[38] During the wedding banquet, a drunken Attalus made a speech praying to the gods that the union would produce a legitimate heir to the Macedonian throne. Alexander shouted to Attalus, "What, am I then a bastard?" and he threw his goblet at him.[23] Philip, who was also drunk, drew his sword and advanced towards Alexander before collapsing, leading Alexander to say, "See there, the man who makes preparations to pass out of Europe into Asia, overturned in passing from one seat to another."[23]

    Alexander fled from Macedon taking his mother with him, whom he dropped off with her brother in Dodona, capital of Epirus. He carried on to Illyria, where he sought refuge with the Illyrian King and was treated as a guest by the Illyrians, despite having defeated them in battle a few years before. Alexander returned to Macedon after six months in exile due to the efforts of a family friend, Demaratus the Corinthian, who mediated between the two parties.[23][39][40]

    The following year, the Persian satrap (governor) of Caria, Pixodarus, offered the hand of his eldest daughter to Alexander's half-brother, Philip Arrhidaeus. Olympias and several of Alexander's friends suggested to Alexander that this move showed that Philip intended to make Arrhidaeus his heir. Alexander reacted by sending an actor, Thessalus of Corinth, to tell Pixodarus that he should not offer his daughter's hand to an illegitimate son, but instead to Alexander. When Philip heard of this, he scolded Alexander for wishing to marry the daughter of a Carian. Philip had four of Alexander's friends, Harpalus, Nearchus, Ptolemy and Erigyius exiled, and had the Corinthians bring Thessalus to him in chains.[38][41][42]

    King of Macedon

    Accession

    The Kingdom of Macedon in 336 BC

    In 336 BC, whilst at Aegae, attending the wedding of his daughter by Olympias, Cleopatra, to Olympias's brother, Alexander I of Epirus, Philip was assassinated by the captain of his bodyguard, Pausanias.vi[›] As Pausanias tried to escape, he tripped over a vine and was killed by his pursuers, including two of Alexander's companions, Perdiccas and Leonnatus. Alexander was proclaimed king by the Macedonian army and by the Macedonian noblemen at the age of 20.[43][44][45]

    Power consolidation

    Alexander began his reign by having his potential rivals to the throne murdered. He had his cousin, the former Amyntas IV, executed, as well as having two Macedonian princes from the region of Lyncestis killed, while a third, Alexander Lyncestes, was spared. Olympias had Cleopatra Eurydice and her daughter by Philip, Europa, burned alive. When Alexander found out about this, he was furious with his mother. Alexander also ordered the murder of Attalus, who was in command of the advance guard of the army in Asia Minor. Attalus was at the time in correspondence with Demosthenes, regarding the possibility of defecting to Athens. Regardless of whether Attalus actually intended to defect, he had already severely insulted Alexander, and having just had Attalus's daughter and grandchildren murdered, Alexander probably felt Attalus was too dangerous to leave alive.[46] Alexander spared the life of Arrhidaeus, who was by all accounts mentally disabled, possibly as a result of poisoning by Olympias.[43][47][48][49]

    News of Philip's death roused many states into revolt, including Thebes, Athens, Thessaly and the Thracian tribes to the north of Macedon. When news of the revolts in Greece reached Alexander, he responded quickly. Though his advisors advised him to use diplomacy, Alexander mustered the Macedonian cavalry of 3,000 men and rode south towards Thessaly, Macedon's neighbor to the south. When he found the Thessalian army occupying the pass between Mount Olympus and Mount Ossa, he had the men ride over Mount Ossa. When the Thessalians awoke the next day, they found Alexander in their rear, and promptly surrendered, adding their cavalry to Alexander's force, as he rode down towards the Peloponnesus.[50][51][52][53]

    Alexander stopped at Thermopylae, where he was recognized as the leader of the Amphictyonic League before heading south to Corinth. Athens sued for peace and Alexander received the envoy and pardoned anyone involved with the uprising. At Corinth, he was given the title Hegemon, and like Philip, appointed commander of the forthcoming war against Persia. While at Corinth, he heard the news of the Thracian rising to the north.[51][54]

    Balkan campaign

    Before crossing to Asia, Alexander wanted to safeguard his northern borders and, in the spring of 335 BC, he advanced to suppress several apparent revolts.[55] Starting from Amphipolis, he first went east into the country of the "Independent Thracians", and at Mount Haemus, the Macedonian army attacked and defeated a Thracian army manning the heights.[55] The Macedonians marched on into the country of the Triballi, and proceeded to defeat the Triballian army near the Lyginus river [56] (a tributary of the Danube). Alexander then advanced for three days on to the Danube, encountering the Getae tribe on the opposite shore. Surprising the Getae by crossing the river at night, he forced the Getae army to retreat after the first cavalry skirmish, leaving their town to the Macedonian army.[57][58] News then reached Alexander that Cleitus, King of Illyria, and King Glaukias of the Taulanti were in open revolt against Macedonian authority. Marching west into Illyria, Alexander defeated each in turn, forcing Cleitus and Glaukias to flee with their armies, leaving Alexander's northern frontier secure.[59][60]

    While he was triumphantly campaigning north, the Thebans and Athenians rebelled once more. Alexander reacted immediately, but, while the other cities once again hesitated, Thebes decided to resist with the utmost vigor. However, the resistance was useless, as the city was razed to the ground amid great bloodshed, and its territory was divided between the other Boeotian cities. The end of Thebes cowed Athens into submission, leaving all of Greece at least outwardly at peace with Alexander.[61]

    Conquest of the Persian Empire

    Asia Minor

    Map of Alexander's empire and the paths he took

    Alexander's army crossed the Hellespont in 334 BC with approximately 42,000 soldiers from Macedon, various Greek city-states, mercenaries and feudally raised soldiers from Thrace, Paionia, and Illyria.[62] After an initial victory against Persian forces at the Battle of the Granicus, Alexander accepted the surrender of the Persian provincial capital and treasury of Sardis and proceeded down the Ionian coast.[63] At Halicarnassus, Alexander successfully waged the first of many sieges, eventually forcing his opponents, the mercenary captain Memnon of Rhodes and the Persian satrap of Caria, Orontobates, to withdraw by sea.[64] Alexander left the government of Caria to Ada, who adopted Alexander as her son.[65]

    From Halicarnassus, Alexander proceeded into mountainous Lycia and the Pamphylian plain, asserting control over all coastal cities. He did this in order to deny the Persians naval bases; since Alexander had no reliable fleet of his own, defeating the Persian fleet required land-control.[66] From Pamphylia onward, the coast held no major ports and so Alexander moved inland. At Termessos, Alexander humbled but did not storm the Pisidian city.[67] At the ancient Phrygian capital of Gordium, Alexander 'undid' the hitherto unsolvable Gordian Knot, a feat said to await the future "king of Asia".[68] According to the most vivid story, Alexander proclaimed that it did not matter how the knot was undone, and he hacked it apart with his sword.[69]

    Syria

    Alexander Mosaic, showing Battle of Issus, from the House of the Faun, Pompeii

    After spending the winter campaigning in Asia Minor, Alexander's army crossed the Cilician Gates in 333 BC, and defeated the main Persian army under the command of Darius III at the Battle of Issus in November.[70] Darius was forced to flee the battle after his army broke, and in doing so left behind his wife, his two daughters, his mother Sisygambis, and a fabulous amount of treasure.[71] He afterwards offered a peace treaty to Alexander, the concession of the lands he had already conquered, and a ransom of 10,000 talents for his family. Alexander replied that since he was now king of Asia, it was he alone who decided territorial divisions.[72]

    Alexander proceeded to take possession of Syria, and most of the coast of the Levant.[73] However, the following year, 332 BC, he was forced to attack Tyre, which he eventually captured after a famous siege.[74][75] After the capture of Tyre, Alexander crucified all the men of military age, and sold the women and children into slavery.[76]

    Egypt

    Egyptian alabaster statuette of Alexander the Great in the Brooklyn Museum

    When Alexander destroyed Tyre, most of the towns on the route to Egypt quickly capitulated, with the exception of Gaza. The stronghold at Gaza was built on a hill and was heavily fortified.[77] At the beginning of the Siege of Gaza, Alexander utilized the engines he had employed against Tyre. After three unsuccessful assaults, the stronghold was finally taken by force, but not before Alexander received a serious shoulder wound. When Gaza was taken, the male population was put to the sword and the women and children were sold into slavery.[78]

    Jerusalem, on the other hand, opened its gates in surrender, and according to Josephus, Alexander was shown the book of Daniel's prophecy, presumably chapter 8, where a mighty Greek king would subdue and conquer the Persian Empire. Thereupon, Alexander spared Jerusalem and pushed south into Egypt.[79][80]

    Alexander advanced on Egypt in later 332 BC, where he was regarded as a liberator.[81] He was pronounced the new "master of the Universe" and son of the deity of Amun at the Oracle of Siwa Oasis in the Libyan desert.[82] Henceforth, Alexander often referred to Zeus-Ammon as his true father, and subsequent currency depicted him adorned with ram horns as a symbol of his divinity.[83][84] During his stay in Egypt, he founded Alexandria-by-Egypt, which would become the prosperous capital of the Ptolemaic kingdom after his death.[85]

    Assyria and Babylonia

    Initial dispositions and opening movements in the Battle of Gaugamela, 331 BC.

    Leaving Egypt in 331 BC, Alexander marched eastward into Mesopotamia (now northern Iraq) and defeated Darius once more at the Battle of Gaugamela.[86] Once again, Darius was forced to leave the field, and Alexander chased him as far as Arbela. Darius fled over the mountains to Ecbatana (modern Hamedan), but Alexander instead marched to, and captured Babylon.[87]

    Persia

    From Babylon, Alexander went to Susa, one of the Achaemenid capitals, and captured its legendary treasury.[87] Sending the bulk of his army to the Persian ceremonial capital of Persepolis via the Royal Road, Alexander himself took selected troops on the direct route to the city. However, the pass of the Persian Gates (in the modern Zagros Mountains) had been blocked by a Persian army under Ariobarzanes, and Alexander had to storm the pass. Alexander then made a dash for Persepolis before its garrison could loot the treasury.[88] At Persepolis, Alexander stared at the crumbled statue of Xerxes and decided to leave it on the ground.[89][90] During their stay at the capital, a fire broke out in the eastern palace of Xerxes and spread to the rest of the city. Theories abound as to whether this was the result of a drunken accident, or a deliberate act of revenge for the burning of the Acropolis of Athens during the Second Persian War.[90]

    Fall of the Empire and the East

    Alexander then set off in pursuit of Darius again, first into Media, and then Parthia.[91] The Persian king was no longer in control of his destiny, having been taken prisoner by Bessus, his Bactrian satrap and kinsman.[92] As Alexander approached, Bessus had his men fatally stab the Great King and then declared himself Darius' successor as Artaxerxes V, before retreating into Central Asia to launch a guerrilla campaign against Alexander.[93] Darius' remains were buried by Alexander next to his Achaemenid predecessors in a full regal funeral.[94] Alexander claimed that, while dying, Darius had named him as his successor to the Achaemenid throne.[95] The Achaemenid Empire is normally considered to have fallen with the death of Darius.[96]

    Silver coin of Alexander, British Museum

    Alexander, now considering himself the legitimate successor to Darius, viewed Bessus as a usurper to the Achaemenid throne, and set out to defeat him. This campaign, which was initially against Bessus, would turn into a grand tour of central Asia, with Alexander founding a series of new cities, all called Alexandria, including modern Kandahar in Afghanistan, and Alexandria Eschate ("The Furthest") in modern Tajikistan. The campaign took Alexander through Media, Parthia, Aria (West Afghanistan), Drangiana, Arachosia (South and Central Afghanistan), Bactria (North and Central Afghanistan), and Scythia.[97]

    Bessus was betrayed in 329 BC by Spitamenes, who held an undefined position in the satrapy of Sogdiana. Spitamenes handed over Bessus to Ptolemy, one of Alexander's trusted companions, and Bessus was executed.[98] However, when, at some point later, Alexander was on the Jaxartes, Spitamenes raised Sogdiana in revolt. Alexander launched a campaign and defeated him in the Battle of Gabai; after the defeat, Spitamenes was killed by his own men, who then sued for peace.[99]

    Problems and plots

    During this time, Alexander took the Persian title "King of Kings" (Shahanshah) and adopted some elements of Persian dress and customs at his court, notably the custom of proskynesis, either a symbolic kissing of the hand, or prostration on the ground, that Persians paid to their social superiors.[100][101] The Greeks regarded the gesture as the province of deities and believed that Alexander meant to deify himself by requiring it. This cost him much in the sympathies of many of his countrymen.[101] A plot against his life was revealed, and one of his officers, Philotas, was executed for failing to bring the plot to his attention. The death of the son necessitated the death of the father, and thus Parmenion, who had been charged with guarding the treasury at Ecbatana, was assassinated by command of Alexander, so he might not make attempts at vengeance. Most infamously, Alexander personally slew the man who had saved his life at Granicus, Cleitus the Black, during a drunken argument at Maracanda.[102] Later, in the Central Asian campaign, a second plot against his life was revealed, this one instigated by his own royal pages. His official historian, Callisthenes of Olynthus (who had fallen out of favor with the king by leading the opposition to his attempt to introduce proskynesis), was implicated in the plot; however, there has never been consensus among historians regarding his involvement in the conspiracy.[103]

    Indian campaign

    Invasion of the Indian subcontinent

    After the death of Spitamenes and his marriage to Roxana (Roshanak in Bactrian) to cement his relations with his new Central Asian satrapies, Alexander was finally free to turn his attention to the Indian subcontinent. Alexander invited all the chieftains of the former satrapy of Gandhara, in the north of what is now Pakistan, to come to him and submit to his authority. Omphis (whose actual name is Ambhi), ruler of Taxila, whose kingdom extended from the Indus to the Hydaspes, complied, but the chieftains of some hill clans, including the Aspasioi and Assakenoi sections of the Kambojas (known in Indian texts also as Ashvayanas and Ashvakayanas), refused to submit.[104]

    A painting by Charles Le Brun depicting Alexander and Porus (Puru) during the Battle of the Hydaspes

    In the winter of 327/326 BC, Alexander personally led a campaign against these clans; the Aspasioi of Kunar valleys, the Guraeans of the Guraeus valley, and the Assakenoi of the Swat and Buner valleys.[105] A fierce contest ensued with the Aspasioi in which Alexander himself was wounded in the shoulder by a dart but eventually the Aspasioi lost the fight. Alexander then faced the Assakenoi, who fought bravely and offered stubborn resistance to Alexander in the strongholds of Massaga, Ora and Aornos.[104] The fort of Massaga could only be reduced after several days of bloody fighting in which Alexander himself was wounded seriously in the ankle. According to Curtius, "Not only did Alexander slaughter the entire population of Massaga, but also did he reduce its buildings to rubbles".[106] A similar slaughter then followed at Ora, another stronghold of the Assakenoi. In the aftermath of Massaga and Ora, numerous Assakenians fled to the fortress of Aornos. Alexander followed close behind their heels and captured the strategic hill-fort after the fourth day of a bloody fight.[104]

    After reducing Aornos, Alexander crossed the Indus and fought and won an epic battle against a local ruler Porus, who ruled a region in the Punjab, in the Battle of Hydaspes in 326 BC.[107] Alexander was greatly impressed by Porus for his bravery in battle, and therefore made an alliance with him and appointed him as satrap of his own kingdom, even adding some land he did not own before.[108] Alexander named one of the two new cities that he founded, Bucephala, in honor of the horse that had brought him to India, and had died during the battle.[109]

    Revolt of the army

    Campaigns and landmarks of Alexander's invasion of the Indian subcontinent.

    East of Porus' kingdom, near the Ganges River, was the powerful Nanda Empire of Magadha and Gangaridai Empire of Bengal. Fearing the prospects of facing other powerful Indian armies and exhausted by years of campaigning, his army mutinied at the Hyphasis River, refusing to march further east. This river thus marks the easternmost extent of Alexander's conquests.[110][111]

    "As for the Macedonians, however, their struggle with Porus blunted their courage and stayed their further advance into India. For having had all they could do to repulse an enemy who mustered only twenty thousand infantry and two thousand horse, they violently opposed Alexander when he insisted on crossing the river Ganges also, the width of which, as they learned, was thirty-two furlongs, its depth a hundred fathoms, while its banks on the further side were covered with multitudes of men-at-arms and horsemen and elephants. For they were told that the kings of the Ganderites and Praesii were awaiting them with eighty thousand horsemen, two hundred thousand footmen, eight thousand chariots, and six thousand war elephants."[110]

    Alexander spoke to his army and tried to persuade them to march further into India but Coenus pleaded with him to change his opinion and return, the men, he said, "longed to again see their parents, their wives and children, their homeland". Alexander, seeing the unwillingness of his men, eventually agreed and turned south. Along the way his army conquered the Malli clans (in modern day Multan), and other Indian tribes.[112]

    Return

    Alexander sent much of his army to Carmania (modern southern Iran) with his general Craterus, and commissioned a fleet to explore the Persian Gulf shore under his admiral Nearchus, while he led the rest of his forces back to Persia through the more difficult southern route along the Gedrosian Desert and Makran (now part of southern Iran and Pakistan).[113]

    Last years

    Discovering that many of his satraps and military governors had misbehaved in his absence, Alexander executed a number of them as examples, whilst on his way to Susa. As a gesture of thanks, he paid off the debts of his soldiers, and announced that he would send those over-aged and disabled veterans back to Macedon under Craterus, but his troops misunderstood his intention and mutinied at the town of Opis, refusing to be sent away and bitterly criticizing his adoption of Persian customs and dress and the introduction of Persian officers and soldiers into Macedonian units. Alexander executed the ringleaders of the mutiny, but forgave the rank and file. In an attempt to craft a lasting harmony between his Macedonian and Persian subjects, he held a mass marriage of his senior officers to Persian and other noblewomen at Susa, but few of those marriages seem to have lasted much beyond a year. Meanwhile, upon his return, Alexander learned some men had desecrated the tomb of Cyrus the Great, and swiftly executed them. For they were put in charge of guarding the tomb Alexander held in honor.

    After Alexander traveled to Ecbatana to retrieve the bulk of the Persian treasure, his closest friend and possibly lover[114] Hephaestion died of an illness, or possibly of poisoning. Alexander, distraught over the death of his longtime companion, sacked a nearby town, and put all of its inhabitants to the sword, as a 'sacrifice' to Hephaestion's ghost. Alexander mourned Hephaestion for six months.

    From Persia, Alexander planned a series of new campaigns, beginning with an invasion of Arabia, but he would not have a chance to realize them.[citation needed]

    Death and succession

    Final days

    An Astronomical diary (c. 323–322 BC) recording the death of Alexander (British Museum, London)

    On either 10 or 11 June 323 BC, Alexander died in the palace of Nebuchadnezzar II, in Babylon aged 32.[115] Plutarch gives a lengthy account of the circumstances of his death, echoed (without firm dates) by Arrian. Roughly 14 days before his death, Alexander entertained his admiral Nearchus, and then, instead of going to bed, spent the night and next day drinking with Medius of Larissa.[116] After this, and by the 18 Daesius (a Macedonian month) he had developed a fever, which then grew steadily worse.[116][117] By 25 Daesius, he was unable to speak.[117] By 26 Daesius, the common soldiers had become anxious about his health, or thought he was already dead. They demanded to see him, and Alexander's generals acquiesced.[117] The soldiers slowly filed past him, whilst Alexander raised his right hand in greeting, still unable to speak.[118] Two days later, on 28 Daesius (although Aristobolus's account says it was 30 Daesius), Alexander was dead.[116][117] Conversely, Diodorus recounts that Alexander was struck down with pain after downing a large bowl of unmixed wine in honour of Hercules, and (rather mysteriously) died after some agony,[119] which is also mentioned as an alternative by Arrian, but Plutarch specifically refutes this claim.[116]

    Possible causes

    Poison

    Given the propensity of the Macedonian aristocracy to assassination,[120] it is scarcely surprising that allegations of foul play have been made about the death of Alexander. Diodorus, Plutarch, Arrian and Justin all mention the theory that Alexander was poisoned. Plutarch dismisses it as a fabrication,[47] but both Diodorus and Arrian say that they only mention it for the sake of completeness.[119][121] The accounts are nevertheless fairly consistent in designating Antipater, recently removed from the position of Macedonian viceroy, and at odds with Olympias, as the head of the alleged plot. Perhaps taking his summons to Babylon as a death sentence in waiting,[122] and having seen the fate of Parmenion and Philotas,[123] Antipater arranged for Alexander to be poisoned by his son Iollas, who was Alexander's wine-pourer.[47][121][123] There is even a suggestion that Aristotle may have had a hand in the plot.[47][121] Conversely, the strongest argument against the poison theory is the fact that twelve days had passed between the start of his illness and his death; in the ancient world, such long-acting poisons were probably not available.[124]

    Natural causes

    Several diseases have been suggested as the cause of Alexander's death; malaria or typhoid fever are obvious candidates.[125] A 1998 article in the New England Journal of Medicine attributed his death to typhoid fever complicated by bowel perforation and ascending paralysis,[125] whereas another recent analysis has suggested pyrogenic spondylitis or meningitis as the cause.[126] Other illnesses could have also been the culprit, including acute pancreatitis or the West Nile virus.[127][128] Another theory is that Alexander may have died as a result of overdosing on Hellebore, a plant at that time used medicinally, but deadly in large doses.[129] Natural cause theories also tend to emphasise that Alexander's health may have been in general decline after years of heavy drinking and suffering severe wounds (including one in India that nearly claimed his life).[125] Furthermore, the anguish that Alexander felt after Hephaestion's death may have contributed to his declining health.[125]

    Fate after death

    Detail of Alexander on the Alexander Sarcophagus

    Alexander's body was placed in a gold anthropoid sarcophagus, which was in turn placed in a second gold casket.[130] According to Aelian, a seer called Aristander foretold that the land where Alexander was laid to rest "would be happy and unvanquishable forever".[131] Perhaps more likely, the successors may have seen possession of the body as a symbol of legitimacy (it was a royal prerogative to bury the previous king).[132] At any rate, Ptolemy stole the funeral cortege, and took it to Memphis.[130][131] His successor, Ptolemy II Philadelphus, transferred the sarcophagus to Alexandria, where it remained until at least Late Antiquity.[133] Ptolemy IX Lathyros, one of the last successors of Ptolemy I, replaced Alexander's sarcophagus with a glass one, and melted the original down in order to strike emergency gold issues of his coinage.[133] Pompey, Julius Caesar and Augustus all visited the tomb whilst in Alexandria, the latter allegedly accidentally knocking the nose off the body.[133] Caligula was said to have taken Alexander's breastplate from the tomb for his own use.[133] In c. AD 200, Emperor Septimius Severus closed Alexander's tomb to the public.[133] His son and successor, Caracalla, was a great admirer of Alexander, and visited the tomb in his own reign.[133] After this, details on the fate of the tomb are sketchy.[133]

    The so-called "Alexander Sarcophagus", discovered near Sidon and now in the Istanbul Archaeology Museum, is so named not because it was thought to have contained Alexander's remains, but because its bas-reliefs depict Alexander and his companions hunting and in battle with the Persians. It was originally thought to have been the sarcophagus of Abdalonymus (died 311 BC), the king of Sidon appointed by Alexander immediately following the battle of Issus in 331.[134][135][136] However, more recently, it has been suggested that it may date from earlier than Abdalonymus' death.[137]

    Division of the Empire

    Bust of Seleucus I Nicator, who succeeded to Alexander's eastern conquests

    Alexander had no obvious or legitimate heir, his son Alexander IV by Roxane being born after Alexander's death. This left the huge question mark as to who would rule the newly conquered, and barely pacified Empire.[138] According to Diodorus, Alexander's companions asked him when he was on his deathbed to whom he bequeathed his kingdom; his laconic reply was "tôi kratistôi"—"to the strongest".[119] Given that Arrian and Plutarch have Alexander speechless by this point, it is possible that this is an apocryphal story.[139] Diodorus, Curtius and Justin also have the more plausible story of Alexander passing his signet ring to Perdiccas, one of his bodyguard and leader of the companion cavalry, in front of witnesses, thereby possibly nominating Perdiccas as his successor.[119][138]

    In the event, Perdiccas initially avoided explicitly claiming power, instead suggesting that Roxane's baby would be king, if male; with himself, Craterus, Leonnatus and Antipater as guardians.[140] However, the infantry, under the command of Meleager, rejected this arrangement since they had been excluded from the discussion. Instead, they supported Alexander's half-brother Philip Arrhidaeus.[140] Eventually, the two sides reconciled, and after the birth of Alexander IV, he and Philip III were appointed joint kings of the Empire—albeit in name only.[140]

    It was not long, however, before dissension and rivalry began to afflict the Macedonians. The satrapies handed out by Perdiccas at the Partition of Babylon became power bases for each general, from which to launch his own bid for power.[141] After the assassination of Perdiccas in 321 BC, all semblance of Macedonian unity collapsed, and 40 years of war between "The Successors" (Diadochi) ensued, before the Hellenistic world settled into four stable power blocks: the Ptolemaic kingdom of Egypt, the Seleucid Empire in the east, the kingdom of Pergamon in Asia minor, and Macedon.[141] In the process both Alexander IV and Philip III were murdered.[141]

    Testament

    Diodorus relates that Alexander had given detailed written instructions to Craterus some time before his death.[142] Although Craterus had already started to carry out some of Alexander's commands, the successors chose not to further implement them, on the grounds that they were impractical and extravagant.[142] The testament called for military expansion into the Southern and Western Mediterranean, monumental constructions, and the intermixing of Eastern and Western populations. Its most remarkable items were:

    • The construction of a monumental pyre to Hephaestion, costing 10,000 talents.
    • The construction of a monumental tomb for his father Philip, "to match the greatest of the pyramids of Egypt".
    • The erection of great temples in Delos, Delphi, Dodona, Dium, Amphipolis, Cyrnus and Ilium.
    • The building of "a thousand warships, larger than triremes, in Phoenicia, Syria, Cilicia, and Cyprus for the campaign against the Carthaginians and the others who live along the coast of Libya and Iberia and the adjoining coastal regions as far as Sicily".
    • The building of a road in northern Africa as far as the Pillars of Heracles, with ports and shipyards along it.
    • The establishment of cities and the "transplant of populations from Asia to Europe and in the opposite direction from Europe to Asia, in order to bring the largest continent to common unity and to friendship by means of intermarriage and family ties."[122][142]

    Character

    Physical appearance

    Roman copy of a statue by Lysippus, Louvre Museum. According to Plutarch, sculptures by Lysippus were the most faithful.

    Green provides a description of Alexander's appearance, based on ancient sources:

    "Physically, Alexander was not prepossessing. Even by Macedonian standards he was very short, though stocky and tough. His beard was scanty, and he stood out against his hirsute Macedonian barons by going clean-shaven. His neck was in some way twisted, so that he appeared to be gazing upward at an angle. His eyes (one blue, one brown) revealed a dewy, feminine quality. He had a high complexion and a harsh voice".[143]

    Many descriptions and statues portray Alexander with the aforementioned gaze looking upward and outward. Both his father Philip II and his brother Philip Arrhidaeus also suffered from physical deformities, which had led to the suggestion that Alexander suffered from a congenital scoliotic disorder (familial neck and spinal deformity).[126] Furthermore, it has been suggested that this may have contributed to his death.[126]

    Personality

    Alexander's personality is well described by the ancient sources. Some of his strongest personality traits formed in response to his parents.[143] His mother had huge ambitions for Alexander, and encouraged him to believe it was his destiny to conquer the Persian Empire.[143] Indeed, Olympias may have gone to the extent of poisoning Philip Arrhidaeus so as to disable him, and prevent him being a rival for Alexander.[47] Olympias's influence instilled huge ambition and a sense of destiny in Alexander,[144] and Plutarch tells us that his ambition "kept his spirit serious and lofty in advance of his years"[145] Alexander's relationship with his father generated the competitive side of his personality; he had a need to out-do his father, as his reckless nature in battle suggests.[143] While Alexander worried that his father would leave him "no great or brilliant achievement to be displayed to the world",[11] he still attempted to downplay his father's achievements to his companions.[143]

    Alexander's most evident personality traits were his violent temper and rash, impulsive nature,[145][146] which undoubtedly contributed to some of his decisions during his life.[143] Plutarch thought that this part of his personality was the cause of his weakness for alcohol.[145] Although Alexander was stubborn, and did not respond well to orders from his father, he was easier to persuade by reasoned debate.[16] Indeed, set beside his fiery temperament, there was a calmer side to Alexander; perceptive, logical and calculating. He had a great desire for knowledge, a love for philosophy and was an avid reader.[20] This was no doubt in part due to his tutelage by Aristotle; Alexander was intelligent and quick to learn.[16][143] The tale of his "solving" the Gordian knot neatly demonstrates this. He had great self-restraint in "pleasures of the body", contrasting with his lack of self control with alcohol.[145][147] The intelligent and rational side to Alexander is also amply demonstrated by his ability and success as a general.[146]

    Alexander was undoubtedly erudite, and was a patron to both the arts and sciences.[20][145] However, he had little interest in sports, or the Olympic games (unlike his father), seeking only the Homeric ideals of glory and fame.[144][145] He had great charisma and force of personality, characteristics which made him a great leader of men.[138][146] This is further emphasised by the inability of any of his generals to unite the Macedonians, and retain the Empire after his death—only Alexander had the personality to do so.[138]

    Megalomania

    During his final years, and especially after the death of Hephaestion, Alexander began to exhibit signs of megalomania and paranoia.[122] His extraordinary achievements, coupled with his own ineffable sense of destiny, and the flattery of his companions, may have combined to produce this effect.[148] His delusions of grandeur are readily visible in the testament that he ordered Craterus to fulfil, and in his desire to conquer all non-Greek peoples.[122]

    He seems to have come to believe himself a deity, or at least sought to deify himself.[122] Olympias has always insisted to him that he was the son of Zeus,[2] a theory apparently confirmed to him by the oracle of Ammon at Siwa.[83] He began to identify himself as the son of Zeus-Ammon.[83] Alexander adopted some elements of Persian dress and customs at his court, notably the custom of proskynesis, and a practice of which the Macedonians disapproved, and were loathe to perform.[100][101] Such behaviour cost him much in the sympathies of many of his countrymen.[101]

    Relationships

    A mural in Pompeii, depicting the marriage of Alexander to Barsine (Stateira) in 324 BC. The couple are apparently dressed as Ares and Aphrodite.

    The greatest emotional relationship of Alexander's life was with his friend, general and bodyguard Hephaestion, the son of a Macedonian noble.[143][149][150] Hephaestion's death devastated Alexander, sending him into a six month period of grieving.[149][151] This event may have contributed to Alexander's failing health, and detached mental state during his final months.[122][125] Alexander married twice, Roxana, daughter of a Bactrian nobleman, Oxyartes, out of love;[152] and Stateira, a Persian princess and daughter of Darius III of Persia out of political interest.[153] He apparently had two sons, Alexander IV of Macedon of Roxana and, possibly, Heracles of Macedon from his mistress Barsine, and lost another child when Roxana miscarried at Babylon.

    Alexander's sexuality has been the subject of much controversy since W. W. Tarn, one of his biographers, felt compelled to specifically deny that Alexander was homosexual.[154] Nowhere in the ancient sources is it stated that Alexander had homosexual relationships, or that Alexander's relationship with Hephaestion was sexual.[114] Aelian, however, writes of Alexander's visit to Troy where "Alexander garlanded the tomb of Achilles and Hephaestion that of Patroclus, the latter riddling that he was a beloved of Alexander, in just the same way as Patroclus was of Achilles".[114] Noting that the word eromenos (ancient Greek for beloved) does not necessarily bear sexual meaning, Alexander may indeed have been bisexual, an orientation, which in antiquity did not bear any ethical controversies.[155][156]

    Green argues that there is little evidence in the ancient sources Alexander had much interest in women, particularly since he did not produce an heir until the very end of his life.[143] However, he was relatively young when he died, and Ogden suggests that Alexander's matrimonial record is more impressive than his father's, at the same age.[157] Apart from wives, Alexander had many more female companions. Alexander had accumulated a harem in the style of Persian kings but he used it rather sparingly;[158] showing great self-control in "pleasures of the body".[147] It is possible that Alexander was simply not a highly sexed person. Nevertheless, Plutarch describes how Alexander was infatuated by Roxanne while complimenting him on not forcing himself on her.[159] Green suggests that, in the context of the period, Alexander formed quite strong friendships with women, including Ada of Caria, who adopted Alexander, and even Darius's mother Sisygambis, who supposedly died from grief when Alexander died.[143]

    Legacy

    Hellenistic Kingdoms

    The Hellenistic world view after Alexander: ancient world map of Eratosthenes (276–194 BC), incorporating information from the campaigns of Alexander and his successors.[160]

    Alexander's most obvious legacy was the introduction of Macedonian rule to huge new swathes of Asia.[161] Many of these areas would remain in Macedonian hands, or under Greek influence for the next 200–300 years. The successor states that emerged were, at least initially, dominant forces during this epoch, and these 300 years are often referred to as the Hellenistic Period.[161]

    The eastern borders of Alexander's empire began to collapse even during his lifetime.[138] However, the power-vacuum he left in the north-west of the Indian subcontinent directly gave rise to one of the most powerful Indian dynasties in history. Taking advantage of the neglect shown to this region by the succesors, Chandragupta Maurya (referred to in European sources as Sandrokotto), of relatively humble origin, took control of the Punjab, and then with that power-base proceeded to conquer the Nanda Empire of northern India.[162] In 305 BC, Seleucus, one of the successors, marched to India to reclaim the territory; instead, he ceded the area to Chandragupta in return for 500 war elephants. These in turn played a pivotal role in the Battle of Ipsus, the result of which did much to settle the division of the Empire.[162]

    Hellenization

    Hellenization is a term coined by the German historian Johann Gustav Droysen to denote the spread of Greek language, culture and population into the former Persian empire after Alexander's conquest.[161] That this export took place is undoubted, and can be seen in the great Hellenistic cities of, for instance, Alexandria and Antioch.[163] However, exactly how widespread and deeply permeating this was, and to what extent it was a deliberate policy, is debatable. Alexander certainly made deliberate efforts to insert Greek elements into Persian culture and in some instances he attempted to hybridize Greek and Persian culture, culminating in his aspiration to homogenise the populations of Asia and Europe.[164] However, the successors explicitly rejected such policies after his death.[164] Nevertheless, Hellenization occurred throughout the region, and moreover, was accompanied by a distinct and opposite 'Orientalization' of the Successor states.[163][164]

    Coin of Alexander bearing an Aramaic language inscription.

    The core of Hellenistic culture was essentially Athenian by origin.[163][165] The Athenian koine dialect had been adopted long before Philip II for official use and was thus spread throughout the Hellenistic world, becoming the lingua franca through Alexander's conquests.[163] Furthermore town planning, education, local government, and art current in the Hellenistic period were all based on Classical Greek ideals,[163] evolving though into distinct new forms commonly grouped as Hellenistic.

    Some of the most unusual effects of Hellenization can be seen in India, in the region of the relatively late-arising Indo-Greek kingdoms.[166] There, isolated from Europe, Greek culture apparently hybridised with Indian, and especially Buddhist, influences. The first realistic portrayals of the Buddha appeared at this time; they are modelled on Greek statues of Apollo.[166] Several Buddhist traditions may have been influenced by the ancient Greek religion: the concept of Boddhisatvas is reminiscent of Greek divine heroes,[167] and some Mahayana ceremonial practices (burning incense, gifts of flowers and food placed on altars) are similar to those practiced by the ancient Greeks. Zen Buddhism draws in part on the ideas of Greek stoics, such as Zeno.[168] One Greek king, Menander, probably became Buddhist, and is immortalized in Buddhist literature as 'Milinda'.[166]

    Aspects of the Hellenistic culture were still evident in the traditions of the Byzantine Empire up until the mid-15th century.[citation needed]

    Influence on Rome

    Alexander and his exploits were admired by many Romans who wanted to associate themselves with his achievements. Polybius started his Histories by reminding Romans of his role, and thereafter subsequent Roman leaders saw him as his inspirational role model. Julius Caesar reportedly wept in Spain at the sight of Alexander's statue, because he thought he had achieved so little by the same age that Alexander had conquered the world.[169] Pompey the Great searched the conquered lands of the east for Alexander's 260-year-old cloak, which he then wore as a sign of greatness. In his zeal to honor Alexander, Augustus accidentally broke the nose off the Macedonian's mummified corpse while laying a wreath at the Alexander's tomb Alexandria. The Macriani, a Roman family who, in the person of Macrinus briefly ascended to the imperial throne, kept images of Alexander on their persons, either on jewelry, or embroidered into their clothes.[170]

    In the summer of 1995, a statue of Alexander was recovered in an excavation of a Roman house in Alexandria, which was richly decorated with mosaic and marble pavements and probably was constructed in the 1st century AD and occupied until the 3rd century.[171]

    Legend

    Equestrian statue of Alexander the Great, on the waterfront of Thessaloniki, Macedonia (Greece).

    There are many legendary accounts surrounding the life of Alexander the Great, with a relatively large number deriving from his own lifetime, probably encouraged by Alexander himself. His court historian Callisthenes portrayed the sea in Cilicia as drawing back from him in proskynesis. Writing shortly after Alexander's death, another participant, Onesicritus, went so far as to invent a tryst between Alexander and Thalestris, queen of the mythical Amazons. When Onesicritus read this passage to his patron, Alexander's general and later King Lysimachus reportedly quipped, "I wonder where I was at the time."[172]

    In the first centuries after Alexander's death, probably in Alexandria, a quantity of the more legendary material coalesced into a text known as the Alexander Romance, later falsely ascribed to the historian Callisthenes and therefore known as Pseudo-Callisthenes. This text underwent numerous expansions and revisions throughout Antiquity and the Middle Ages.

    The Alexander legend is also believed to extend to Alexander the Great in the Qur'an, where he appears as a prophet called Dhul-Qarnayn.

    Alexander became the measure against which generals, even to this day, compare themselves, and his tactical exploits are still taught in military academies throughout the world.[citation needed]

    In ancient and modern culture

    Alexander the Great's accomplishments and legacy have been preserved and depicted in many ways. Alexander has figured in works of both high and popular culture from his own era to the modern day.

    Sources

    Texts written by people who actually knew Alexander or who gathered information from men who served with Alexander, are all lost, apart from a few inscriptions and fragments.[173] Contemporaries who wrote accounts of his life include Alexander's campaign historian Callisthenes; Alexander's generals Ptolemy and Nearchus; Aristobulus, a junior officer on the campaigns; and Onesicritus, Alexander's chief helmsman.[173] These works have been lost, but later works based on these original sources survive.[173] The five main surviving accounts are by Arrian, Curtius, Plutarch, Diodorus, and Justin.[173]

    See also

    Notes

    ^ i: See for instance[174][175][176][177][178][179][180][181][182][183][184][185][186][187][188][189][190][191][192] andiv[›]v[›].
    ^ ii:  By the time of his death, he had conquered the entire Achaemenid Persian Empire, adding it to Macedon's European territories; according to some modern writers, this was most of the world then known to the ancient Greeks (the 'Ecumene').[193][194] An approximate view of the world known to Alexander can be seen in Hecataeus of Miletus's map, see Image:Hecataeus world map-en.svg.
    ^ iii: For instance, Hannibal supposedly ranked Alexander as the greatest general;[195] Julius Caesar wept on seeing a statue of Alexander, since he had achieved so little by the same age;[169] Pompey consciously posed as the 'new Alexander';[196] the young Napoleon Bonaparte also encouraged comparisons with Alexander.[197]
    ^ iv: "In the early 5th century the royal house of Macedon, the Temenidae was recognised as Greek by the Presidents of the Olympic Games. Their verdict was and is decisive. It is certain that the Kings considered themselves to be of Greek descent from Heracles son of Zeus."[174]
    ^ v: "AEACIDS Descendants of Aeacus, son of Zeus and the nymph Aegina, eponymous (see the term) to the island of that name. His son was Peleus, father of Achilles, whose descendants (real or supposed) called themselves Aeacids: thus Pyrrhus and Alexander the Great."[175]
    ^ vi: There have been, since the time, many suspicions that Paunsanias was actually hired to murder Philip. Suspicion has fallen upon Alexander, Olympias and even the newly crowned Persian Emperor, Darius III. All three of these people had motive to have Philip murdered.[198]

    References

    1. ^ a b c d Plutarch, Alexander, 2
    2. ^ a b c Plutarch, Alexander, 3
    3. ^ Alexander was born on the 6 of the month Hekatombaion, "The birth of Alexander at Livius.org". http://www.livius.org/aj-al/alexander/alexander_t32.html#7. 
    4. ^ McCarty, p. 10.
    5. ^ a b Renault, p. 28.
    6. ^ Durant, Life of Greece, p. 538.
    7. ^ Plutarch. "Life of Pyrrhus". Penelope.uchicago.edu. http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Plutarch/Lives/Pyrrhus*.html. Retrieved 14 November 2009. 
    8. ^ Appian, History of the Syrian Wars, §10 and §11 at Livius.org
    9. ^ Bose, p. 21.
    10. ^ Renault, pp. 33–34.
    11. ^ a b Plutarch, Alexander, 5
    12. ^ Plutarch, Alexander, 6
    13. ^ Fox, The Search For Alexander, p. 64.
    14. ^ Renault, p. 39.
    15. ^ Durant, p. 538.
    16. ^ a b c Plutarch, Alexander, 7
    17. ^ a b Fox, The Search For Alexander, p. 65.
    18. ^ Renault, p. 44.
    19. ^ McCarty, p. 15.
    20. ^ a b c Plutarch, Alexander, 8
    21. ^ Renault, pp. 45–47.
    22. ^ McCarty, Alexander the Great, p. 16.
    23. ^ a b c d e Plutarch, Alexander, 9
    24. ^ Fox, The Search For Alexander, p. 68.
    25. ^ Renault, p. 47.
    26. ^ Bose, p. 43.
    27. ^ Renault, pp. 47–49.
    28. ^ Renault, pp. 50–51.
    29. ^ Bose, pp. 44–45
    30. ^ McCarty, p. 23
    31. ^ Renault, p. 51.
    32. ^ Bose, p. 47.
    33. ^ McCarty, p. 24.
    34. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Library XVI, 86
    35. ^ "History of Ancient Sparta". Sikyon.com. http://www.sikyon.com/sparta/history_eg.html. Retrieved 14 November 2009. 
    36. ^ Renault, p. 54.
    37. ^ McCarty, p. 26.
    38. ^ a b McCarty, p. 27.
    39. ^ Bose, p. 75.
    40. ^ Renault, p. 56
    41. ^ Renault, p. 59.
    42. ^ Fox, The Search For Alexander, p. 71.
    43. ^ a b McCarty, pp. 30–31.
    44. ^ Renault, pp. 61–62.
    45. ^ Fox, The Search For Alexander, p. 72.
    46. ^ Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, pp5–6
    47. ^ a b c d e Plutarch, Alexander, 77
    48. ^ Renault, pp. 70–71.
    49. ^ Fox, p. 72.
    50. ^ McCarty, p. 31.
    51. ^ a b Renault, p. 72.
    52. ^ Fox, The Search For Alexander, p. 104.
    53. ^ Bose, p. 95.
    54. ^ Bose, p. 96.
    55. ^ a b Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri I, 1
    56. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri I, 2
    57. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri I, 3–4
    58. ^ Renault, pp. 73–74.
    59. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri I, 5–6
    60. ^ Renault, p. 77.
    61. ^ Plutarch, Phocion, 17
    62. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri I, 11
    63. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri I, 13–19
    64. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri I, 20–23
    65. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri I, 23
    66. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri I, 20, 24–26
    67. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri I, 27–28
    68. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri II, 3
    69. ^ Greene, p. 351
    70. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri II, 6–10
    71. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri II, 11–12
    72. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri I, 3–4 II, 14
    73. ^ Arrian II, 23
    74. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri II, 16–24
    75. ^ Gunther, p. 84.
    76. ^ Sabin et al., p. 396.
    77. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri II, 26
    78. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri II, 26–27
    79. ^ Josephus, Jewish Antiquities, XI, 337 [viii, 5]
    80. ^ Insight on the Scriptures, Volume 1, 1988, Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania International Bible Students Association, pg. 70
    81. ^ Ring et al. pp. 49, 320.
    82. ^ Grimal, p. 382.
    83. ^ a b c Plutarch, Alexander, 27
    84. ^ "Coin: from the Persian Wars to Alexander the Great, 490–336 bc". Encyclopedia Britannica. http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/124716/coin/15880/From-the-Persian-Wars-to-Alexander-the-Great-490-336-bc. Retrieved 2009-11-16. 
    85. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri III, 1
    86. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri III 7–15
    87. ^ a b Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri III, 16
    88. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri III, 18
    89. ^ Plutarch, Alexander, 37
    90. ^ a b Hammond, N. G. L. (1983). Sources for Alexander the Great. Cambridge University Press. pp. 72–73. ISBN 9780521714716. http://books.google.com/books?id=gay_i14p9oEC&pg=PA72&lpg=PA72&dq=%22statue+of+Xerxes%22+alexander&source=bl&ots=JajY84CQZ0&sig=nZnldACxC58Z4Clch7cdlK4PHEY&hl=en&ei=px0BS8ydFcqJkQXbqNSADA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1&ved=0CAoQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q=&f=false. 
    91. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri III, 19–20
    92. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri III, 21
    93. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri III, 21, 25
    94. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri III, 22
    95. ^ Gergel, p. 81.
    96. ^ "The end of Persia". www.livius.org. http://www.livius.org/aj-al/alexander/alexander10.html. Retrieved 2009-11-16. 
    97. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri III, 23–25, 27–30; IV, 1–7
    98. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri III, 30
    99. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri IV, 5–6, 16–17
    100. ^ a b Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri VII, 11
    101. ^ a b c d Plutarch, Alexander, 45
    102. ^ Gergel, p. 99.
    103. ^ Waldemar Heckel, Lawrence A. Tritle, ed (2009). Alexander the Great: A New History. Wiley-Blackwell. pp. 47–48. ISBN 9781405130820. http://books.google.com/books?id=jbaPwpvt8ZQC&pg=PA46&lpg=PA46&dq=callisthenes+of+olynthus+conspiracy&source=bl&ots=OuEJ0-CcWq&sig=QBgIAlj9TnGaolkmvaRbMDzuktg&hl=en&ei=X_QBS6uLBI-XkQWt-qiEDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=2&ved=0CAsQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=callisthenes%20of%20olynthus%20conspiracy&f=false. 
    104. ^ a b c Tripathi. History of Ancient India. pp. 118–121. http://books.google.com/books?id=WbrcVcT-GbUC. 
    105. ^ Narain, pp. 155–165
    106. ^ Curtius in McCrindle, Op cit, p 192, J. W. McCrindle; History of Punjab, Vol I, 1997, p 229, Punajbi University, Patiala, (Editors): Fauja Singh, L. M. Joshi; Kambojas Through the Ages, 2005, p 134, Kirpal Singh.
    107. ^ Tripathi. History of Ancient India. pp. 124–125. http://books.google.com/books?id=WbrcVcT-GbUC. 
    108. ^ Tripathi. History of Ancient India. pp. 126–127. http://books.google.com/books?id=WbrcVcT-GbUC. 
    109. ^ Gergel, p. 120.
    110. ^ a b Plutarch, Alexander, 62
    111. ^ Tripathi. History of Ancient India. pp. 129–130. http://books.google.com/books?id=WbrcVcT-GbUC. 
    112. ^ Tripathi. History of Ancient India. pp. 137–138. http://books.google.com/books?id=WbrcVcT-GbUC&pg=PA134&dq=Malloi++Alexander&sig=Xvc-CeaQxzHb6-MqkbsZ_EhAeHM#PPA138,M1. 
    113. ^ Tripathi. History of Ancient India. p. 141. http://books.google.com/books?id=WbrcVcT-GbUC. 
    114. ^ a b c Aelian, Varia Historia XII, 7
    115. ^ Depuydt L. "The Time of Death of Alexander the Great: 11 June 323 BC, ca. 4:00-5:00 PM". Die Welt des Orients 28: 117–135. 
    116. ^ a b c d Plutarch, Alexander, 75
    117. ^ a b c d Plutarch, Alexander, 76
    118. ^ Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri VII, 26
    119. ^ a b c d Diodorus Siculus Library XVII, 117
    120. ^ Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, pp. 1–2.
    121. ^ a b c Arrian, Anabasis Alexandr VII, 27
    122. ^ a b c d e f Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, pp. 23–24.
    123. ^ a b Diodorus Siculus Library XVII, 118
    124. ^ Fox, Alexander the Great, p.
    125. ^ a b c d e Oldach DW, Richard RE, Borza EN, Benitez RM (June 1998). "A mysterious death". N. Engl. J. Med. 338 (24): 1764–1769. doi:10.1056/NEJM199806113382411. PMID 9625631. http://content.nejm.org/cgi/pmidlookup?view=short&pmid=9625631&promo=ONFLNS19. 
    126. ^ a b c Ashrafian, H (2004). "The death of Alexander the Great—a spinal twist of fate". J Hist Neurosci 13 (2): 138–142. doi:10.1080/0964704049052157. PMID 15370319. 
    127. ^ "Alexander the Great and West Nile Virus Encephalitis". Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/eid/vol9no12/03-0288.htm. Retrieved 20 May 2008. 
    128. ^ Sbarounis CN (2007). "Did Alexander the Great die of acute pancreatitis?". J Clin Gastroenterol 24 (4): 294–296. doi:10.1097/00004836-199706000-00031. PMID 9252868. 
    129. ^ "Forensic Psychiatry & Medicine - Dead Men Talking". Forensic-psych.com. http://www.forensic-psych.com/articles/artDeadMenTalking.php. Retrieved 18 July 2009. 
    130. ^ a b "HEC". Greece.org. http://www.greece.org/alexandria/alexander/pages/location.html. Retrieved 18 July 2009. 
    131. ^ a b Aelian, Varia Historia XII, 64
    132. ^ Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, p. 32.
    133. ^ a b c d e f g "HEC". Greece.org. http://www.greece.org/alexandria/alexander/pages/aftermath.html. Retrieved 18 July 2009. 
    134. ^ Studniczka pp. 226ff.
    135. ^ Beazley and Ashmole, p. 59, fig. 134.
    136. ^ Bieber M (1965). "The Portraits of Alexander". Greece & Rome, Second Series 12.2: 183–188. 
    137. ^ See Alexander Sarcophagus.
    138. ^ a b c d e Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, pp. 24–26.
    139. ^ Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, p. 20.
    140. ^ a b c Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, pp. 26–29.
    141. ^ a b c Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, pp. 29–45.
    142. ^ a b c Diodorus Siculus, Library XVIII, 4
    143. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, pp. 15–16.
    144. ^ a b Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, p. 4.
    145. ^ a b c d e f Plutarch, Alexander, 4
    146. ^ a b c Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri VII, 29
    147. ^ a b Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri VII, 28
    148. ^ Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, pp20–21
    149. ^ a b Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri VII, 14
    150. ^ Diodorus Siculus Library XVII, 114
    151. ^ Plutarch, Alexander, 72
    152. ^ Plutarch, Alexander, 47
    153. ^ Plutarch, On the Fortune and Virtue of Alexander, Or2.6
    154. ^ Ogden, p. 204.
    155. ^ Sacks et al, p. 16.
    156. ^ Worthington, p. 159.
    157. ^ Ogden, Alexander the Great - A new history p. 208. "three attested pregnancies in eight years produces an attested impregnation rate of one every 2.7 years, which is actually superior to that of his father's.
    158. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Library XVII, 77
    159. ^ Plutarch, On the Fortune and Virtue of Alexander I, 11
    160. ^ "Source". Henry-davis.com. http://www.henry-davis.com/MAPS/Ancient%20Web%20Pages/112.html. Retrieved 22 March 2009. 
    161. ^ a b c Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, pp. xii–xix.
    162. ^ a b Keay, pp. 82–85.
    163. ^ a b c d e Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, pp. 56–59.
    164. ^ a b c Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, p. 21.
    165. ^ Murphy, p. 17.
    166. ^ a b c Keay, pp. 101–109.
    167. ^ Luniya, p. 312.
    168. ^ Pratt, p. 237.
    169. ^ a b Plutarch, Caesar, 11
    170. ^ Holt, p. 3.
    171. ^ "Salima Ikram. Nile Currents". Egyptology.com. http://www.egyptology.com/kmt/fall96/nile.html. Retrieved 22 March 2009. 
    172. ^ Plutarch, Alexander, 46
    173. ^ a b c d Green, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age, pp. xxii–xxviii.
    174. ^ a b Hammond, N.G.L. A History of Greece to 323 BC. Cambridge University, 1986, p. 516.
    175. ^ a b Chamoux, François and Roussel, Michel. Hellenistic Civilization. Blackwell Publishing, 2003, p. 396, ISBN 0631222421.
    176. ^ Pomeroy et al.
    177. ^ Hammond, pp. 12–13.
    178. ^ A. R. Burn, Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Empire, Macmillan, 1948
    179. ^ George Cawkwell, Philip of Macedon, Faber & Faber, London, 1978
    180. ^ Francois Chamoux, Hellenistic Civilization, Blackwell Publishing Professional, 2002
    181. ^ Victor Ehrenberg, The Greek State, Methuen, 2000
    182. ^ Malcolm Errington, A History of Macedonia, University of California Press, February 1993
    183. ^ John V.A. Fine, The Ancient Greeks: A Critical History, Harvard University Press, 1983
    184. ^ Robin Lane Fox, Alexander the Great
    185. ^ Jonathan M. Hall, Ethnic Identity in Greek Antiquity, Cambridge University Press, 1998
    186. ^ N G L Hammond, A History of Greece to 323 BC, Cambridge University, 1986
    187. ^ Archer Jones, The Art of War in Western World, University of Illinois Press, 2000
    188. ^ Robin Osborne, Greek History, Routledge, 2004
    189. ^ Chester G. Starr, A History of the Ancient World, Oxford University Press, 1991
    190. ^ Arnold J. Toynbee, The Greeks and Their Heritages, Oxford University Press, 1981
    191. ^ Ulrich Wilcken, Alexander the Great
    192. ^ Ian Worthington, Alexander the Great, Routledge, 2002.
    193. ^ Danforth, pp38, 49, 167
    194. ^ Stoneman, p2
    195. ^ Goldsworthy, pp. 327–328.
    196. ^ Holland, pp. 176–183.
    197. ^ Barnett, p. 45.
    198. ^ Fox, The Search For Alexander, pp. 72–73.

    Bibliography

    Primary sources

    Secondary sources

    • Barnett, C. (1997). Bonaparte. Wordsworth Editions. ISBN 1853266787. 
    • Beazley JD and Ashmole B (1932). Greek Sculpture and Painting. Cambridge University Press. 
    • Bose, Partha (2003). Alexander the Great's Art of Strategy. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 1741141133. 
    • Bowra, Maurice (1994). The Greek Experience. Phoenix Books. ISBN 1857991222. 
    • Danforth, Loring M. (1997). The Macedonian Conflict: Ethnic Nationalism in a Transnational World. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691043566. 
    • Durant, Will (1966). The Story of Civilization: The Life of Greece. Simon & Schuster. ISBN 0671418009. 
    • Bill Fawcett, (2006). Bill Fawcett. ed. How To Loose A Battle: Foolish Plans and Great Military Blunders. Harper. ISBN 0060760249. 
    • Gergel, Tania (editor) (2004). The Brief Life and Towering Exploits of History's Greatest Conqueror as Told By His Original Biographers. Penguin Books. ISBN 0142001406. 
    • Green, Peter (1992). Alexander of Macedon: 356–323 B.C. A Historical Biography. University of California Press. ISBN 0520071662. 
    • Green, Peter (2007). Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age. Orion Books. ISBN 9780753824139. 
    • Greene, Robert (2000). The 48 Laws of Power. Penguin Books. p. 351. ISBN 0140280197. 
    • Grimal, Nicolas (1992). A History of Ancient Egypt (reprint ed.). Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 9780631193960. 
    • Gunther, John (2007). Alexander the Great. Sterling. ISBN 1402745192. 
    • Hammond, N. G. L. (1989). The Macedonian State: Origins, Institutions, and History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0198148836. 
    • Holland, T. (2003). Rubicon: Triumph and Tragedy in the Roman Republic. Abacus. ISBN 9780349115634. 
    • Holt, Frank Lee (2003). Alexander the Great and the mystery of the elephant medallions. University of California Press. ISBN 0520238818. 
    • Keay, John (2001). India: A History. Grove Press. ISBN 0802137970. 
    • Lane Fox, Robin (1973). Alexander the Great. Allen Lane. ISBN 0860077071. 
    • Lane Fox, Robin (1980). The Search for Alexander. Little Brown & Co. Boston. ISBN 0316291080. 
    • Goldsworthy, A. (2003). The Fall of Carthage. Cassel. ISBN 0304366420. 
    • Luniya, Bhanwarlal Nathuram (1978). Life and Culture in Ancient India: From the Earliest Times to 1000 A.D.. Lakshmi Narain Agarwal. LCCN 78907043. 
    • McCarty, Nick (2004). Alexander the Great. Penguin. ISBN 0670042684. 
    • Murphy, James Jerome; Richard A. Katula, Forbes I. Hill, Donovan J. Ochs (2003). A Synoptic History of Classical Rhetoric. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates. p. 17. ISBN 1880393352. 
    • Nandan, Y and Bhavan, BV (2003). British Death March Under Asiatic Impulse: Epic of Anglo-Indian Tragedy in Afghanistan. Mumbai: Bharatiya Vidya Bhavan. ISBN 8172763018. 
    • Narain, AK (1965). Alexander the Great: Greece and Rome–12. 
    • Daniel Ogden (2009). "Alexander's Sex Life". in Alice Heckel, Waldemar Heckel, Lawrence A. Tritle. Alexander the Great: A New History. Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 1405130822. 
    • Pratt, James Bissett (1996). The Pilgrimage of Buddhism and a Buddhist Pilgrimage. Laurier Books. ISBN 8120611969. 
    • Pomeroy, S.; Burstein, S.; Dolan, W.; Roberts, J. (1998). Ancient Greece: A Political, Social, and Cultural History. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195097424. 
    • Renault, Mary (2001). The Nature of Alexander the Great. Penguin. ISBN 014139076X. 
    • Trudy Ring, Robert M. Salkin, K. A. Berney, Paul E. Schellinger (1994). Taylor & Francis. ed. International dictionary of historic places. Chicago ; Fitzroy Dearborn, 1994-1996.. ISBN 9781884964036. 
    • Sabin, P; van Wees, H; Whitby, M (2007). The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare: Greece, the Hellenistic World and the Rise of Rome. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521782732. 
    • Sacks, David (1995). Encyclopedia of the Ancient Greek World. Constable and Co.. ISBN 0094752702. 
    • Stoneman, Richard (2004). Alexander the Great. Routledge. ISBN 0415319323. 
    • Studniczka, Franz (1894). Achäologische Jahrbook 9. 
    • Tripathi, Rama Shankar (1999). History of Ancient India. ISBN 9788120800182. 
    • Trudy Ring, Robert M. Salkin, K. A. Berney, Paul E. Schellinger (1994). International dictionary of historic places. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 1884964036. 
    • Wilcken, Ulrich (1997) [1932]. Alexander the Great. W. W. Norton & Company. ISBN 0393003817. 
    • Worthington, Ian (2003). Alexander the Great. Routledge. ISBN 0415291879. 
    • Worthington, Ian (2004). Alexander the Great: Man And God. Pearson. ISBN 9781405801621. 

    External links

    Find more about Alexander the Great on Wikipedia's sister projects:

    Search Wikibooks Textbooks from Wikibooks
    Search Wikiquote Quotations from Wikiquote
    Search Wikisource Source texts from Wikisource
    Search Commons Images and media from Commons
    Search Wikiversity Learning resources from Wikiversity

    Bibliographic resources

    Other

    Alexander the Great
    Argead dynasty
    Born: 356 BC Died: 323 BC
    Preceded by
    Philip II
    King of Macedon
    336–323 BC
    Succeeded by
    Philip III & Alexander IV
    Preceded by
    Darius III
    Great King (Shah) of Persia
    330–323 BC
    Pharaoh of Egypt
    332–323 BC
    Preceded by
    New Title
    King of Asia
    331–323 BC


     
     

     

    Copyrights:

    Who2 Biography. Copyright © 1998-2008 by Who2, LLC. All rights reserved. See the Alexander the Great biography from Who2.  Read more
    Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. Britannica Concise Encyclopedia. © 2006 Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Military History Companion. The Oxford Companion to Military History. Copyright © 2001, 2004 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Music Encyclopedia. The Concise Grove Dictionary of Music. Copyright © 1994 by Oxford University Press, Inc.. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Irish Literature Companion. The Concise Oxford Companion to Irish Literature. Copyright © 1996, 2000, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Archaeology Dictionary. The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Archaeology. Copyright © 2002, 2003 by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Columbia Encyclopedia. The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright © 2003, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Columbia University Press. All rights reserved. www.cc.columbia.edu/cu/cup/ Read more
    History Dictionary. The New Dictionary of Cultural Literacy, Third Edition Edited by E.D. Hirsch, Jr., Joseph F. Kett, and James Trefil. Copyright © 2002 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Quotes By. Copyright © 2008 QuotationsBook.com. All rights reserved.  Read more
    Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Alexander the Great" Read more