Alexander the Ggreat
Alexander the Great, his son.
Alexander's father was Philip II of Macedon. Philip had conquered most of Greece by the time he died in 336 BC. Alexander was 20 and began completing the plans Philip had made to invade Persia.
Antipater ruled the Macedonia and the rest of Greece after Alexander the Great died.
Alexander the GreatWas born in Pella, Macedonia (in Turkey) and was the conquerer of the ancient world
Antipater
Alexander the Great, his son.
Alexander's father was Philip II of Macedon. Philip had conquered most of Greece by the time he died in 336 BC. Alexander was 20 and began completing the plans Philip had made to invade Persia.
KIng Philip II king of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedonia, died in the year 336 B.C.E.
Antipater ruled the Macedonia and the rest of Greece after Alexander the Great died.
Alexander the GreatWas born in Pella, Macedonia (in Turkey) and was the conquerer of the ancient world
Antipater
Demosthenes warned the Greek states of Philip II of Macedonia's plans to conquer them. Philip died before he could achieve the unification of Greece, so his son Alexander the Great took control and achieved more than his father had originally planned. Demosthenes' warnings were ignored, so he didn't have too much of an effect.
When Alexander the Great died and the Hellenistic Period began, his empire was divided into three parts.AntipaterPtolemyDariusAugustus was given Macedonia and Greece to rule.
I would answer it if you could spell "great" right
Zero, US didn't exist then and today there wasn't any war in Greece yet, to import US soldiers.
Serapion of Macedonia died in 195.
Greece was not a country - it comprised hundreds of independent city-states spread around the Mediterranean and Black Seas. After Alexander's death his generals split his empire amongst themselves. Peninsular Greece was fought over by several generals. None of the cities conquered Macedonia - it was eventually conquered by the Romans who split it up into four independent republics to stop it being a troublesome power.