No. The deciding battle at Chaeronea which won hegemony for Macedonia over the Greek states involved the following:
Combatants
Side A'
Macedonia, Thessaly, Epirus, Aetolia, Northern Phocis, Epicnemidian Locrians*
Side B'
Athens, Beotian League (Thebes, etc), Euboean League, Achaean League, Corinth, Megara, Corcyra, Acarnania, Ambracia, Southern Phocis.
Neutral sides
Sparta, Argos, Arcadia, Messene. The three last had alliances both with Athens and Philip but their pro-macedonian activity of 344/3 BC showed they were leaning towards Philip. However they didnt sent aid to Chaeronea in Philip's side because of the blocking in Isthmus by Corinth and Megara. Sparta had withdrawn almost entirely from Greek affairs in 344 BC.
[*] Elis had an alliance with Philip though they didn't take part in Chaeronea but showed their pro-macedonian feelings by joining their forces with Philip in the invasion of Laconia in the autumn of 338 BC.
A:Alexander the Great annexed Judah in 331 BCE after defeating the Persians, the previous rulers of Judah.
it reaveled alexander was a very bad leader
By pouring out the water, he proved to his men that he was willing to share in the great hardships of the march, and that he did not consider himself above them.
Alexander Hamilton Stephens died on March 4, 1883 at the age of 71.
Alexander the Great was known to be hard on his slaves. He freed a lot of them so he did not have many, but the ones he did have he pushed to continuously expand, march, and fight no matter the weather.
Sparta had a strong military reputation in Ancient Greece. Despite the city not being democratic like Athens many philosophers from Athens believed that the Spartans had a better system of government than their own. Sparta had a more stable system and an army that could out drill, out march and out fight any other army in Greece. All male citizens were equals and there was no real division between rich and poor. Sparta is located in a fertile valley protected by nature by the mountains that surround her. Also because the men were often away at war, the women of Sparta were more free than their counterparts in other city-states including Athens.
They died from heat exposure and thirst.
Burke's Law - 1994 Who Killed Alexander the Great 1-6 was released on: USA: 4 March 1994
please answer this question! please do! i have a ss project due on march 13 2009
They ate what the land they march through could provide.
A:Alexander the Great annexed Judah in 331 BCE after defeating the Persians, the previous rulers of Judah.
The arc of the Great March was mostly in a southeasterly direction with a detour to the southwest to conquer Egypt before making an about face toward Persia and resuming his original course.
Dubai is one hour ahead of Athens from March to October and two hours ahead from October to March.
it reaveled alexander was a very bad leader
Alexander McQueen was born on March 17, 1969
Sparta and Athens, along with other Greek city-states, stopped King Xerxes' march into Greece at the Battle of Salamis in 480 BCE. This naval battle occurred in the straits between the island of Salamis and the Athenian coast, where the Greek fleet decisively defeated the Persian navy. Prior to this, the Persian advance was also halted at the Battle of Thermopylae, where a small Greek force, including Spartans led by King Leonidas, made a valiant stand against Xerxes' much larger army.
Alexander Graham Bell was born March 3rd,1847.