Roxana
Alexander never married.
Yes. Alexander the great had one son. But since Alexander was married to a Persian women and the macedonians (which was where he is from) didnt aprove the killed his son after he died from malaria.
Cleopatra never married Alexander the Great. They lived about 350 years apart.
He came into power at the age of 20. During hs rein which was for the next 13 years he expanded the Greek empire and married 2 persain women. He took part of Eygpyt and other places. He encouraged cultural diffusion and that is why he married 2 persin women.
Yes, Alexander the Great was married; he had three known wives, the most famous of whom was Roxana, whom he married in 327 BC. He also had a son named Alexander IV, born posthumously to Roxana after Alexander's death in 323 BC. Additionally, he married two other women, Stateira II and Parysatis II, as part of his efforts to unify his empire. However, his son Alexander IV and his half-brother, Heracles, faced political challenges and were ultimately killed in their youth.
adopted the customs of those people
adopted the customs of those people
Alexander Hamilton married Elizabeth Schuyler in December of 1780. Elizabeth was the daughter of General Philip Schuyler and a member of one of the wealthiest families in New York. Not much is known about Elizabeth because she burned all of her correspondence to Hamilton after his death. She was born in 1757 and died in 1854, 50 years after her husband died. She bore Hamilton 8 children and after his death petitioned Congress for her husband's pension (which he had waived) and was involved in charity work with orphanages in New York City.
There were a great many women that were married in the colonial era. This was just a way of life.
Yes, Alexander did allow slavery. While the city of Tyre was under siege, Alexander sold the women and children into slavery.
Alexander the Great was born in on July 20 356 BCE in Pella, Macedonia. He was married at least times: 1. Roxane, daughter of a Bactrian noble and 2. Stateira, Persian princess and daughter of Darius III (previous Great King of Persia)
He thought of them as partners in the universal empire he was establishing. Some he appointed as provincial governors. He married all his senior leaders to Persian women to help create a uniform race.