Took over so much area the armys also joined as a big one
The Persians. Huge and cultured empire.
Alexander the great. He never lost a battle or war, revolutionized tactics and made a huge fat empire. Killed by mosquitoes.
Alexander the Great built a vast empire through a combination of military genius, strategic diplomacy, and the establishment of cities named after him, such as Alexandria. His conquests, which began with the defeat of the Persian Empire, enabled him to spread Greek culture, language, and governance throughout Asia and Egypt. By promoting intermarriage and cultural exchanges between Greeks and local populations, he facilitated the Hellenization of these regions. This cultural diffusion laid the foundation for the blending of Greek and Eastern traditions, which influenced the development of later civilizations.
Alexander the Great got his name because he was one of the best generals in military history.Alexander conquested nearly entire known ancient world. He occupied Persia, Egypt, Armenia, several Asian kingdoms and areas, he reached Indus.Alexander has created so huge empire as nobody before him. This is reason to call him "Great".Reality:Alexander's empire was the same size as the Persian Empire, because Alexander simply took it over. It still got him The Great.The appellation 'The Great' was given to very successful kings and commanders. Before Alexander there were the Persian kings Cyrus the Great and Darius the Great. After him were such Roman generals as Pompey the Great and Fabius Maximus (The Greatest').
yes, it would have, because he was very powerful and determined, he may of conquered the rest of Europe!
The Persians. Huge and cultured empire.
it was a huge empire on the time of Alexander the greate. it was on the coast on the oposit side of grese. (to the East).
It took over the Persian empire feom Asia Minor and Egypt to Afghanistan.
Alexander the great. He never lost a battle or war, revolutionized tactics and made a huge fat empire. Killed by mosquitoes.
they conquered most of china
Alexander the Great built a vast empire through a combination of military genius, strategic diplomacy, and the establishment of cities named after him, such as Alexandria. His conquests, which began with the defeat of the Persian Empire, enabled him to spread Greek culture, language, and governance throughout Asia and Egypt. By promoting intermarriage and cultural exchanges between Greeks and local populations, he facilitated the Hellenization of these regions. This cultural diffusion laid the foundation for the blending of Greek and Eastern traditions, which influenced the development of later civilizations.
Alexander the Great got his name because he was one of the best generals in military history.Alexander conquested nearly entire known ancient world. He occupied Persia, Egypt, Armenia, several Asian kingdoms and areas, he reached Indus.Alexander has created so huge empire as nobody before him. This is reason to call him "Great".Reality:Alexander's empire was the same size as the Persian Empire, because Alexander simply took it over. It still got him The Great.The appellation 'The Great' was given to very successful kings and commanders. Before Alexander there were the Persian kings Cyrus the Great and Darius the Great. After him were such Roman generals as Pompey the Great and Fabius Maximus (The Greatest').
yes, it would have, because he was very powerful and determined, he may of conquered the rest of Europe!
She had a great education, and knew how to rule a huge empire.
because hi
They had a huge Empire across the world. It included ports between Indonesia and Aruba and many other places.
The earliest surviving reference we have of Alexander being called, 'Alexander the Great', is found in a Roman play titled, "Mostellaria (The Haunted House), a play written by Titus Maccius Plautus c. 254-184 BCE testifying to the admiration that the Romans had for his military achievements.The line from the play, "Alexandrum magnum atque Agathoclem aiunt maximas" in English reads, "Alexander the great and most importantly, they say, Agathocles". The character, Tranio, a slave in Rome owned by Theopropides is comparing himself admiringly to Alexander and Agathocles.We don't know if the playwright Titus Maccius Plautus coined the title but we can safely assume that his audience would recognize who 'Alexandrum magnum' was, an indication that the epithet predated Plautus' play and suggesting that the Romans began styling Alexander as 'the great' fairly soon after his death.Quintus Curtius Rufus also mentions 'Alexander the Great', by the epithet 'Great' in his "Historie Alexandri Magni Macedonis" in the 1st century CE. The 'Magni' has been translated into English as, "Great" and is a clear reference to his talent as a military leader which allowed him to build such a huge empire.