Sunday, August 4, 2019
Alexanders Empire :: essays research papers
 Alexander's Empire      The ancient Kingdom of Macedonia, situated in the north of modern Greece,  was established by Perdiccas I about 640 B.C. Perdiccas was a Dorian, although  the Macedonian tribes included Thracian and Illyrian elements. Originally a  semibarbarous and fragmented power, Macedon became tributary to Persia under the  Persian kings Darius I and Xerxes I and thereafter struggled to maintain itself  against Thracians and other barbarians and against the Greek cities of the  Chalcidice as well as Sparta and Athens.  A new stage began with Archelaus (d.399 B.C.), who centralized the kingdom  with a system of roads and forts; he also fostered the Hellenization of his  people by inviting famous Greek artists, Euripides among them, to his court.  Few regions gave much thought to Macedonia. The area was so primitive that  it seemed to belong to another age- it was a rude, brawling, heavy-drinking  country of dour peasants and landowning warriors. The language was Greek, but so  tainted by barbarian strains that Athenians could not understand it. Macedonia  remained an outland. Growth of trade in the early fourth century promoted the  rise of several cities, yet when Perdiccas III, king of Macedonia, fell in 359  B.C. while fighting the Illyrians the seaboard of his state was largely under  Athenian control or in the hands of the Chalcidian league, grouped about  Olynthus.  Philip (382-36), brother of the dead king, was made regent for the infant  heir, soon set aside his nephew, and became outright king.  Once power was his, the young monarch swiftly brought order to his domain  by armed force when necessary, by diplomatic guile whenever he could, Philip set  out to make Macedon the greatest power in the Greek world.  Alexander was born in 356 to the first wife of Philip. As a teenager  Alexander was educated by Athenian philosopher Aristotle. By the year 337 all of  the Greek city-states had been conquered or forced into an alliance by Philip.  He was planning to lead their joint forces for an invasion of the Persian empire  when he was assassinated in 336. Thus at the age of 20, Alexander became king of  the Macedonians.  After Philip's death, some Greek cities under Macedonian rule revolted. In  335 B.C. Alexander's army stormed the walls of the rebellious city of Thebes and  demolished the city. About 30,000 inhabitants were sold in slavery. Alexander's  action against Thebes discouraged, for a time, rebellion by other Greek cities  With Greece under control, Alexander turned to his fathers plan for  attacking the Persian Empire. In 334 B.C., he led an army of about 35,000  infantry and cavalry across the Hellespont from Europe to Asia.  					    
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