He did not 'free it', he conquered it from the Persians it and incorporated it into his own empire.
Alexander the Great fought to free Greek cities in Asia Minor, particularly during his campaign against the Persian Empire. Notable cities he liberated include Miletus and Ephesus. His conquests aimed to spread Greek culture and influence throughout the region, ultimately leading to the establishment of Hellenistic civilization.
King Alexander III aka Alexander the Great, left Greece with a united Greek army to free Greeks in asia minor from the Persians and ended up going as far as India which was beyond the known world at that time.
phillip the second or alex. the great
http://www.momomesh.com/free-movies/alexander/alexander
Persia
The Macedonian King who conquered the Persians after three major battles was Alexander the Great. Alexander was the son of King Philip II who united Greece under Macedonian hegemony and was planning on invading the Persian Empire (in order to free the Greeks of asia minor who were being harassed and persecuted by the Persians) but was assassinated before he could invade, passing the responsibility on to his young son, Alexander.
Alexander took over the Persian Empire and made it into his own dictatorship - no freedom there.
Alexander the great whose skills in military strategy are still unmatched. His father Philip II, however, was also a brilliant strategist and had long term foresight. He was able to take a backwater group of volunteer greek soldiers, turn it into a professional fighting machine, seize hegemony over all of Greece and make plans to free the Greeks in Asia Minor from Persian oppression. Alexander certainly was his father's son.
u cant do that because it will say free install language pack.
Philip united Greece under Macedonian Hegemony in order to attack Persia and free the Greek states in Asia Minor that the Persians were harassing.
Nothing really, he was in a democracy so people had free speech. Btw this is a 2nd grader
Alexander Keith - Free Church minister - was born in 1781.