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The Wars of Alexander the Great PDF

98 Pages·2002·5.67 MB·English
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www.GetPedia.com * More than 500,000 Interesting Articles waiting for you . * The Ebook starts from the next page : Enjoy ! * Say hello to my cat "Meme" WALDEMAR HECKEL is Professor of Ancient History at the University of Calgary. His publications include numerous articles on the history of Alexander the Great, The Last Days and Testament of Alexander the Great (Stuttgart 1988) and The Marshals of Alexander's Empire (London 1992). Together with John Yardley he has produced the Penguin edition of Quintus Curtius Rufus: The History of Alexander (1984), a commentary on Justin's books on Alexander (OUP 1997) and most recently Livy: The Dawn of the Roman Empire for Oxford World's Classics (2000). PROFESSOR ROBERT O'NEILL, AO D. PHIL. (Oxon), Hon D. Litt. (ANU), FASSA, Fr Hist S, is the Series Editor of the Essential Histories. His wealth of knowledge and expertise shapes the series content and provides up-to-the-minute research and theory. Born in 1936 an Australian citizen, he served in the Australian army (1955-68) and has held a number of eminent positions in history circles, including the Chichele Professorship of the History of War at All Souls College, University of Oxford, 1987-2001, and the Chairmanship of the Board of the Imperial War Museum and the Council of the International Institute for Strategic Studies, London. He is the author of many books including works on the German Army and the Nazi party, and the Korean and Vietnam wars. Now based in Australia on his retirement from Oxford he is the Chairman of the Council of the Australian Strategic Policy Institute. Essential Histories The Wars of Alexander the Great 336-323 BC Essential Histories The Wars of Alexander the Great 336-323 BC Waldemar Heckel First published in Great Britain in 2002 by Osprey Publishing, For a complete list of titles available from Osprey Publishing Elms Court, Chapel Way, Botley, Oxford OX2 9LP UK please contact: Email: info@ospreypublishmg. com Osprey Direct UK, PO Box 140, © 2002 Osprey Publishing Limited Wellingborough, Northants, NN8 2FA, UK. Email: info@ospreydirect. co. uk All rights reserved. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study, research, criticism or review, as permitted under Osprey Direct USA, c/o MBI Publishing, the Copyright, Design and Patents Act, 1988, no part of this PO Box 1, 729 Prospect Ave, publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or Osceola, WI 54020, USA. transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, electrical, Email: info@ospreydirectusa. com chemical, mechanical, optical, photocopying, recording or www. ospreypublishing. com otherwise, without the prior written permission of the copyright owner Enquiries should be made to the Publishers. Every attempt has been made by the publisher to secure the appropriate permissions for material reproduced in this book. If there has been any oversight we will be happy to rectify the situation and written submission should be made to the Publishers. ISBN 1 84176 473 6 Editor: Rebecca Cullen Design: Ken Vail Graphic Design, Cambridge, UK Cartography by The Map Studio Index by David Worthington Picture research by Image Select International Origination by Grasmere Digital Imaging, Leeds, UK Printed and bound in China by L. Rex Printing Company Ltd. 02 03 04 05 06 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 Contents Introduction 7 Chronology 13 Background to war The decline of the city-states and the rise of Macedon 14 Warring sides The Persians, the Macedonians and allied troops 22 Outbreak Alexander's rise to power 28 The fighting Alexander conquers an empire 35 Portrait of a soldier Two generals and a satrap 72 The world around war Rome, Carthage and India 76 Portrait of a civilian A historian, athletes and courtesans 81 How the war ended The death of Alexander 84 Conclusion and consequences The struggle for succession 86 Further reading 90 Glossary 92 Index 94 Introduction The conquests of Alexander the Great form Mycenaean-Minoan 'Greeks'. Even after the a watershed between the world of the Greek fall of Troy ended what the historian city-state {polls) and the so-called Hellenistic Herodotus regarded as the first great struggle world, the eastern kingdoms, where between east and west, and after the collapse Alexander's successors applied a veneer of of the Bronze Age civilisations - under Greek culture and administration to a circumstances that are still not clear - new barbarian world. These ancient Near Eastern waves of Greek migrants splashed against the territories had always been the battleground shores of Asia Minor. From there, they spread between eastern and western civilisations, to the Black Sea coast and the Levant, and and would continue to be so well beyond eventually to the west as well. the chronological confines of the ancient By the sixth century BC, however, Greek world. settlements in Asia Minor became subject to Western contact with the Near East had the authority of the Lydians. This kingdom begun in the Bronze Age, in Hittite Asia had allied itself with the Medes, who ruled Minor, in the Orontes valley of Syria and in the Persians from Ecbatana (modern the Nile delta of Egypt. The spectacular Hamadan) until they were overthrown by frescoes and other artefacts of the prehistoric Cyrus the Great. Croesus, whose name is civilisations of the Aegean depict contact, synonymous with fabulous wealth, was the friendly and hostile, between foreigners and last of the Lydian rulers and, in 548/7, he raised an army against the Persian upstart, misled by Greek oracles into thinking that he would acquire a greater empire. After an indecisive battle near the Halys, the Lydian troops disbanded, as was their practice - for it was not customary to wage war over the winter months - but Cyrus brought his Persians up to the walls of Sardis, seized its citadel and put Croesus to death. (Greek tradition was embarrassed by the oracle's deception and maintained that Apollo intervened at the last minute, saving Croesus from the flames and transporting him to an idyllic world. ) Between 547 and 540 Cyrus's generals subdued coastal Asia Minor, while he turned his attention to the Elamites and Babylonians. By the end of the century, the Achaemenids ruled an empire that extended from the Indus to the Aegean and from Samarkand to the first cataracts of the Nile. The title 'King of Kings' was thus no empty boast. Marble head of Alexander (Greek Ministry of Culture) 8 Essential Histories • The Wars of Alexander the Great Persian domination of Greek Asia Minor administered as the Persian satrapy of threatened the city-states of the peninsula to Skudra, and at some point thereafter the the west, as well as the islands that lay in Persians received the submission of between. In 513 Darius I crossed the Macedon. Even the isolationist states to the Hellespont (Dardanelles), the narrow strait south, in particular Sparta, were forced to that separates the Gallipoli peninsula of take notice. Europe from what is today Asiatic Turkey. The Athenians and the Eretrians of Portions of Thrace were annexed and Euboea had aided a rebellion by the Ionians, Introduction 9 The tomb of Cyrus the Great, the founder of the Persian Empire (d. 530 BC). Alexander had Poulamachos, a Macedonian, impaled for desecrating the tomb. (TRIP) descendants, the Gortyae, fought Alexander at Gaugamela. Then Datis landed on Athenian soil at Marathon; however, contrary to expectation, a predominantly Athenian force defeated the Persian army. The Athenian victory provided an immense boost to Greek confidence, which would be put to the test ten years later, when Darius' son and successor, Xerxes, came dangerously close to defeating a coalition of Greeks and adding the lower Balkans to the Persian Empire. Only the great naval victory at Salamis (summer 480) prevented the Persian juggernaut from crushing all resistance in Greece. That victory hastened the retreat of Xerxes with the bulk of his army; those who remained under Mardonius were dealt the decisive blow on the battlefield of Plataea in 479. The ill-fated expedition of Xerxes resulted in strained but stable relations between Greece and Persia, a balance of power that in some respects resembled the Gold War of the twentieth century. The Greek world, however, was itself divided and polarised, with the Spartans exercising hegemony over the Peloponnesian League as a counterweight to Athens, which, under the guise of liberating the Hellenes from Persia, had converted the Delian League - originally, a confederacy of autonomous allies - into an empire. By the middle of the fifth century, Athens was reaping the financial benefits of the incoming tribute and unashamedly extolling the virtues of 'power politics'. The inevitable clash of Demosthenes on Persia a futile (as it turned out) attempt to throw 'I consider the Great King to be the off the Persian yoke (499/498-494/493). common enemy of all the Greeks... Nor Victorious over the rebels, Darius launched a do I see the Greeks having a common punitive campaign against their supporters: friendship with one another, but some in 490 his general, Datis, crossed the Aegean trust the King more than they do some and destroyed the city of the Eretrians, many of their own [race]. ' of whom were subsequently enslaved in the Demosthenes 14. 3 heart of the Persian Empire - their

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I really enjoyed this little morsel of history, so much so that I tried another another book from the Essential Histories series when reading on another topic.Before mentioning the good/bad about the book I should say that I'm not typically a reader of history and I had little or no knowledge of anc
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