Formation of a Macedonian empire led by him, and after his early death, to the splitting up of the empire into separate kingdoms by his warring generals, which we today call the Hellenistic kingdoms.
he won against the Persians
The spread of Greek culture.
His main enemy was Persia
Alexander III of Macedon, conquered most of Greece, Persia, Egypt, and parts of India. He was very confident and a great warrior. He was a great king of macedonia.
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.
Alexander the Great's conquests were driven by a combination of personal ambition, the desire to unite the Greek city-states under Macedonian rule, and the legacy of his father, King Philip II. After consolidating power in Greece, he sought to expand his empire, motivated by a vision of spreading Hellenistic culture and revenge against Persia for its earlier invasions of Greece. His military genius, innovative tactics, and the loyalty of his troops enabled him to achieve rapid victories across Asia Minor, Egypt, and Persia, establishing one of the largest empires in history.
The spread of Greek culture.
he won against the Persians
His main enemy was Persia
Alexander III of Macedon, conquered most of Greece, Persia, Egypt, and parts of India. He was very confident and a great warrior. He was a great king of macedonia.
Darius the third.
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.
Alexander the Great did...
From Eastern Europe to Egypt and Persia (Iraq, Iran, etc.)
Because Alexander conquered from Greece to Persia and India to egypt.
This one was a bit harder to answer. But the result was Egypt took over Greece leaving Alexander stranded in Persia.
He ruled Greece first, then Persia and Syria and Egypt too.