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Alexander the Great
"It is a lovely thing to live with great courage and die leaving an
everlasting fame."
Alexander The Great
Long before the birth of Christ, the land directly above what we know as
Greece today, was called Macedonia. Macedonia still exists, but it is
now Bulgaria, Yugoslavia and modern Greece. Macedonia was considered to
be part of ancient Greece, but the people of these two countries
couldn t be more different. No people in history ever gave so much to
the human race as the ancient Greeks. They produced architectural
monuments, four of the greatest dramatic actors who ever lived, one of
the most brilliant statesmen and two of the greatest historians.
Scientists, philosophers and artists all thrived in this country. The
political system we call democracy had its roots in this culture.
The Macedonians in comparison with their Greek neighbors were crude and
fierce in their outlook. They were a rough people. They never produced
any artists, philosophers, or great actors. But they produced Alexander
The Great - a man with a legacy so remarkable that it has challenged the
minds of men ever since.
Alexander was born to conquer the world. His life was bold and from
beginning to end, it was etched with dramatic clarity. Every important
event in his life brought him one step closer to fulfilling his
ambition. He was the first leaders, like Caesar and Napoleon, who partly
be accident and partly by design, set out to gather the whole world into
their fists, unify it, rule it and enlighten it.
But unlike the other great giants of history, Alexander was a shooting
star whose blaze of glory ended with his death, at not quite
thirty-three years old...
Alexander was born in 356 BC to King Philip of Macedonia and his wife,
Olympias. On the day of Alexander s birth, Philip was away in battle. A
courier brought Philip the message of his son s birth, along with two
other messages - Philip s horse had won first prize in the Olympic Games
and his army had just won a very important battle. With three pieces of
good news at once, Philip always thought his son s arrival into the
world came with an omen of good luck.
As Crown Prince of Macedonia and at that time, his father s only heir,
Alexander was raised to inherit his father s kingdom. Alexander was good
at sports and even as a young child showed a very ambitious streak. One
of his courtiers commented on how well he ran and suggested that he
compete in the Olympic foot races. Alexander refused and replied that we
would only run against kings, so that he could be sure that no one threw
the race in his favor.
As a young boy, Alexander began to show many of the traits that made him
famous - courage, cleverness and complete self-confidence. Once when
Alexander s father brought home several horses, one horse in particular
caught Alexander s eye. It was an enormous black horse and one that none
of King Philip s men seemed to be able to mount and ride. Alexander
approached his father and asked for the horse. On a dare and a bet from
his father, Alexander did what no one else had been able to do, mount
and ride the horse. The horse, Bucephalus, became one of the most famous
horses in history and for most of the sixteen years of his life was the
only horse that Alexander ever rode in battle. When Bucephalus died,
Alexander gave him a funeral worthy of a king and named a city after
him.
Alexander s education is said to have been the most expensive in
history. Philip persuaded Aristotle, the Greek philosopher and scientist
to be Alexander s tutor. In addition to the large sum of money paid to
Aristotle for his years of service as a teacher, Philip also agreed to
rebuild the town where Aristotle had been born (which Philip had
destroyed in a raid) and permit its exiled citizens to return.
Aristotle introduced Alexander to many things, but in particular he
instilled in Alexander the love of books. Alexander s favorite was
Homer s Iliad, which he learned by heart. Throughout his entire life,
whereever he was, Alexander slept with two things under his pillow - a
dagger for protection and a copy of the Iliad.
When Alexander was seventeen, his father left him temporarily in charge
of Macedonia while he attended state matters in Greece. While his father
was away, a tribe in a northern province, apparently hoping to take
advantage of Alexander s youth and inexperience started a revolt.
Alexander gathered his army, marched against the rebels, beat them in
battle and captured their chief city. He renamed their city after
himself Alexandropolis.
By the time Alexander was eighteen, things were not well between his
parents. What has started, as a love match between Philip and Olympias
had become a hateful and vengeful relationship. Philip decided to marry
again, taking a second Queen. Alexander, who had always had a good
relationship with his father, but loved his mother deeply, sided with
her. During the next two years Alexander and Philip held a troubled
truce. When Philip was assassinated, whispers emerged that his first
wife, Olympias was involved in the plot. Within days of Philip s death,
Olympias had her husband s second wife and her infant son murdered, so
as to not shed any doubt on Alexander s claim to the throne.
At twenty, Alexander was king of Macedonia. He set about restoring order
in Macedonia and Greece with a vengeance. During this time, a serious
revolt broke out in Thebes, a city in Greece. Alexander and his army
marched against Thebes and burned it to the ground. Over thirty thousand
Thebans were sold into slavery. In the entire city, Alexander spared
only one house - the home of a poet called Pindar, whose poetry
Alexander has always liked.
The battle of Thebes was the first of many atrocities that Alexander
committed. The memory of the battle lingered and Alexander s reputation
spread. He never had any difficulties in keeping the Greeks in line
after this campaign.
Alexander admired courage in all forms. Many times he spared the lives
of people who showed courage in the face of pain or death.
In 334 BC, Alexander set out to conquer Persia. No expedition like it
had ever been undertaken and few rival it since. Alexander s army was
small by that day s standard, but it was very efficient. Alexander was
also something of a military genius and he systematically set about to
overtake parts of Persia in a series of smaller and victorious battles.
He then moved on to Asia Minor, the Mediterranean coast and Egypt. By
the time Alexander was twenty-four most of the known world at that time
was under his rule.
In Egypt, Alexander founded Alexandria, which is still one of the chief
world ports today. When Alexandria was completed it was one of the most
impressive cities in the world. The streets were lettered or numbered
and it was the first city in history to have lights at night.
Four years after Alexander set out to conquer Persia he finally met the
Persian king in battle. Alexander won. The battle was called the Battle
of Arbela and marked the end of Persian power. Alexander became King of
Persia, along with being King of Macedonia, Greece, Egypt and Asia. He
was twenty-six.
Alexander married when he was twenty-eight. Because he had spent the
majority of his time since becoming an adult in Persia, it was no
surprise that he married a Persian princess. Everyone knew that
Alexander and his Queen were friends and liked each other. But because
Alexander spent most of his life surrounded by his male friends, rather
than seek relationships with women, the marriage was known as one of
duty to produce an heir than a love match for either Alexander or
Roxana.
Alexander s battle for India was his last battle of any consequence. He
won the battle against the great Indian king, Porus. But Alexander s
army was getting tired. They had been away from home and fighting for
over eight years. After overtaking more than 5000 towns and villages in
India, Alexander s army wanted to go home. They started the long trek
back to Macedonia. During this time, the army never lost a battle and
they never broke ranks. When they made it to Persia, two major events
happened. First, to further his political ties with Persia, especially
since he was heading back to Macedonia, Alexander decided to marry
another Persian princess. He also orchestrated the marriages of 9000 of
his men to Persian women, just to solidify the two countries. Second, he
watched his best friend, constant companion and general of his armies
die of fever. Alexander, mad with grief became a drunken wreck almost
overnight. He became manic in his dealings.
Alexander never returned to Greece. He died in Persia of fever, similar
in symptoms to Malaria. After he died, Alexander was buried in
Alexandia.
Roxana, Alexander s first wife and mother to his first born son, had the
second wife and her child murdered, hoping to secure Alexander s throne.
Roxana and her child were murdered as well, and Alexander s kingdom went
to one of Alexander s generals, rather than an heir.
Alexander The Great lived a life, which in human terms has never been
matched. His contributions to history, despite his faults, will never
dim. The stories of his exploits will live forever.
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