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Alexander the Great
Introduction
Alexander the Great
(Alexander III), king of Macedonia, overthrew the Persian Empire,
carried Macedonian arms to India, and laid the foundations for the
Hellenistic world of territorial kingdoms. Already in his lifetime the
subject of fabulous stories, he later became the hero of a full-scale
legend bearing only the sketchiest resemblance to his historical
career.
LIFE
He was born in 356 BC at
Pella in Macedonia, the son of Philip II and Olympias (daughter of
King Neoptolemus of Epirus). From age 13 to 16 he was taught by
Aristotle, who inspired him with an interest in philosophy, medicine,
and scientific investigation; but he was later to advance beyond his
teacher's narrow precept that non-Greeks should be treated as slaves.
Left in charge of
Macedonia in 340 during Philip's attack on Byzantium, Alexander
defeated the Maedi, a Thracian people; two years later he commanded
the left wing at the Battle of Chaeronea, in which Philip defeated the
allied Greek states, and displayed personal courage in breaking the
Sacred Band of Thebes. A year later Philip divorced Olympias; and,
after a quarrel at a feast held to celebrate his father's new
marriage, Alexander and his mother fled to Epirus, and Alexander later
went to Illyria. Shortly afterward, father and son were reconciled and
Alexander returned; but his position as heir was jeopardized.
In 336, however, on Philip's assassination, Alexander, acclaimed by
the army, succeeded without opposition. He at once executed the
princes of Lyncestis, alleged to be behind Philip's murder, along with
all possible rivals and the whole of the faction opposed to him.
He then marched south,
recovered a wavering Thessaly, and at an assembly of the Greek League
at Corinth was appointed generalissimo for the forthcoming invasion of
Asia, already planned and initiated by Philip.
Returning to Macedonia by
way of Delphi (where the Pythian priestess acclaimed him
"invincible"), he advanced into Thrace in spring 335 and, after
forcing the Shipka Pass and crushing the Triballi, crossed the Danube
to disperse the Getae; turning west, he then defeated and shattered a
coalition of Illyrians who had invaded Macedonia.
Meanwhile, a rumor of his
death had precipitated a revolt of Theban democrats; other Greek
states favored Thebes, and the Athenians, urged on by Remoistens,
voted help. In 14 days Alexander marched 240 miles from Pelion (near
modern Korçë, Albania) in Illyria to Thebes. When the Thebans refused
to surrender, he made an entry and razed their city to the ground,
sparing only temples and Pindar's house; 6,000 were killed and all
survivors sold into slavery. The other Greek states were cowed by this
severity, and Alexander could afford to treat Athens leniently.
Macedonian garrisons were left in Corinth, Chalcis, and the Cadmea
(the citadel of Thebes).
Beginnings Of The Persian
Expedition
From his accession
Alexander had set his mind on the Persian expedition. He had grown up
to the idea. Moreover, he needed the wealth of Persia if he was to
maintain the army built by Philip and pay off the 500 talents he owed.
The exploits of the Ten
Thousand, Greek soldiers of fortune, and of Agesilaus of Sparta, in
successfully campaigning in Persian territory had revealed the
vulnerability of the Persian Empire.
With a good cavalry force
Alexander could expect to defeat any Persian army. In spring 334 he
crossed the Dardanelles, leaving Antipater, who had already faithfully
served his father, as his deputy in Europe with over 13,000 men; he
himself commanded about 30,000 foot and over 5,000 cavalry, of whom
nearly 14,000 were Macedonians and about 7,000 allies sent by the
Greek League.
This army was to prove
remarkable for its balanced combination of arms. Much work fell on the
light armed Cretan and Macedonian archers, 
Thracians, and the
Agrianian javelin men. But in pitched battle the striking force was
the cavalry, and the core of the army, should the issue still remain
undecided after the cavalry charge, was the infantry phalanx, 9,000
strong, armed with 13-foot spears and shields, and the 3,000 men of
the royal battalions, the hypaspists.
Alexander's second in
command was Parmenio, who had secured a foothold in Asia Minor during
Philip's lifetime; many of his family and supporters were entrenched
in positions of responsibility. The army was accompanied by surveyors,
engineers, architects, scientists, court officials, and historians;
from the outset Alexander seems to have envisaged an unlimited
operation.
After visiting Ilium (Troy), a romantic gesture inspired by Homer, he
confronted his first Persian army, led by three satraps, at the
Granicus (modern Kocabas) River, near the Sea of Marmara (May/June
334).
The Persian plan to tempt
Alexander across the river and kill him in the melee almost succeeded;
but the Persian line broke, and Alexander's victory was complete.
Darius' Greek mercenaries were largely massacred, but 2,000 survivors
were sent back to Macedonia in chains.
This victory exposed
western Asia Minor to the Macedonians, and most cities hastened to
open their gates. The tyrants were expelled and (in contrast to
Macedonian policy in Greece) democracies were installed. Alexander
thus underlined his Panhellenic policy, already symbolized in the
sending of 300 panoplies (sets of armor) taken at the Granicus as an
offering dedicated to Athena at Athens by "Alexander son of Philip and
the Greeks (except the Spartans) from the barbarians who inhabit
Asia." (This formula, cited by the Greek historian Arrian in his
history of Alexander's campaigns, is noteworthy for its omission of
any reference to Macedonia.) But the cities remained de facto under
Alexander, and his appointment of Calas as satrap of Hellespontine
Phrygia reflected his claim to succeed the Great King of Persia.
When Miletus, encouraged
by the proximity of the Persian fleet, resisted, Alexander took it by
assault; but, refusing a naval battle, he disbanded his own costly
navy and announced that he would "defeat the Persian fleet on land,"
by occupying the coastal cities. In Caria, Halicarnassus resisted and
was stormed; but Ada, the widow and sister of the satrap Idrieus,
adopted Alexander as her son and, after expelling her brother
Pixodarus, Alexander restored her to her satrapy. Some parts of Caria
held out, however, until 332.
Asia Minor And The Battle Of
Issus
In winter 334-333
Alexander conquered western Asia Minor, subduing the hill tribes of
Lycia and Pisidia; and in spring 333 he advanced along the coastal
road to Perga, passing the cliffs of Mt. Climax, thanks to a fortunate
change of wind. The fall in the level of the sea was interpreted as a
mark of divine favor by Alexander's flatterers, including the
historian Callisthenes.
At Gordium in Phrygia,
tradition records his cutting of the Gordian knot, which could only be
loosed by the man who was to rule Asia; but this story may be
apocryphal or at least distorted. At this point Alexander benefited
from the sudden death of Memnon, the competent Greek commander of the
Persian fleet.
From Gordium he pushed on
to Ancyra (modern Ankara) and thence south through Cappadocia and the
Cilician Gates (modern Külek Bogazi); a fever held him up for a time
in Cilicia. Meanwhile, Darius with his Grand Army had advanced
northward on the eastern side of Mt. Amanus. Intelligence on both
sides was faulty, and Alexander was already encamped by Myriandrus
(near modern Iskenderun, Turkey) when he learned that Darius was
astride his line of communications at Issus, north of Alexander's
position (autumn 333). Turning, Alexander found Darius drawn up along
the Pinarus River. In the battle that followed, Alexander won a
decisive victory. The struggle turned into a Persian rout and Darius
fled, leaving his family in Alexander's hands; the women were treated
with chivalrous care.
Conquest Of The Mediterranean
Coast And Egypt
From Issus Alexander
marched south into Syria and Phoenicia, his object being to isolate
the Persian fleet from its bases and so to destroy it as an effective
fighting force. The Phoenician cities Marathus and Aradus came over
quietly, and Parmenio was sent ahead to secure Damascus and its rich
booty, including Darius' war chest.
In reply to a letter from
Darius offering peace, Alexander replied arrogantly, recapitulating
the historic wrongs of Greece and demanding unconditional surrender to
himself as lord of Asia. After taking Byblos (modern Jubayl) and Sidon
(Arabic Sayda), he met with a check at Tyre, where he was refused
entry into the island city. He thereupon prepared to use all methods
of siegecraft to take it, but the Tyrians resisted, holding out for
seven months. In the meantime (winter 333-332) the Persians had
counterattacked by land in Asia Minor--where they were defeated by
Antigonus, the satrap of Greater Phrygia--and by sea, recapturing a
number of cities and islands.
While the siege of Tyre was in progress, Darius sent a new offer: he
would pay a huge ransom of 10,000 talents for his family and cede all
his lands west of the Euphrates. "I would accept," Parmenio is
reported to have said, "were I Alexander"; "I too," was the famous
retort, "were I Parmenio."
The storming of Tyre in
July 332 was Alexander's greatest military achievement; it was
attended with great carnage and the sale of the women and children
into slavery. Leaving Parmenio in Syria, Alexander advanced south
without opposition until he reached Gaza on its high mound; there
bitter resistance halted him for two months, and he sustained a
serious shoulder wound during a sortie. There is no basis for the
tradition that he turned aside to visit Jerusalem.
In November 332 he reached Egypt. The people welcomed him as their
deliverer, and the Persian satrap Mazaces wisely surrendered. At
Memphis Alexander sacrificed to Apis, the Greek term for Hapi, the
sacred Egyptian bull, and was crowned with the traditional double
crown of the pharaohs; the native priests were placated and their
religion encouraged.
He spent the winter
organizing Egypt, where he employed Egyptian governors, keeping the
army under a separate Macedonian command. He founded the city of
Alexandria near the western arm of the Nile on a fine site between the
sea and Lake Mareotis, protected by the island of Pharos, and had it
laid out by the Rhodian architect Deinocrates. He is also said to have
sent an expedition to discover the causes of the flooding of the Nile.
From Alexandria he
marched along the coast to Paraetonium and from there inland to visit
the celebrated oracle of the god Amon (at Siwah); the difficult
journey was later embroidered with flattering legends. On his reaching
the oracle in its oasis, the priest gave him the traditional
salutation of a pharaoh, as son of Amon; Alexander consulted the god
on the success of his expedition but revealed the reply to no one.
Later the incident was to contribute to the story that he was the son
of Zeus and, thus, to his "deification." In spring 331 he returned to
Tyre, appointed a Macedonian satrap for Syria, and prepared to advance
into Mesopotamia. His conquest of Egypt had completed his control of
the whole eastern Mediterranean coast.
In July 331 Alexander was at Thapsacus on the Euphrates. Instead of
taking the direct route down the river to Babylon, he made across
northern Mesopotamia toward the Tigris, and Darius, learning of this
move from an advance force sent under Mazaeus to the Euphrates
crossing, marched up the Tigris to oppose him. The decisive battle of
the war was fought on the plain of Gaugamela between Nineveh and
Arbela. Alexander pursued the defeated Persian forces for 35 miles to
Arbela, but Darius escaped with his Bactrian cavalry and Greek
mercenaries into Media.
Alexander now occupied Babylon, city and province; Mazaeus, who
surrendered it, was confirmed as satrap in conjunction with a
Macedonian troop commander, and quite exceptionally was granted the
right to coin. As in Egypt, the local priesthood was encouraged. Susa,
the capital, also surrendered, releasing huge treasures amounting to
50,000 gold talents; here Alexander established Darius' family in
comfort. Crushing the mountain tribe of the Ouxians, he now pressed on
over the Zagros range into Persia proper and, successfully turning the
Pass of the Persian Gates, held by the satrap Ariobarzanes, he entered
Persepolis and Pasargadae.
At Persepolis he
ceremonially burned down the palace of Xerxes, as a symbol that the
Panhellenic war of revenge was at an end; for such seems the probable
significance of an act that tradition later explained as a drunken
frolic inspired by Thaïs, an Athenian courtesan. In spring 330
Alexander marched north into Media and occupied its capital Ecbatana.
The Thessalians and Greek allies were sent home; henceforward he was
waging a purely personal war.
As Mazaeus' appointment indicated, Alexander's views on the empire
were changing. He had come to envisage a joint ruling people
consisting of Macedonians and Persians, and this served to augment the
misunderstanding that now arose between him and his people. Before
continuing his pursuit of Darius, who had retreated into Bactria, he
assembled all the Persian treasure and entrusted it to Harpalus, who
was to hold it at Ecbatana as chief treasurer. Parmenio was also left
behind in Media to control communications; the presence of this older
man had perhaps become irksome.
In midsummer 330 Alexander set out for the eastern provinces at a high
speed via Rhagae (modern Rayy, near Tehran) and the Caspian Gates,
where he learned that Bessus, the satrap of Bactria, had deposed
Darius. After a skirmish near modern Shahrud, the usurper had Darius
stabbed and left him to die. Alexander sent his body for burial with
due honors in the royal tombs at Persepolis.
Campaign Eastward - To Central
Asia
Darius' death left no
obstacle to Alexander's claim to be Great King, and a Rhodian
inscription of this year (330) calls him "lord of Asia"--i.e., of the
Persian Empire; soon afterward his Asian coins carry the title of
king.
Crossing the Elburz
Mountains to the Caspian, he seized Zadracarta in Hyrcania and
received the submission of a group of satraps and Persian notables,
some of whom he confirmed in their offices; in a diversion westward,
perhaps to modern Amol, he reduced the Mardi, a mountain people who
inhabited the Elburz Mountains. He also accepted the surrender of
Darius' Greek mercenaries.
His advance eastward was
now rapid. In Aria he reduced Satibarzanes, who had offered submission
only to revolt, and he founded Alexandria of the Arians (modern
Herat). At Phrada in Drangiana (either near modern Nad-e 'Ali in
Seistan or farther north at Farah), he at last took steps to destroy
Parmenio and his family. Philotas, Parmenio's son, commander of the
elite Companion cavalry, was implicated in an alleged plot against
Alexander's life, condemned by the army, and executed; and a secret
message was sent to Cleander, Parmenio's second in command, who
obediently assassinated him.
This ruthless action
excited widespread horror but strengthened Alexander's position
relative to his critics and those whom he regarded as his father's
men. All Parmenio's adherents were now eliminated and men close to
Alexander promoted. The Companion cavalry was reorganized in two
sections, each containing four squadrons (now known as hipparchies);
one group was commanded by Alexander's oldest friend, Hephaestion, the
other by Cleitus, an older man. From Phrada, Alexander pressed on
during the winter of 330-329 up the valley of the Helmand River,
through Arachosia, and over the mountains past the site of modern
Kabul into the country of the Paropamisadae, where he founded
Alexandria by the Caucasus.
Bessus was now in Bactria raising a national revolt in the eastern
satrapies with the usurped title of Great King. Crossing the Hindu
Kush northward over the Khawak Pass (11,650 feet), Alexander brought
his army, despite food shortages, to Drapsaca (sometimes identified
with modern Banu [Andarab], probably farther north at Qunduz);
outflanked, Bessus fled beyond the Oxus (modern Amu Darya), and
Alexander, marching west to Bactra-Zariaspa (modern Balkh [Wazirabad]
in Afghanistan), appointed loyal satraps in Bactria and Aria. Crossing
the Oxus, he sent his general Ptolemy in pursuit of Bessus, who had
meanwhile been overthrown by the Sogdian Spitamenes. Bessus was
captured, flogged, and sent to Bactra, where he was later mutilated
after the Persian manner (losing his nose and ears); in due course he
was publicly executed at Ecbatana.
From Maracanda (modern Samarkand) Alexander advanced by way of
Cyropolis to the Jaxartes (modern Syrdarya), the boundary of the
Persian Empire. There he broke the opposition of the Scythian nomads
by his use of catapults and, after defeating them in a battle on the
north bank of the river, pursued them into the interior.
On the site of modern
Leninabad (Khojent) on the Jaxartes, he founded a city, Alexandria
Eschate, "the farthest." Meanwhile, Spitamenes had raised all Sogdiana
in revolt behind him, bringing in the Massagetai, a people of the
Shaka confederacy. It took Alexander until the autumn of 328 to crush
the most determined opponent he encountered in his campaigns. Later in
the same year he attacked Oxyartes and the remaining barons who held
out in the hills of Paraetacene (modern Tadzhikistan); volunteers
seized the crag on which Oxyartes had his stronghold, and among the
captives was his daughter, Roxana. In reconciliation Alexander married
her, and the rest of his opponents were either won over or crushed.
An incident that occurred at Maracanda widened the breach between
Alexander and many of his Macedonians. He murdered Cleitus, one of his
most trusted commanders, in a drunken quarrel; but his excessive
display of remorse led the army to pass a decree convicting Cleitus
posthumously of treason. The event marked a step in Alexander's
progress toward Eastern absolutism, and this growing attitude found
its outward expression in his use of Persian royal dress.
Shortly afterward, at
Bactra, he attempted to impose the Persian court ceremonial, involving
prostration (proskynesis), on the Greeks and Macedonians too; but to
them this custom, habitual for Persians entering the king's presence,
implied an act of worship and was intolerable before a man. Even
Callisthenes, historian and nephew of Aristotle, whose ostentatious
flattery had perhaps encouraged Alexander to see himself in the role
of a god, refused to abase himself.
Macedonian laughter
caused the experiment to founder, and Alexander abandoned it. Shortly
afterward, however, Callisthenes was held to be privy to a conspiracy
among the royal pages and was executed (or died in prison; accounts
vary); resentment of this action alienated sympathy from Alexander
within the Peripatetic school of philosophers, with which Callisthenes
had close connections.
Invasion of India.
In early summer 327
Alexander left Bactria with a reinforced army under a reorganized
command. If Plutarch's figure of 120,000 men has any reality, however,
it must include all kinds of auxiliary services, together with
muleteers, camel drivers, medical corps, peddlers, entertainers,
women, and children; the fighting strength perhaps stood at about
35,000.
Recrossing the Hindu Kush,
probably by Bamian and the Ghorband Valley, Alexander divided his
forces. Half the army with the baggage under Hephaestion and Perdiccas,
both cavalry commanders, was sent through the Khyber Pass, while he
himself led the rest, together with his siege train, through the hills
to the north. His advance through Swat and Gandhara was marked by the
storming of the almost impregnable pinnacle of Aornos, the modern
Pir-Sar, a few miles west of the Indus and north of the Buner River,
an impressive feat of siegecraft.
In spring 326, crossing
the Indus near Attock, Alexander entered Taxila, whose ruler, Taxiles,
furnished elephants and troops in return for aid against his rival
Porus, who ruled the lands between the Hydaspes (modern Jhelum) and
the Acesines (modern Chenab). In June Alexander fought his last great
battle on the left bank of the Hydaspes. He founded two cities there,
Alexandria Nicaea (to celebrate his victory) and Bucephala (named
after his horse Bucephalus, which died there); and Porus became his
ally.
How much Alexander knew of India beyond the Hyphasis (probably the
modern Beas) is uncertain; there is no conclusive proof that he had
heard of the Ganges. But he was anxious to press on farther, and he
had advanced to the Hyphasis when his army mutinied, refusing to go
farther in the tropical rain; they were weary in body and spirit, and
Coenus, one of Alexander's four chief marshals, acted as their
spokesman. On finding the army adamant, Alexander agreed to turn back.
On the Hyphasis he erected 12 altars to the 12 Olympian gods, and on
the Hydaspes he built a fleet of 800 to 1,000 ships. Leaving Porus, he
then proceeded down the river and into the Indus, with half his forces
on shipboard and half marching in three columns down the two banks.
The fleet was commanded by Nearchus, and Alexander's own captain was
Onesicritus; both later wrote accounts of the campaign. The march was
attended with much fighting and heavy, pitiless slaughter; at the
storming of one town of the Malli near the Hydraotes (Ravi) River,
Alexander received a severe wound which left him weakened.
On reaching Patala, located at the head of the Indus delta, he built a
harbour and docks and explored both arms of the Indus, which probably
then ran into the Rann of Kutch. He planned to lead part of his forces
back by land, while the rest in perhaps 100 to 150 ships under the
command of Nearchus, a Cretan with naval experience, made a voyage of
exploration along the Persian Gulf. Local opposition led Nearchus to
set sail in September (325), and he was held up for three weeks until
he could pick up the northeast monsoon in late October. In September
Alexander too set out along the coast through Gedrosia (modern
Baluchistan), but he was soon compelled by mountainous country to turn
inland, thus failing in his project to establish food depots for the
fleet.
Craterus, a high-ranking officer, already had been sent off with the
baggage and siege train, the elephants, and the sick and wounded,
together with three battalions of the phalanx, by way of the Mulla
Pass, Quetta, and Kandahar into the Helmand Valley; from there he was
to march through Drangiana to rejoin the main army on the Amanis
(modern Minab) River in Carmania. Alexander's march through Gedrosia
proved disastrous; waterless desert and shortage of food and fuel
caused great suffering, and many, especially women and children,
perished in a sudden monsoon flood while encamped in a wadi. At
length, at the Amanis, he was rejoined by Nearchus and the fleet,
which also had suffered losses.
Consolidation Of The Empire
Alexander now proceeded
farther with the policy of replacing senior officials and executing
defaulting governors on which he had already embarked before leaving
India. Between 326 and 324 over a third of his satraps were superseded
and six were put to death, including the Persian satraps of Persis,
Susiana, Carmania, and Paraetacene; three generals in Media, including
Cleander, the brother of Coenus (who had died a little earlier), were
accused of extortion and summoned to Carmania, where they were
arrested, tried, and executed.
How far the rigour that
from now onward Alexander displayed against his governors represents
exemplary punishment for gross maladministration during his absence
and how far the elimination of men he had come to distrust (as in the
case of Philotas and Parmenio) is debatable; but the ancient sources
generally favourable to him comment adversely on his severity.
In spring 324 he was back in Susa, capital of Elam and administrative
centre of the Persian Empire; the story of his journey through
Carmania in a drunken revel, dressed as Dionysus, is embroidered, if
not wholly apocryphal. He found that his treasurer, Harpalus,
evidently fearing punishment for peculation, had absconded with 6,000
mercenaries and 5,000 talents to Greece; arrested in Athens, he
escaped and later was murdered in Crete. At Susa Alexander held a
feast to celebrate the seizure of the Persian Empire, at which, in
furtherance of his policy of fusing Macedonians and Persians into one
master race, he and 80 of his officers took Persian wives; he and
Hephaestion married Darius' daughters Barsine (also called Stateira)
and Drypetis, respectively, and 10,000 of his soldiers with native
wives were given generous dowries.
This policy of racial fusion brought increasing friction to
Alexander's relations with his Macedonians, who had no sympathy for
his changed concept of the empire. His determination to incorporate
Persians on equal terms in the army and the administration of the
provinces was bitterly resented. This discontent was now fanned by the
arrival of 30,000 native youths who had received a Macedonian military
training and by the introduction of Orientals from Bactria, Sogdiana,
Arachosia, and other parts of the empire into the Companion cavalry;
whether Orientals had previously served with the Companions is
uncertain, but if so they must have formed separate squadrons. In
addition, Persian nobles had been accepted into the royal cavalry
bodyguard. Peucestas, the new governor of Persis, gave this policy
full support to flatter Alexander; but most Macedonians saw it as a
threat to their own privileged position.
The issue came to a head at Opis (324), when Alexander's decision to
send home Macedonian veterans under Craterus was interpreted as a move
toward transferring the seat of power to Asia. There was an open
mutiny involving all but the royal bodyguard; but when Alexander
dismissed his whole army and enrolled Persians instead, the opposition
broke down. An emotional scene of reconciliation was followed by a
vast banquet with 9,000 guests to celebrate the ending of the
misunderstanding and the partnership in government of Macedonians and
Persians--but not, as has been argued, the incorporation of all the
subject peoples as partners in the commonwealth. Ten thousand veterans
were now sent back to Macedonia with gifts, and the crisis was
surmounted.
In summer 324 Alexander attempted to solve another problem, that of
the wandering mercenaries, of whom there were thousands in Asia and
Greece, many of them political exiles from their own cities. A decree
brought by Nicanor to Europe and proclaimed at Olympia (September 324)
required the Greek cities of the Greek League to receive back all
exiles and their families (except the Thebans), a measure that implied
some modification of the oligarchic regimes maintained in the Greek
cities by Alexander's governor Antipater. Alexander now planned to
recall Antipater and supersede him by Craterus; but he was to die
before this could be done.
In autumn 324 Hephaestion
died in Ecbatana, and Alexander indulged in extravagant mourning for
his closest friend; he was given a royal funeral in Babylon with a
pyre costing 10,000 talents. His post of chiliarch (grand vizier) was
left unfilled. It was probably in connection with a general order now
sent out to the Greeks to honour Hephaestion as a hero that Alexander
linked the demand that he himself should be accorded divine honours.
For a long time his mind
had dwelt on ideas of godhead. Greek thought drew no very decided line
of demarcation between god and man, for legend offered more than one
example of men who, by their achievements, acquired divine status.
Alexander had on several occasions encouraged favourable comparison of
his own accomplishments with those of Dionysus or Heracles. He now
seems to have become convinced of the reality of his own divinity and
to have required its acceptance by others. There is no reason to
assume that his demand had any political background (divine status
gave its possessor no particular rights in a Greek city); it was
rather a symptom of growing megalomania and emotional instability. The
cities perforce complied, but often ironically: the Spartan decree
read, "Since Alexander wishes to be a god, let him be a god."
In the winter of 324 Alexander carried out a savage punitive
expedition against the Cossaeans in the hills of Luristan. The
following spring at Babylon he received complimentary embassies from
the Libyans and from the Bruttians, Etruscans, and Lucanians of Italy;
but the story that embassies also came from more distant peoples, such
as Carthaginians, Celts, Iberians, and even Romans, is a later
invention. Representatives of the cities of Greece also came,
garlanded as befitted Alexander's divine status.
Following up Nearchus'
voyage, he now founded an Alexandria at the mouth of the Tigris and
made plans to develop sea communications with India, for which an
expedition along the Arabian coast was to be a preliminary. He also
dispatched Heracleides, an officer, to explore the Hyrcanian (i.e.,
Caspian) Sea.
Suddenly, in Babylon,
while busy with plans to improve the irrigation of the Euphrates and
to settle the coast of the Persian Gulf, Alexander was taken ill after
a prolonged banquet and drinking bout; 10 days later, on June 13, 323,
he died in his 33rd year; he had reigned for 12 years and eight
months. His body, diverted to Egypt by Ptolemy, the later king, was
eventually placed in a golden coffin in Alexandria. Both in Egypt and
elsewhere in the Greek cities he received divine honours.
No heir had been appointed to the throne, and his generals adopted
Philip II's half-witted illegitimate son, Philip Arrhidaeus, and
Alexander's posthumous son by Roxana, Alexander IV, as kings, sharing
out the satrapies among themselves, after much bargaining. The empire
could hardly survive Alexander's death as a unit. Both kings were
murdered, Arrhidaeus in 317 and Alexander in 310/309. The provinces
became independent kingdoms, and the generals, following Antigonus'
lead in 306, took the title of king
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