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Alexander the Great,
one of the world's
greatest military
commanders, was born
in 356 BC in Pella -
Macedonia, the son
of King Philip II of
Macedonia and
Olympids, daughter
of King Neoptolemos.
The legend says that
he was born the same
night when
Herostratus, a
lunatic who lived in Ephesus, burnt
down the Temple of Artemis.
Between 342 and 340
BC his tutor was the
philosopher
Aristotle. Alexander
had already
distinguished
himself in battle at
Chaironaia in 338 BC
when he secured the
throne as Alexander
III byeliminating
his rivals after the
death of his father
in 336 BC at the
hands of Pausanias,
possibly a hired
assassin. Appointed
Commander of the
Corinthian League he
moved first against
the Thracians and
the Illyrians and
put down a rising by
the Thebans (335 BC)
in Greece. In 334 BC
Alexander, with his
army of 35-40
thousand men,
embarked on a
campaign against the
Persians, crossing
the Hellespont
(Dardanelles), |
winning the battle on the
Granikos in the spring,
occupying Gordion (remembers
the story of him cutting the
legendary Gordian knot),
then marching over the
Taurus mountains to Cilicia
and defeating Darius III,
the Persian king, in
November of 333 at Issus,
north of present-day
Iskenderun. This left the
way open to Egypt where he
founded the city of
Alexandria and had his
divine origins and claim to
power confirmed by the
oracle of Zeus Ammon at the
Siwa oasis.
From Egypt Alexander and his
army marched to Babylonia,
where he again defeated
Darius, this time
decisively, at Gaugamela on
the Mossul plain, now in
Iraq. He carried on into
Persia (todays Iran) and
finally began his Indian
campaign (327-325 BC),
getting as far as the Hindu
Kush and the Punjab before
his exhausted men forced him
to turn back at the Indus
delta. Sailing back for part
of the return journey
through the Persian Gulf,
Alexander and his remaining
men made the grueling
crossing of the desert and
eventually reached Babylon
where in 323 BC he died of a
fever while preparing for an
Arabian campaign.
Alexander's declared policy,
in part already embarked
upon, of conciliation and of
consolidating the great new
empire he had created from
so many disparate pieces,
was doomed to failure. His
empire fragmented almost
immediately as rival claims
were lodged by his
successors. The empire was
divided into four major
portions: Cassander ruled in
Macedonia, Lysimachus in Thrace,
Seleucus in Mesopotamia and
Persia, and Ptolemy I Soter
in the Levant and Egypt.