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Wars of Alexander the Great

The wars of Alexander the Great (Greek: Πόλεμοι του Μεγάλου Αλεξάνδρου) were a series of conquests that were carried out by Alexander III of Macedon from 336 BC to 323 BC. They began with battles against the Achaemenid Persian Empire, then under the rule of Darius III of Persia. After Alexander's chain of victories against Achaemenid Persia, he began a campaign against local chieftains and warlords that stretched as far from Greece as the region of Punjab in South Asia. By the time of his death, he ruled over most regions of Greece and the conquered Achaemenid Empire (including much of Persian Egypt); he did not, however, manage to conquer the Indian subcontinent in its entirety as was his initial plan. Despite his military accomplishments, Alexander did not provide any stable alternative to the rule of the Achaemenid Empire,[1] and his untimely death threw the vast territories he conquered into a series of civil wars, commonly known as the Wars of the Diadochi.

Wars of Alexander the Great

Alexander, depicted with his horse Bucephalus, fighting Persian king Darius III, from the Alexander Mosaic of Pompeii (Naples National Archaeological Museum, Italy)
Date336–323 BC
(13 years)
Location
Result

Greek victory:

Belligerents

Kingdom of Macedonia

Achaemenid Empire


In Balkans:
In Western and Central Asia:
Commanders and leaders

Alexander assumed kingship over ancient Macedonia following the assassination of his father, Philip II of Macedon (r. 359–336 BC). During his two-decades on the throne, Philip II had unified[2] the poleis (Greek city-states) of mainland Greece (with Macedonian hegemony) under the League of Corinth.[3] Alexander proceeded to solidify Macedonian rule by quashing a rebellion that took place in the southern Greek city-states, and also staged a short but bloody excursion against the city-states to the north. He then proceeded east in order to carry out his plans to conquer the Achaemenid Empire. His campaign of conquests from Greece spanned across Anatolia, Syria, Phoenicia, Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia, Afghanistan, and India. He extended the boundaries of his Macedonian Empire as far east as the city of Taxila in modern-day Pakistan.

Prior to his death, Alexander had also made plans for a Hellenic military and mercantile expansion into the Arabian Peninsula, after which he planned to turn his armies to Carthage, Rome, and the Iberian Peninsula in the west. However, the Diadochi (his political rivals) abandoned these plans after he died; instead, within a few years of Alexander's death, the Diadochi began a series of military campaigns against each other and divided the territories of the Macedonian Empire among themselves,[4] triggering 40 years of warfare during the Hellenistic period.

Background

 
The Kingdom of Macedon in 332 BC

In 336, Philip II was assassinated by the captain of his bodyguard, Pausanias.[5] Philip's son, and previously designated heir, Alexander, was proclaimed king by the Macedonian noblemen and army.[6] He also succeeded his father as head of the League of Corinth, a confederation of Greek states that were under the hegemony of Macedonia in order to combat the Achaemenid Empire.[7]

News of Philip's death roused many states into revolt, including Thebes, Athens, Thessaly, as well as the Thracian tribes to the north of Macedon. When news of the revolt reached Alexander, he took quick action. Although his advisers recommended the use of diplomacy, Alexander ignored the advice and instead proceeded to muster together his Macedonian cavalry of 3,000 men. Together, the army rode south towards Thessaly (Macedon's immediate neighbor to the south). When he found the Thessalian army blocking the pass between Mount Olympus and Mount Ossa, he had his men ride over Mount Ossa. When the Thessalians awoke, they found Alexander at their rear. The Thessalians quickly surrendered, and their cavalry was added to Alexander's force. He then proceeded south, towards the Peloponnese.[8]

Alexander stopped at Thermopylae, where he was recognized as the leader of the Sacred League before heading south to Corinth. Athens sued for peace and Alexander received the envoy and pardoned anyone involved with the uprising. At Corinth, he was given the title 'Hegemon' of the Greek forces against the Persians. Whilst at Corinth, he heard the news of a Thracian uprising in the north.[9]

Balkan campaign

Before crossing to Asia, Alexander wanted to safeguard his northern borders and, in the spring of 335 BC, he advanced into Thrace to deal with the revolt, which was led by the Illyrians and Triballi. At Mount Haemus, the Macedonian army attacked and defeated a Thracian garrison manning the heights. The Macedonians were then attacked in the rear by the Triballi, who were crushed in turn. Alexander then advanced on to the Danube, encountering the Getae tribe on the opposite shore. The Getae army retreated after the first cavalry skirmish, leaving their town to the Macedonian army.[10] News then reached Alexander that Cleitus, King of Illyria, and King Glaukias of the Taulantii were in open revolt against Macedonian authority. Alexander defeated each in turn, forcing Cleitus and Glaukias to flee with their armies, leaving Alexander's northern frontier secure.[11]

While he was triumphantly campaigning north, the Thebans and Athenians rebelled once more. Alexander reacted immediately, but, while the other cities once again hesitated, Thebes decided to resist with the utmost vigor. This resistance was useless, however, as the city was razed to the ground amid great bloodshed and its territory divided between the other Boeotian cities. The end of Thebes cowed Athens into submission, leaving all of Greece at least outwardly at peace with Alexander.[12]

Persia

Asia Minor

In 334 BC, Alexander crossed the Hellespont into Asia. It took over one hundred triremes (triple-banked galleys) to transport the entire Macedonian army, but the Persians decided to ignore the movement.[13]

In these early months, Darius still refused to take Alexander seriously or mount a serious challenge to Alexander's movements. Memnon of Rhodes, the Greek mercenary who aligned himself with the Persians, advocated for a scorched earth strategy. He wanted the Persians to destroy the land in front of Alexander, which he hoped would force Alexander's army to starve, and then to turn back. The satraps in Anatolia rejected this advice, considering it their duty to defend their land.[14] Eventually, with Alexander advancing deeper into Persian territory, Darius ordered all five satraps of the Anatolian provinces to pool their military resources together and confront Alexander. This army was guided by Memnon, while absolute command was split among the five satraps.[15]

Battle of the Granicus River

 
Map of what would become Alexander's empire

The Battle of the Granicus River in May 334 BC was fought in Northwestern Asia Minor (modern-day Turkey), near the site of Troy. After crossing the Hellespont, Alexander advanced up the road to the capital of the Satrapy of Phrygia. The various satraps of the Persian Empire gathered their forces at the town of Zelea and offered battle on the banks of the Granicus River. Alexander ultimately fought many of his battles on a river bank. By doing so, he was able to minimize the advantage the Persians had in numbers. In addition, the deadly Persian chariots were useless on a cramped, muddy river bank.[citation needed]

Arrian, Diodorus, and Plutarch all mention the battle, with Arrian providing the most detail. The Persians placed their cavalry in front of their infantry, and drew up on the right (east) bank of the river. The Macedonian line was arrayed with the heavy Phalanxes in the middle, Macedonian cavalry led by Alexander on the right, and allied Thessalian cavalry led by Parmenion on the left.[16] The Persians expected the main assault to come from Alexander's position and moved units from their center to that flank.[citation needed]

 
Hellenistic marble bust of Alexander dating from 2nd-1st century BC, possibly from Alexandria, Egypt, now at the British Museum

Alexander's second-in-command, Parmenion, suggested crossing the river upstream and attacking at dawn the next day, but Alexander attacked immediately. He ordered a small group of cavalry and light infantry to attack from the Macedonian right to draw the Persians off the bank and into the river. Seeing that he had broken the Persian line, Alexander led his horse companions in oblique order further to the right in order to outflank the Persians and buy time for his infantry to cross the river.[16] Several high-ranking Persian nobles were killed by Alexander himself or his bodyguards, although Alexander was stunned by an axe-blow from a Persian nobleman named Spithridates. Before the noble could deal a death-blow, however, he was himself killed by Cleitus the Black. The Macedonian cavalry opened a hole in the Persian line as the Macedonian infantry advanced, forcing the enemy back and eventually breaking their center. The Persian cavalry turned and fled the battlefield, and the Greek mercenary infantry they held in reserve were encircled by the Macedonians and slaughtered; only around two-thousand of which survived, and were sent back to Macedonia for labor.[17]

Alexander consolidates support in Asia Minor

After the battle, Alexander buried the dead Greeks and Persians and sent the captured Greek mercenaries back to Greece to work in the mines as an abject lesson for any Greek who decided to fight for the Persians. He sent some of the spoils back to Greece, including three hundred panoplies (complete Persian suits of armor) back to Athens to be dedicated in the Parthenon with the inscription "Alexander, son of Philip and the Greeks, Lacedaemonians (Spartans) excepted, these spoils from the barbarians who dwell in Asia".[18]

Antipater, whom Alexander had left in charge of Macedon in his absence, had been given a free hand to install dictators and tyrants wherever he saw fit in order to minimize the risk of a rebellion. As he moved deeper into Persia, however, the threat of trouble seemed to grow. Many of these towns had been ruled for generations by heavy handed tyrants, so in these Persian towns, he did the opposite of what he did in Greece. Wanting to appear to be a liberator, he freed the population and allowed self-government. As he continued marching into Persia, he saw that his victory at Granicus had been lost on no one. Town after town seemed to surrender to him. The satrap at Sardis, as well as his garrison, was among the first of many satraps to capitulate.[citation needed]

As these satraps gave up, Alexander appointed new ones to replace them, and claimed to distrust the accumulation of absolute power into anyone's hands. There appeared to be little change from the old system. Alexander, however, appointed independent boards to collect tribute and taxes from the satrapies, which appeared to do nothing more than improve the efficiency of government. The true effect, however, was to separate the civil from the financial function of these satrapies, thus ensuring that these governments, while technically independent of him, never truly were. Otherwise, he allowed the inhabitants of these towns to continue as they always had, and made no attempt to impose Greek customs on them. Meanwhile, ambassadors from other Greek cities in Asia Minor came to Alexander, offering submission if he allowed their 'democracies' to continue. Alexander granted their wish, and allowed them to stop paying taxes to Persia, but only if they joined the League of Corinth. By doing so, they promised to provide monetary support to Alexander.[citation needed]

Siege of Halicarnassus

 
Map of Halicarnassus at the time of the siege

The Siege of Halicarnassus was undertaken in 334 BC. Alexander, who had a weak navy, was constantly being threatened by the Persian navy. It continuously attempted to provoke an engagement with Alexander, who would have none of it. Eventually, the Persian fleet sailed to Halicarnassus, in order to establish a new defense. Ada of Caria, the former queen of Halicarnassus, had been driven from her throne by her usurping brother. When he died, Darius had appointed Orontobates satrap of Caria, which included Halicarnassus in its jurisdiction. On the approach of Alexander in 334 BC, Ada, who was in possession of the fortress of Alinda, surrendered the fortress to him. Alexander and Ada appear to have formed an emotional connection. He called her "mother", finding her more amicable than his megalomaniacal snake-worshiping mother Olympias. In return for his support, Ada gave Alexander gifts, and even sent him some of the best cooks in Asia Minor, realizing that Alexander had a sweet tooth. In the past, Alexander had referred to his biological father, Philip, as his "so-called" father, and preferred to think of the deity Amon Zeus as his actual father. Thus, he had finally managed to divorce himself from both of his biological parents.[citation needed]

Orontobates and Memnon of Rhodes entrenched themselves in Halicarnassus. Alexander had sent spies to meet with dissidents inside the city, who had promised to open the gates and allow Alexander to enter. When his spies arrived, however, the dissidents were nowhere to be found. A small battle resulted, and Alexander's army managed to break through the city walls. Memnon, however, now deployed his catapults, and Alexander's army fell back. Memnon then deployed his infantry, and shortly before Alexander would have received his first (and only) defeat, his infantry managed to break through the city walls, surprising the Persian forces and killing Orontobates. Memnon, realizing the city was lost, set fire to it and withdrew with his army. A strong wind caused the fire to destroy much of the city. Alexander then committed the government of Caria to Ada; and she, in turn, formally adopted Alexander as her son, ensuring that the rule of Caria passed unconditionally to him upon her eventual death.[citation needed]

Syria

Shortly after the battle, Memnon died. His replacement was a Persian who had spent time in Macedonia called Pharnabazus. He disrupted Alexander's supply routes by taking Aegean islands near the Hellespont and by fomenting rebellion in southern Greece. Meanwhile, Darius took the Persian army to intercept Alexander.

Alexander marched his army east through Cappadocia, where, for a stretch of nearly 150 km (93 mi), there was no water. As his army approached Mount Taurus, they found only one route through which to pass, which was a narrow defile called "The Gates". The defile was very narrow, and could have been easily defended. However, the Persian satrap of Cappadocia had an inflated view of his own abilities. He had been at the Battle of the Granicus River, and had believed that Memnon's scorched Earth strategy would work here. He didn't realize that the different circumstances of the terrain made that strategy useless. Had he mounted a credible defence of the defile, Alexander would have been easily repulsed. He left only a small contingent to guard the defile, and took his entire army to destroy the plain that lay ahead of Alexander's army. The Persian contingent that was supposed to guard the defile soon abandoned it, and Alexander passed through without any problems. Alexander supposedly said after this incident that he had never been so lucky in his entire career.[citation needed]

After reaching Mount Taurus, Alexander's army found a stream that flowed from the mountain with water that was ice cold. Not thinking, Alexander jumped into the stream, suffered a cramp and then a convulsion, and was pulled out nearly dead. He quickly developed pneumonia, but none of his physicians would treat him, because they feared that, if he died, they would be held responsible. One physician named Philip, who had treated Alexander since he was a child, agreed to treat him. Although he soon fell into a coma, he eventually recovered.[citation needed]

Battle of Issus

 
Alexander's decisive attack

The Battle of Issus took place in southern Anatolia on November 333 BC.[7] After Alexander's forces defeated the Persians at the Battle of the Granicus, Darius took personal charge of his army, gathered a large army from the depths of the empire, and maneuvered to cut the Greek line of supply, requiring Alexander to countermarch his forces, setting the stage for the battle near the mouth of the Pinarus River and south of the village of Issus. Darius was apparently unaware that, by deciding to stage the battle on a river bank, he was minimizing the numerical advantage his army had over Alexander's.[19]

Initially, Alexander chose what was apparently unfavorable ground. This surprised Darius who mistakenly elected to hold the wrong position while Alexander instructed his infantry to take up a defensive posture. Alexander personally led the more elite Greek Companion cavalry against the Persian left up against the hills, and cut up the enemy on the less encumbering terrain, thereby generating a quick rout. After achieving a breakthrough, Alexander demonstrated he could do the difficult thing and held the cavalry in check after it broke the Persian right. Alexander then mounted his beloved horse Bucephalus, took his place at the head of his Companion cavalry, and led a direct assault against Darius. The horses that were pulling Darius' chariot were injured, and began tossing at the yoke. Darius, about to fall off his chariot, instead jumped off. He threw his royal diadem away, mounted a horse, and fled the scene. The Persian troops, realizing they had lost, either surrendered or fled with their hapless king. The Macedonian cavalry pursued the fleeing Persians for as long as there was light. As with most ancient battles, significant carnage occurred after the battle as pursuing Macedonians slaughtered their crowded, disorganized foe.[citation needed]

The invading troops led by Alexander were outnumbered more than 2:1, yet they defeated the army personally led by Darius III of Achaemenid Persia. The battle was a decisive Macedonian victory and it marked the beginning of the end of Persian power. It was the first time the Persian army had been defeated with the King present on the field. Darius left his wife and an enormous amount of treasure behind as his army fled. The greed of the Macedonians helped to persuade them to keep going, as did the large number of Persian concubines and prostitutes they picked up in the battle. Darius, now fearing for both his throne and his life, sent a letter to Alexander in which he promised to pay a substantial ransom in exchange for the prisoners of war, and agreeing to a treaty of alliance with and the forfeiture of half of his empire to Alexander. Darius received a response which began "King Alexander to Darius". In the letter, Alexander blamed Darius for his father's death and claimed Darius was but a vulgar usurper, who planned to take Macedonia. He agreed to return the prisoners without ransom, but told Darius that he and Alexander were not equals, and that Darius was to henceforth address Alexander as "King of all Asia". Darius was also curtly informed that, if he wanted to dispute Alexander's claim to the Achaemenid throne, that he would have to stand and fight, and that if he instead fled, Alexander would pursue and kill him. By this, Alexander revealed for the first time that his plan was to conquer the entire Persian Empire.[citation needed]

Siege of Tyre

 
A naval action during the siege, Drawing by André Castaigne

The Siege of Tyre occurred in 332 BC when Alexander set out to conquer Tyre, a strategic coastal base. Tyre was the site of the only remaining Persian port that did not capitulate to Alexander. Even by this point in the war, the Persian navy still posed a major threat to Alexander. Tyre, the largest and most important city-state of Phoenicia, was located both on the Mediterranean coast as well as a nearby Island with two natural harbors on the landward side. At the time of the siege, the city held approximately 40,000 people, though the women and children were evacuated to Carthage, an ancient Phoenician colony.[citation needed]

Alexander sent an envoy to Tyre, proposing a peace treaty, and asked to visit their city and offer sacrifices to their God Melqart. The Tyrians politely told Alexander that their town was neutral in the war, and that allowing him to offer sacrifices to Melqart would be tantamount to recognizing him as their king. Alexander considered building a causeway that would allow his army to take the town by force. His engineers didn't believe it would be possible to build such a massive structure, and so Alexander sent peace envoys once more to propose an alliance. The Tyrians believed this to be a sign of weakness, and so they killed the envoys and threw their bodies over the city wall. The dissent against Alexander's plans to take the city by force disappeared, and his engineers began to design the structure. Alexander began with an engineering feat that shows the true extent of his brilliance; as he could not attack the city from sea, he built a kilometer-long causeway stretching out to the island on a natural land bridge no more than two meters deep.[20] Alexander then constructed two towers 150 feet high and moved them to the end of the causeway. The Tyrians, however, quickly devised a counterattack. They used an old horse transport ship, filling it with dried branches, pitch, sulfur, and various other combustibles. They then lit it on fire, creating what we might call a primitive form of napalm, and ran it up onto the causeway. The fire spread quickly, engulfing both towers and other siege equipment that had been brought up.[citation needed]

This convinced Alexander that he would be unable to take Tyre without a navy. Fate would soon provide him with one. Presently, the Persian navy returned to find their home cities under Alexander's control. Since their allegiance was to their city, they were therefore Alexander's. He now had eighty ships. This coincided with the arrival of another hundred and twenty from Cyprus, which had heard of his victories and wished to join him. Alexander then sailed on Tyre and quickly blockaded both ports with his superior numbers. He had several of the slower galleys, and a few barges, refit with battering rams, the only known case of battering rams being used on ships. Alexander started testing the wall at various points with his rams, until he made a small breach in the south end of the island. He then coordinated an attack across the breach with a bombardment from all sides by his navy. Once his troops forced their way into the city, they easily overtook the garrison, and quickly captured the city. Those citizens that took shelter in the temple of Heracles were pardoned by Alexander. It is said that Alexander was so enraged at the Tyrians' defense and the loss of his men that he destroyed half the city. Alexander granted pardon to the king and his family, whilst 30,000 residents and foreigners taken were sold into slavery. There was a family, though, that Alexander gave a very high position in his government, but the only contact he ever had with them was when he spent the night with the wife of the household.[citation needed]

Egypt

Siege of Gaza

The stronghold at Gaza was built on a hill and was heavily fortified.[21] The inhabitants of Gaza and their Nabataean allies did not want to lose the lucrative trade which was controlled by Gaza.[21]

Batis, the commander of the fortress of Gaza, refused to surrender to Alexander. Though a eunuch, Batis was physically imposing and ruthless. After three unsuccessful assaults, the stronghold was finally taken by force,[22] but not before Alexander received a serious shoulder wound. When Gaza was taken, the male population was put to the sword and the women and children were sold into slavery. According to the Roman historian Quintus Curtius Rufus, Batis was killed by Alexander in imitation of Achilles' treatment of the fallen Hector. A rope was forced through Batis's ankles, probably between the ankle bone and the Achilles tendon, and Batis was dragged alive by chariot beneath the walls of the city. Alexander, who admired courage in his enemies and might have been inclined to show mercy to the brave Persian general, was infuriated at Batis's refusal to kneel and by the enemy commander's haughty silence and contemptuous manner.

With Gaza taken, Alexander marched into Egypt. His entry was described as "closer to a triumphant procession than an invasion."[7] They welcomed Alexander as their king, placed him on the throne of the Pharaohs,[7] giving him the crown of Upper and Lower Egypt, and named him the incarnation of Ra and Osiris. He set in motion plans to build Alexandria, and, though future tax revenues would be channeled to him, he left Egypt under the management of Egyptians, which helped to win him their support.[citation needed]

Mesopotamia

Battle of Gaugamela

The Battle of Gaugamela took place in 331 BC in what is now Iraqi Kurdistan, possibly near Dohuk,[23][24] and resulted in a decisive victory for the Macedonians. After the Siege of Gaza, Alexander advanced from Syria towards the heart of the Persian Empire, crossing both the Euphrates and the Tigris rivers without any opposition. Darius was building up a massive army, drawing men from the far reaches of his empire, and planned to use sheer numbers to crush Alexander. Though Alexander had conquered part of the Persian empire, it was still vast in area and in manpower reserves, and Darius could recruit more men than Alexander could dream of. Also present in the Persian army, a sign that the Persians were still very powerful, were the feared war elephants. While Darius had a significant advantage in number of soldiers, most of his troops weren't as organized as Alexander's.[citation needed]

 
Alexander's decisive attack

The battle began with the Persians already present at the battlefield. Darius had recruited the finest cavalry from his eastern satrapies. Darius placed himself in the center with his best infantry as was the tradition among Persian kings. The Macedonians were divided into two, with the right side of the army falling under the direct command of Alexander, and the left to Parmenion. Alexander began by ordering his infantry to march in phalanx formation towards the center of the enemy line. Darius now launched his chariots, which were intercepted by the Agrianians, and quickly rendered useless. Alexander, while leading the charge, formed his units into a giant wedge, which quickly smashed right into the weakened Persian center. Darius' charioteer was killed by a spear, and chaos rang out as everyone (incorrectly) thought it was Darius who had been killed. The Persian line then collapsed, and Darius fled. Darius escaped with a small core of his forces remaining intact, although the Bactrian cavalry and Bessus soon caught up with him. The remaining Persian resistance was quickly put down. In all, the Battle of Gaugamela was a disastrous defeat for the Persians, and possibly one of Alexander's finest victories.[citation needed]

Bactria

 
Alexander's first victory over the Persian king Darius, depicted in medieval European style in the 15th century romance The History of Alexander’s Battles

After the battle, Parmenion rounded up the Persian baggage train while Alexander and his own bodyguard chased after Darius in hopes of catching up. Substantial amounts of loot were gained following the battle, with 4,000 talents captured, as well as the King's personal chariot and bow. Darius planned to head further east, and raise another army to face Alexander while he and the Macedonians headed to one of the Persian capitals, Babylon, and then to another, Susa. There, Alexander found wealth that even he had never imagined possible. He paid his troops, and sent a sum of money six times the annual income of Athens to Greece, in order to put down a Spartan rebellion. Darius, meanwhile, dispatched letters to his eastern satrapies asking them to remain loyal. The satrapies, however, had other intentions, and quickly capitulated to Alexander.[citation needed]

Bessus fatally stabbed Darius, before fleeing eastwards. Darius was found by one of Alexander's scouts, moaning in pain. Darius, dying and chained to a baggage train being pulled by an ox, was lying next to a lone dog and his royal robes were covered in blood. He asked for water, and then, clutching the Macedonian soldier's hand, said that he was thankful that he would not die utterly alone and abandoned. Alexander, who may have felt genuinely saddened at Darius' death, buried Darius next to his Achaemenid predecessors in a full military funeral. Alexander claimed that, while dying, Darius had named Alexander as his successor to the Achaemenid throne and had asked Alexander to avenge his death, a striking irony since it was Alexander who had pursued him to his death. The Achaemenid Persian Empire is considered to have fallen with the death of Darius.[citation needed]

Alexander, viewing himself as the legitimate Achaemenid successor to Darius, viewed Bessus as a usurper to the Achaemenid throne, and eventually found and executed this 'usurper'. The majority of the existing satraps were to give their loyalty to Alexander, and be allowed to keep their positions. Alexander's troops now thought the war was over. Alexander was unsure how to deal with this, so he decided to scare them into submission. He gave a speech, arguing that their conquests were not secure, that the Persians did not want the Greeks to remain in their country, and that only the strength of Macedon could secure the country. The speech worked, and Alexander's troops agreed to remain with him. Alexander, now the Persian "King of Kings", adopted Persian dress and mannerisms, which, in time, the Greeks began to view as decadent and autocratic. They began to fear that Alexander, the king they had hero-worshiped, was turning into an eastern despot, although a young eunuch was eventually introduced to Alexander, and helped to keep his decadence in check.[citation needed]

Battle of the Persian Gate

 
Map of the Persian Gate

In the winter of 330 BC, at the Battle of the Persian Gate northeast of today's Yasuj in Iran, the Persian satrap Ariobarzanes led a last stand of the Persian forces.[25][26] After the Battle of Gaugamela in present-day Iraqi Kurdistan, Alexander had advanced to Babylon and Susa. A Royal Road connected Susa with the more eastern capitals of Persepolis and Pasargadae in Persis (the Persian Empire had several "capitals"), and was the natural venue for Alexander's continued campaign. After the conquest of Susa, Alexander split the Macedonian army into two parts. Alexander's general, Parmenion, took one half along the Royal Road, and Alexander himself took the route towards Persis. Passing into Persis required traversing the Persian Gates, a narrow mountain pass that lent itself easily to ambush.[27]

Believing that, after his victory over the Uxians, he would not encounter any more enemy forces during his march, Alexander neglected to send scouts ahead of his vanguard, and thus walked into Ariobarzanes' ambush. Once the Macedonian army had advanced sufficiently into the narrow pass, the Persians rained down boulders on them from the northern slopes. From the southern slope, Persian archers and catapults launched their projectiles. Alexander's army initially suffered heavy casualties, losing entire platoons at a time.[28] Ariobarzanes had hoped that defeating Alexander at the Persian Gates would allow the Persians more time to field another army, and possibly stop the Macedonian invasion altogether.

Ariobarzanes held the pass for a month,[29] but Alexander succeeded in encircling the Persian army and broke through the Persian defenses. The defeat of Ariobarzanes's forces at the Persian Gate removed the last military obstacle between Alexander and Persepolis. Upon his arrival at the city of Persepolis, Alexander appointed a general named Phrasaortes as successor of Ariobarzanes. Four months later, Alexander allowed the troops to loot Persepolis. A fire broke out and spread to the rest of the city. It is not clear if it had been a drunken accident, or a deliberate act of revenge for the burning of the Acropolis of Athens during the Second Greco-Persian War.[30]

Siege of the Sogdian Rock

After Alexander defeated the last of the Achaemenid Empire's forces in 328 BC, he began a new campaign to Ariana in 327 BC. He wanted to conquer the entire known world, which in Alexander's day, ended on the eastern end of India. Greeks of Alexander's day knew nothing of China, or any other lands east of Bactria. The Siege of the Sogdian Rock, a fortress located north of Bactria in Sogdiana, occurred in 327 BC. Oxyartes of Bactria had sent his wife and daughters, one of whom was Roxana, to take refuge in the fortress, as it was thought to be impregnable, and was provisioned for a long siege. When Alexander asked the defenders to surrender, they refused, telling him that he would need "men with wings" to capture it. Alexander asked for volunteers, whom he would reward if they could climb the cliffs under the fortress. There were some 300 men who from previous sieges had gained experience in rock-climbing. Using tent-pegs and strong flaxen lines, they climbed the cliff face at night, losing about 30 of their number during the ascent. In accordance with Alexander's orders, they signaled their success to the troops below by waving bits of linen, and Alexander sent a herald to shout the news to the enemy's advanced posts that they might now surrender without further delay. The defenders were so surprised and demoralized by this that they surrendered. Alexander fell in love with Roxana, whom ancient historians call the "most beautiful woman in the world" (not an uncommon claim for an ancient queen), on sight and eventually married her. The story of the siege is told by the Roman historian Arrian of Nicomedia, in Anabasis (section 4.18.4–19.6).[citation needed]

Indian Campaign

 
Campaigns and landmarks of Alexander's invasion of the Indian subcontinent

After the death of Spitamenes and his marriage to Roxana (Roshanak in Bactrian) to cement his relations with his new Central Asian satrapies, Alexander was finally free to turn his attention to the Indian subcontinent. Alexander invited all the chieftains of the former satrapy of Gandhara, in the north of what is now Jhelum River, Pakistani region (Modern History) to come to him and submit to his authority. Omphis, ruler of Taxila, whose kingdom extended from the Indus to the Hydaspes, complied, but the chieftains of some hill clans, including the Aspasioi and Assakenoi sections of the Kambojas (known in Indian texts also as Ashvayanas and Ashvakayanas), refused to submit.

In the winter of 327/326 BC, Alexander personally led a campaign against these clans; the Aspasioi of Kunar valley, the Guraeans of the Guraeus valley, and the Assakenoi of the Swat and Buner valleys.[31] A fierce contest ensued with the Aspasioi in which Alexander himself was wounded in the shoulder by a dart but eventually the Aspasioi lost the fight. Alexander then faced the Assakenoi, who fought bravely and offered stubborn resistance to Alexander in the strongholds of Massaga, Ora and Aornos. The fort of Massaga could only be reduced after several days of bloody fighting in which Alexander himself was wounded seriously in the ankle. According to Curtius, "Not only did Alexander slaughter the entire population of Massaga, but also did he reduce its buildings to rubbles".[32] A similar slaughter then followed at Ora, another stronghold of the Assakenoi. In the aftermath of Massaga and Ora, numerous Assakenians fled to the fortress of Aornos. Alexander followed close behind their heels and captured the strategic hill-fort after the fourth day of a bloody fight. This fight was the challenge Alexander was looking for, an army with huge elephants that were almost able to defeat Alexander.

 
A painting by Charles Le Brun depicting Alexander and Porus (Puru) during the Battle of the Hydaspes.

After gaining control of the former Achaemenid satrapy of Gandhara, including the city of Taxila, Alexander advanced into Punjab, where he engaged in battle against the regional king Porus, whom Alexander defeated in the Battle of the Hydaspes in 326 BC,[33][34] but was so impressed by the demeanor with which the king carried himself that he allowed Porus to continue governing his own kingdom as a satrap.[35] Although victorious, Battle of the Hydaspes was also the most costly battle fought by the Macedonians.[36]

East of Porus' kingdom, near the Ganges River, was the powerful Nanda Empire of Magadha. According to the Greek sources, the Nanda army was five times larger than the Macedonian army.[37] Fearing the prospects of facing the powerful Nanda Empire armies and exhausted by years of campaigning, his army mutinied at the Hyphasis River, refusing to march further east. This river thus marks the easternmost extent of Alexander's conquests.

As for the Macedonians, however, their struggle with Porus blunted their courage and stayed their further advance into India. For having done all they could do to repulse an enemy who mustered only twenty thousand infantry and two thousand horse, they violently opposed Alexander when he insisted on crossing the river Ganges also, the width of which, as they learned, was thirty-two furlongs, its depth a hundred fathoms, while its banks on the further side were covered with multitudes of men-at-arms and horsemen and elephants. For they were told that the kings of the Ganderites and Praesii were awaiting them with eighty thousand horsemen, two hundred thousand footmen, eight thousand chariots, and six thousand fighting elephants.[38]

 
Asia in 323 BC, the Nanda Empire and Gangaridai Empire of Ancient India in relation to Alexander's Empire and neighbors

Alexander spoke to his army and tried to persuade them to march further into India but Coenus pleaded with him to change his opinion and return, the men, he said, "longed to again see their parents, their wives and children, their homeland". Alexander, seeing the unwillingness of his men agreed and diverted. Along the way his army conquered the Malli clans (in modern-day Multan). In the territory of the Indus, he nominated his officer Peithon as a satrap, a position he would hold for the next ten years until 316 BC, and in the Punjab he left Eudemus in charge of the army, at the side of the satrap Porus and Taxiles. Eudemus became ruler of a part of the Punjab after their death. Both rulers returned to the West in 316 BC with their armies. In 321 BC, Chandragupta Maurya founded the Maurya Empire in India and overthrew the Greek satraps.

Return from India

Alexander now sent much of his army to Carmania (modern southern Iran) with his general Craterus, and commissioned a fleet to explore the Persian Gulf shore under his admiral Nearchus, while he led the rest of his forces back to Persia by the southern route through the Gedrosian Desert (now part of southern Iran and Makran now part of Pakistan). According to Plutarch, during the 60-day march through the desert, Alexander lost three-quarters of his army to the harsh desert conditions along the way.[39]

Battle record

Outcome Date War Action Opponent/s Type Country
(present day)
Rank
Victory 338-08-02 2 August 338 BC Philip II's submission of Greece Chaeronea Battle of Chaeronea .Thebans, Athenians and other Greek cities Battle Greece Prince

Victory 335 335 BC Balkan Campaign Mount Haemus Battle of Mount Haemus .Getae, Thracians Battle Bulgaria King

Victory 335-12 December 335 BC Balkan Campaign Pelium Siege of Pelium .Illyrians Siege Albania King

Victory 335-12 December 335 BC Balkan Campaign Pelium Battle of Thebes .Thebans Battle Greece King

Victory 334-05 May 334 BC Persian Campaign Granicus Battle of the Granicus .Achaemenid Empire Battle Turkey King

Victory 334 334 BC Persian Campaign Miletus Siege of Miletus .Achaemenid Empire, Milesians Siege Turkey King

Victory 334 334 BC Persian Campaign Halicarnassus Siege of Halicarnassus .Achaemenid Empire Siege Turkey King

Victory 333-11-05 5 November 333 BC Persian Campaign Issus Battle of Issus .Achaemenid Empire Battle Turkey King

Victory 332 January–July 332 BC Persian Campaign Tyre Siege of Tyre .Achaemenid Empire, Tyrians Siege Lebanon King

Victory 332-10 October 332 BC Persian Campaign Tyre Siege of Gaza .Achaemenid Empire Siege Palestine King

Victory 331-10-01 1 October 331 BC Persian Campaign Gaugamela Battle of Gaugamela .Achaemenid Empire Battle Iraq King

Victory 331-12 December 331 BC Persian Campaign Uxian Defile Battle of the Uxian Defile .Uxians Battle Iran King

Victory 330-01-20 20 January 330 BC Persian Campaign Persian Gate Battle of the Persian Gate .Achaemenid Empire Battle Iran King

Victory 329 329 BC Persian Campaign Cyropolis Siege of Cyropolis .Sogdians Siege Turkmenistan King

Victory 329-10 October 329 BC Persian Campaign Jaxartes Battle of Jaxartes .Scythians Battle Uzbekistan King

Victory 327 327 BC Persian Campaign Sogdian Rock Siege of the Sogdian Rock .Sogdians Siege Uzbekistan King

Victory 327 May 327 – March 326 BC Indian Campaign Cophen Cophen campaign .Aspasians Expedition Afghanistan and Pakistan King

Victory 326-04 April 326 BC Indian Campaign Aornos Siege of Aornos .Aśvaka Siege Pakistan King

Victory 326-05 May 326 BC Indian Campaign Hydaspes Battle of the Hydaspes .Porus Battle Pakistan King

Victory 325 November 326 – February 325 BC Indian Campaign Aornos Siege of Multan .Malli Siege Pakistan King

See also

References

  1. ^ Freeman, Charles. The Greek Achievement: The Foundation of the Western World. Allen Lane, 1999. ISBN 9780713992243. p.172: "In scope and extent his achievements ranked far above that of the Macedonian king, Alexander ("the Great") who was to demolish the empire in the 320s but fail to provide any stable alternative."
  2. ^ Bowra, C. Maurice (1994) [1957]. The Greek Experience. London: Phoenix Orion Books Ltd. p. 9. ISBN 1-85799-122-2.
  3. ^ Sacks, David, (1995), Encyclopedia of the Ancient Greek World, London: Constable and Co. Ltd, ISBN 0-09-475270-2, p. 16.
  4. ^ Strudwick 2013, p. 97.
  5. ^ "Philip II: king of Macedonia". Britannica. Encyclopædia Britannica, Inc.
  6. ^
    • McCarty, Alexander the Great, p. 30-31.
    • Plutarch, The Age of Alexander, p. 262-263
    • Renault, The Nature of Alexander the Great, p. 61-62
    • Fox, The Search For Alexander, p. 72
  7. ^ a b c d Strudwick 2013, p. 96.
  8. ^
    • McCarty, Alexander the Great, p. 31.
    • Plutarch, The Age of Alexander, p. 263
    • Renault, The Nature of Alexander the Great, p. 72
    • Fox, The Search For Alexander, p. 104
    • Bose, Alexander the Great's Art of Strategy, p. 95
  9. ^
    • Bose, Alexander the Great's Art of Strategy, p. 96.
    • Renault, The Nature of Alexander the Great, p. 72
  10. ^
    • Arrian, The Campaigns of Alexander, p. 44–48.
    • Renault, The Nature of Alexander the Great, p. 73–74.
  11. ^
    • Arrian, The Campaigns of Alexander, p. 50–54.
    • Renault, The Nature of Alexander the Great, p. 77.
  12. ^ Plutarch. Phocion. p. 17.
  13. ^ cf. Justinus, Marcus Junianus. Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus. p. 11.6.
  14. ^ Strauss, Barry. Masters of Command. p. 50.
  15. ^ Strauss, Barry. Masters of Command. p. 48.
  16. ^ a b Strauss, Barry. Masters of Command. p. 51.
  17. ^ Strauss, Barry. Masters of Command. pp. 51–53.
  18. ^ https://issuu.com/sonjcemarceva/docs/alexander_the_great_-_historical_so, see page 72 [Arrian, 1.16.7.]
  19. ^ Murison, C. L. (1972). "Darius III and the Battle of Issus". Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte. 21 (3): 399–423. ISSN 0018-2311. JSTOR 4435274.
  20. ^ Stafford, Ned (14 May 2007). "How geology came to help Alexander the Great". Nature.com. Retrieved 17 May 2007.
  21. ^ a b "Siege of Tyre and Gaza". Retrieved 19 January 2007.
  22. ^ . Leaders and Battles Database. Archived from the original on 22 October 2006. Retrieved 18 January 2007.
  23. ^ . www.kurdishglobe.net. Archived from the original on 13 April 2014.
  24. ^
  25. ^ Robinson, Cyril Edward (1929). A History of Greece. Methuen & Company Limited. ISBN 9781846031083.
  26. ^ Farrokh, Kaveh (24 April 2007). Shadows in the Desert: Ancient Persia at War (General Military). Osprey Publishing. p. 106. ISBN 978-1846031083. ISBN 978-1846031083.
  27. ^ For the identification, see Henry Speck, "Alexander at the Persian Gates. A Study in Historiography and Topography" in: American Journal of Ancient History n.s. 1.1 (2002) 15-234; more....
  28. ^ Quintus Curtius Rufus
  29. ^ N. G. L. Hammond (1992). "The Archaeological and Literary Evidence for the Burning of the Persepolis Palace", The Classical Quarterly 42 (2), p. 358-364.
  30. ^ John Prevas (2005). Envy of the Gods: Alexander the Great's Ill-Fated Journey Across Asia. Da Capo Press. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-306-81442-6.
  31. ^ Narain, A. K. (1965). Alexander the Great: Greece and Rome – 12. pp. 155–165.
  32. ^ Curtius in McCrindle, Op cit, p 192, J. W. McCrindle; History of Punjab, Vol I, 1997, p 229, Punajbi University, Patiala, (Editors): Fauja Singh, L. M. Joshi; Kambojas Through the Ages, 2005, p 134, Kirpal Singh.
  33. ^ Fuller, p. 198:

    "While the battle raged, Craterus forced his way over the Haranpur ford. When he saw that Alexander was winning a brilliant victory he pressed on and, as his men were fresh, took over the pursuit."

  34. ^ The Anabasis of Alexander/Book V/Chapter XVIII
  35. ^ The Anabasis of Alexander/Book V/Chapter XIX
  36. ^ Peter Connolly. Greece and Rome at War. Macdonald Phoebus Ltd, 1981, p. 66
  37. ^ Bongard-Levin, G. (1979). A History of India. Moscow: Progress Publishers. p. 264.
  38. ^ Plutarch, "Alexander". p. 62.
  39. ^ Plutarch, The Life of Alexander, 66.

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Alexander the Great in Fact and Fiction, edited by A.B. Bosworth, E.J. Baynham. New York: Oxford University Press (USA), 2002 (Paperback, ISBN 0-19-925275-0).
  • Baynham, Elizabeth. Alexander the Great: The Unique History of Quintus Curtius. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1998 (hardcover, ISBN 0-472-10858-1); 2004 (paperback, ISBN 0-472-03081-7).
  • Brill's Companion to Alexander the Great by Joseph Roisman (editor). Leiden: Brill Academic Publishers, 2003.
  • Cartledge, Paul. Alexander the Great: The Hunt for a New Past. Woodstock, NY; New York: The Overlook Press, 2004 (hardcover, ISBN 1-58567-565-2); London: PanMacmillan, 2004 (hardcover, ISBN 1-4050-3292-8); Vintage, 2005 (paperback, ISBN 1-4000-7919-5).
  • Dahmen, Karsten. The Legend of Alexander the Great on Greek and Roman Coins. Oxford: Routledge, 2006 (hardcover, ISBN 0-415-39451-1; paperback, ISBN 0-415-39452-X).
  • De Santis, Marc G. "At The Crossroads of Conquest". Military Heritage, December 2001. Volume 3, No. 3: 46–55, 97 (Alexander the Great, his military, his strategy at the Battle of Gaugamela and his defeat of Darius making Alexander the King of Kings).
  • Fuller, J.F. C; A Military History of the Western World: From the Earliest Times to the Battle of Lepanto; New York: Da Capo Press, Inc., 1987 and 1988. ISBN 0-306-80304-6
  • Gergel, Tania Editor Alexander the Great (2004) published by the Penguin Group, London ISBN 0-14-200140-6 Brief collection of ancient accounts translated into English
  • Larsen, Jakob A. O. "Alexander at the Oracle of Ammon", Classical Philology, Vol. 27, No. 1. (January 1932), pp. 70–75.
  • Lonsdale, David. Alexander the Great, Killer of Men: History's Greatest Conqueror and the Macedonian Way of War, New York, Carroll & Graf, 2004, ISBN 0-7867-1429-8
  • Pearson, Lionel Ignacius Cusack. The Lost Histories of Alexander the Great. Chicago Ridge, IL: Ares Publishers, 2004 (paperback, ISBN 0-89005-590-4).
  • Thomas, Carol G. Alexander the Great in his World (Blackwell Ancient Lives). Oxford: Blackwell Publishers, 2006 (hardcover, ISBN 0-631-23245-1; paperback, ISBN 0-631-23246-X).

External links

Primary sources

  • Plutarch, Of the Fortune or Virtue of Alexander the Great (in English)
  • Justin, Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus (in English)
  • Alexander the Great: An annotated list of primary sources from Livius.org
  • Wiki Classical Dictionary, extant sources and fragmentary and lost sources

Other

  • A Bibliography of Alexander the Great by Waldemar Heckel 7 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine
  • Pothos.org: Alexander's Home on the Web
  • Alexander III the Great, entry in historical sourcebook by Mahlon H. Smith
  • , a comprehensive directory of some 1,000 sites
  • Alexander The Great in the French museum Le Louvre
  • Alexander the Great of Macedon, a project by John J. Popovic
  • Alexander in the Punjab. A Photo Essay, photos of all sites Alexander visited
  • Alexander the Great Coins, a site depicting Alexander's coins and later coins featuring Alexander's image

wars, alexander, great, wars, alexander, great, greek, Πόλεμοι, του, Μεγάλου, Αλεξάνδρου, were, series, conquests, that, were, carried, alexander, macedon, from, they, began, with, battles, against, achaemenid, persian, empire, then, under, rule, darius, persi. The wars of Alexander the Great Greek Polemoi toy Megaloy Ale3androy were a series of conquests that were carried out by Alexander III of Macedon from 336 BC to 323 BC They began with battles against the Achaemenid Persian Empire then under the rule of Darius III of Persia After Alexander s chain of victories against Achaemenid Persia he began a campaign against local chieftains and warlords that stretched as far from Greece as the region of Punjab in South Asia By the time of his death he ruled over most regions of Greece and the conquered Achaemenid Empire including much of Persian Egypt he did not however manage to conquer the Indian subcontinent in its entirety as was his initial plan Despite his military accomplishments Alexander did not provide any stable alternative to the rule of the Achaemenid Empire 1 and his untimely death threw the vast territories he conquered into a series of civil wars commonly known as the Wars of the Diadochi Wars of Alexander the GreatAlexander depicted with his horse Bucephalus fighting Persian king Darius III from the Alexander Mosaic of Pompeii Naples National Archaeological Museum Italy Date336 323 BC 13 years LocationGreece Illyria Thrace Danube Delta Anatolia Syria Phoenicia Israel Palestine Egypt Mesopotamia Babylonia Persia Afghanistan Sogdia Bactria IndiaResultGreek victory Macedonian Empire spans from the Balkans and Egypt in the west to Central Asia and India in the east Beginning of the Hellenistic periodBelligerentsKingdom of Macedonia Hellenic LeagueAchaemenid Empire In Balkans IllyriansThraciansGreek city states In Western and Central Asia UxiiansSogdia In India PauravasIndian tribes and kingdomsCommanders and leadersAlexander the Great Parmenion Antipater Ptolemy Hephaestion Craterus Philotas Cleitus the Black Perdiccas Coenus Lysimachus Antigonus Nearchus Cassander SeleucusDarius III Bessus Arsites Memnon of Rhodes Azemilcus Ariobarzanes Madates Agis III Spitamenes Porus Alexander assumed kingship over ancient Macedonia following the assassination of his father Philip II of Macedon r 359 336 BC During his two decades on the throne Philip II had unified 2 the poleis Greek city states of mainland Greece with Macedonian hegemony under the League of Corinth 3 Alexander proceeded to solidify Macedonian rule by quashing a rebellion that took place in the southern Greek city states and also staged a short but bloody excursion against the city states to the north He then proceeded east in order to carry out his plans to conquer the Achaemenid Empire His campaign of conquests from Greece spanned across Anatolia Syria Phoenicia Egypt Mesopotamia Persia Afghanistan and India He extended the boundaries of his Macedonian Empire as far east as the city of Taxila in modern day Pakistan Prior to his death Alexander had also made plans for a Hellenic military and mercantile expansion into the Arabian Peninsula after which he planned to turn his armies to Carthage Rome and the Iberian Peninsula in the west However the Diadochi his political rivals abandoned these plans after he died instead within a few years of Alexander s death the Diadochi began a series of military campaigns against each other and divided the territories of the Macedonian Empire among themselves 4 triggering 40 years of warfare during the Hellenistic period Contents 1 Background 2 Balkan campaign 3 Persia 3 1 Asia Minor 3 1 1 Battle of the Granicus River 3 1 2 Alexander consolidates support in Asia Minor 3 1 3 Siege of Halicarnassus 3 2 Syria 3 2 1 Battle of Issus 3 2 2 Siege of Tyre 3 3 Egypt 3 3 1 Siege of Gaza 3 4 Mesopotamia 3 4 1 Battle of Gaugamela 3 5 Bactria 3 6 Battle of the Persian Gate 4 Siege of the Sogdian Rock 5 Indian Campaign 6 Return from India 7 Battle record 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 Further reading 12 External linksBackground Edit The Kingdom of Macedon in 332 BC In 336 Philip II was assassinated by the captain of his bodyguard Pausanias 5 Philip s son and previously designated heir Alexander was proclaimed king by the Macedonian noblemen and army 6 He also succeeded his father as head of the League of Corinth a confederation of Greek states that were under the hegemony of Macedonia in order to combat the Achaemenid Empire 7 News of Philip s death roused many states into revolt including Thebes Athens Thessaly as well as the Thracian tribes to the north of Macedon When news of the revolt reached Alexander he took quick action Although his advisers recommended the use of diplomacy Alexander ignored the advice and instead proceeded to muster together his Macedonian cavalry of 3 000 men Together the army rode south towards Thessaly Macedon s immediate neighbor to the south When he found the Thessalian army blocking the pass between Mount Olympus and Mount Ossa he had his men ride over Mount Ossa When the Thessalians awoke they found Alexander at their rear The Thessalians quickly surrendered and their cavalry was added to Alexander s force He then proceeded south towards the Peloponnese 8 Alexander stopped at Thermopylae where he was recognized as the leader of the Sacred League before heading south to Corinth Athens sued for peace and Alexander received the envoy and pardoned anyone involved with the uprising At Corinth he was given the title Hegemon of the Greek forces against the Persians Whilst at Corinth he heard the news of a Thracian uprising in the north 9 Balkan campaign EditMain article Alexander s Balkan campaign Before crossing to Asia Alexander wanted to safeguard his northern borders and in the spring of 335 BC he advanced into Thrace to deal with the revolt which was led by the Illyrians and Triballi At Mount Haemus the Macedonian army attacked and defeated a Thracian garrison manning the heights The Macedonians were then attacked in the rear by the Triballi who were crushed in turn Alexander then advanced on to the Danube encountering the Getae tribe on the opposite shore The Getae army retreated after the first cavalry skirmish leaving their town to the Macedonian army 10 News then reached Alexander that Cleitus King of Illyria and King Glaukias of the Taulantii were in open revolt against Macedonian authority Alexander defeated each in turn forcing Cleitus and Glaukias to flee with their armies leaving Alexander s northern frontier secure 11 While he was triumphantly campaigning north the Thebans and Athenians rebelled once more Alexander reacted immediately but while the other cities once again hesitated Thebes decided to resist with the utmost vigor This resistance was useless however as the city was razed to the ground amid great bloodshed and its territory divided between the other Boeotian cities The end of Thebes cowed Athens into submission leaving all of Greece at least outwardly at peace with Alexander 12 Persia EditSee also Chronology of the expedition of Alexander the Great into Asia Asia Minor Edit In 334 BC Alexander crossed the Hellespont into Asia It took over one hundred triremes triple banked galleys to transport the entire Macedonian army but the Persians decided to ignore the movement 13 In these early months Darius still refused to take Alexander seriously or mount a serious challenge to Alexander s movements Memnon of Rhodes the Greek mercenary who aligned himself with the Persians advocated for a scorched earth strategy He wanted the Persians to destroy the land in front of Alexander which he hoped would force Alexander s army to starve and then to turn back The satraps in Anatolia rejected this advice considering it their duty to defend their land 14 Eventually with Alexander advancing deeper into Persian territory Darius ordered all five satraps of the Anatolian provinces to pool their military resources together and confront Alexander This army was guided by Memnon while absolute command was split among the five satraps 15 Battle of the Granicus River Edit Map of what would become Alexander s empire The Battle of the Granicus River in May 334 BC was fought in Northwestern Asia Minor modern day Turkey near the site of Troy After crossing the Hellespont Alexander advanced up the road to the capital of the Satrapy of Phrygia The various satraps of the Persian Empire gathered their forces at the town of Zelea and offered battle on the banks of the Granicus River Alexander ultimately fought many of his battles on a river bank By doing so he was able to minimize the advantage the Persians had in numbers In addition the deadly Persian chariots were useless on a cramped muddy river bank citation needed Arrian Diodorus and Plutarch all mention the battle with Arrian providing the most detail The Persians placed their cavalry in front of their infantry and drew up on the right east bank of the river The Macedonian line was arrayed with the heavy Phalanxes in the middle Macedonian cavalry led by Alexander on the right and allied Thessalian cavalry led by Parmenion on the left 16 The Persians expected the main assault to come from Alexander s position and moved units from their center to that flank citation needed Hellenistic marble bust of Alexander dating from 2nd 1st century BC possibly from Alexandria Egypt now at the British Museum Alexander s second in command Parmenion suggested crossing the river upstream and attacking at dawn the next day but Alexander attacked immediately He ordered a small group of cavalry and light infantry to attack from the Macedonian right to draw the Persians off the bank and into the river Seeing that he had broken the Persian line Alexander led his horse companions in oblique order further to the right in order to outflank the Persians and buy time for his infantry to cross the river 16 Several high ranking Persian nobles were killed by Alexander himself or his bodyguards although Alexander was stunned by an axe blow from a Persian nobleman named Spithridates Before the noble could deal a death blow however he was himself killed by Cleitus the Black The Macedonian cavalry opened a hole in the Persian line as the Macedonian infantry advanced forcing the enemy back and eventually breaking their center The Persian cavalry turned and fled the battlefield and the Greek mercenary infantry they held in reserve were encircled by the Macedonians and slaughtered only around two thousand of which survived and were sent back to Macedonia for labor 17 Alexander consolidates support in Asia Minor Edit After the battle Alexander buried the dead Greeks and Persians and sent the captured Greek mercenaries back to Greece to work in the mines as an abject lesson for any Greek who decided to fight for the Persians He sent some of the spoils back to Greece including three hundred panoplies complete Persian suits of armor back to Athens to be dedicated in the Parthenon with the inscription Alexander son of Philip and the Greeks Lacedaemonians Spartans excepted these spoils from the barbarians who dwell in Asia 18 Antipater whom Alexander had left in charge of Macedon in his absence had been given a free hand to install dictators and tyrants wherever he saw fit in order to minimize the risk of a rebellion As he moved deeper into Persia however the threat of trouble seemed to grow Many of these towns had been ruled for generations by heavy handed tyrants so in these Persian towns he did the opposite of what he did in Greece Wanting to appear to be a liberator he freed the population and allowed self government As he continued marching into Persia he saw that his victory at Granicus had been lost on no one Town after town seemed to surrender to him The satrap at Sardis as well as his garrison was among the first of many satraps to capitulate citation needed As these satraps gave up Alexander appointed new ones to replace them and claimed to distrust the accumulation of absolute power into anyone s hands There appeared to be little change from the old system Alexander however appointed independent boards to collect tribute and taxes from the satrapies which appeared to do nothing more than improve the efficiency of government The true effect however was to separate the civil from the financial function of these satrapies thus ensuring that these governments while technically independent of him never truly were Otherwise he allowed the inhabitants of these towns to continue as they always had and made no attempt to impose Greek customs on them Meanwhile ambassadors from other Greek cities in Asia Minor came to Alexander offering submission if he allowed their democracies to continue Alexander granted their wish and allowed them to stop paying taxes to Persia but only if they joined the League of Corinth By doing so they promised to provide monetary support to Alexander citation needed Siege of Halicarnassus Edit Map of Halicarnassus at the time of the siege The Siege of Halicarnassus was undertaken in 334 BC Alexander who had a weak navy was constantly being threatened by the Persian navy It continuously attempted to provoke an engagement with Alexander who would have none of it Eventually the Persian fleet sailed to Halicarnassus in order to establish a new defense Ada of Caria the former queen of Halicarnassus had been driven from her throne by her usurping brother When he died Darius had appointed Orontobates satrap of Caria which included Halicarnassus in its jurisdiction On the approach of Alexander in 334 BC Ada who was in possession of the fortress of Alinda surrendered the fortress to him Alexander and Ada appear to have formed an emotional connection He called her mother finding her more amicable than his megalomaniacal snake worshiping mother Olympias In return for his support Ada gave Alexander gifts and even sent him some of the best cooks in Asia Minor realizing that Alexander had a sweet tooth In the past Alexander had referred to his biological father Philip as his so called father and preferred to think of the deity Amon Zeus as his actual father Thus he had finally managed to divorce himself from both of his biological parents citation needed Orontobates and Memnon of Rhodes entrenched themselves in Halicarnassus Alexander had sent spies to meet with dissidents inside the city who had promised to open the gates and allow Alexander to enter When his spies arrived however the dissidents were nowhere to be found A small battle resulted and Alexander s army managed to break through the city walls Memnon however now deployed his catapults and Alexander s army fell back Memnon then deployed his infantry and shortly before Alexander would have received his first and only defeat his infantry managed to break through the city walls surprising the Persian forces and killing Orontobates Memnon realizing the city was lost set fire to it and withdrew with his army A strong wind caused the fire to destroy much of the city Alexander then committed the government of Caria to Ada and she in turn formally adopted Alexander as her son ensuring that the rule of Caria passed unconditionally to him upon her eventual death citation needed Syria Edit Shortly after the battle Memnon died His replacement was a Persian who had spent time in Macedonia called Pharnabazus He disrupted Alexander s supply routes by taking Aegean islands near the Hellespont and by fomenting rebellion in southern Greece Meanwhile Darius took the Persian army to intercept Alexander Alexander marched his army east through Cappadocia where for a stretch of nearly 150 km 93 mi there was no water As his army approached Mount Taurus they found only one route through which to pass which was a narrow defile called The Gates The defile was very narrow and could have been easily defended However the Persian satrap of Cappadocia had an inflated view of his own abilities He had been at the Battle of the Granicus River and had believed that Memnon s scorched Earth strategy would work here He didn t realize that the different circumstances of the terrain made that strategy useless Had he mounted a credible defence of the defile Alexander would have been easily repulsed He left only a small contingent to guard the defile and took his entire army to destroy the plain that lay ahead of Alexander s army The Persian contingent that was supposed to guard the defile soon abandoned it and Alexander passed through without any problems Alexander supposedly said after this incident that he had never been so lucky in his entire career citation needed After reaching Mount Taurus Alexander s army found a stream that flowed from the mountain with water that was ice cold Not thinking Alexander jumped into the stream suffered a cramp and then a convulsion and was pulled out nearly dead He quickly developed pneumonia but none of his physicians would treat him because they feared that if he died they would be held responsible One physician named Philip who had treated Alexander since he was a child agreed to treat him Although he soon fell into a coma he eventually recovered citation needed Battle of Issus Edit Alexander s decisive attack The Battle of Issus took place in southern Anatolia on November 333 BC 7 After Alexander s forces defeated the Persians at the Battle of the Granicus Darius took personal charge of his army gathered a large army from the depths of the empire and maneuvered to cut the Greek line of supply requiring Alexander to countermarch his forces setting the stage for the battle near the mouth of the Pinarus River and south of the village of Issus Darius was apparently unaware that by deciding to stage the battle on a river bank he was minimizing the numerical advantage his army had over Alexander s 19 Initially Alexander chose what was apparently unfavorable ground This surprised Darius who mistakenly elected to hold the wrong position while Alexander instructed his infantry to take up a defensive posture Alexander personally led the more elite Greek Companion cavalry against the Persian left up against the hills and cut up the enemy on the less encumbering terrain thereby generating a quick rout After achieving a breakthrough Alexander demonstrated he could do the difficult thing and held the cavalry in check after it broke the Persian right Alexander then mounted his beloved horse Bucephalus took his place at the head of his Companion cavalry and led a direct assault against Darius The horses that were pulling Darius chariot were injured and began tossing at the yoke Darius about to fall off his chariot instead jumped off He threw his royal diadem away mounted a horse and fled the scene The Persian troops realizing they had lost either surrendered or fled with their hapless king The Macedonian cavalry pursued the fleeing Persians for as long as there was light As with most ancient battles significant carnage occurred after the battle as pursuing Macedonians slaughtered their crowded disorganized foe citation needed The invading troops led by Alexander were outnumbered more than 2 1 yet they defeated the army personally led by Darius III of Achaemenid Persia The battle was a decisive Macedonian victory and it marked the beginning of the end of Persian power It was the first time the Persian army had been defeated with the King present on the field Darius left his wife and an enormous amount of treasure behind as his army fled The greed of the Macedonians helped to persuade them to keep going as did the large number of Persian concubines and prostitutes they picked up in the battle Darius now fearing for both his throne and his life sent a letter to Alexander in which he promised to pay a substantial ransom in exchange for the prisoners of war and agreeing to a treaty of alliance with and the forfeiture of half of his empire to Alexander Darius received a response which began King Alexander to Darius In the letter Alexander blamed Darius for his father s death and claimed Darius was but a vulgar usurper who planned to take Macedonia He agreed to return the prisoners without ransom but told Darius that he and Alexander were not equals and that Darius was to henceforth address Alexander as King of all Asia Darius was also curtly informed that if he wanted to dispute Alexander s claim to the Achaemenid throne that he would have to stand and fight and that if he instead fled Alexander would pursue and kill him By this Alexander revealed for the first time that his plan was to conquer the entire Persian Empire citation needed Siege of Tyre Edit A naval action during the siege Drawing by Andre Castaigne The Siege of Tyre occurred in 332 BC when Alexander set out to conquer Tyre a strategic coastal base Tyre was the site of the only remaining Persian port that did not capitulate to Alexander Even by this point in the war the Persian navy still posed a major threat to Alexander Tyre the largest and most important city state of Phoenicia was located both on the Mediterranean coast as well as a nearby Island with two natural harbors on the landward side At the time of the siege the city held approximately 40 000 people though the women and children were evacuated to Carthage an ancient Phoenician colony citation needed Alexander sent an envoy to Tyre proposing a peace treaty and asked to visit their city and offer sacrifices to their God Melqart The Tyrians politely told Alexander that their town was neutral in the war and that allowing him to offer sacrifices to Melqart would be tantamount to recognizing him as their king Alexander considered building a causeway that would allow his army to take the town by force His engineers didn t believe it would be possible to build such a massive structure and so Alexander sent peace envoys once more to propose an alliance The Tyrians believed this to be a sign of weakness and so they killed the envoys and threw their bodies over the city wall The dissent against Alexander s plans to take the city by force disappeared and his engineers began to design the structure Alexander began with an engineering feat that shows the true extent of his brilliance as he could not attack the city from sea he built a kilometer long causeway stretching out to the island on a natural land bridge no more than two meters deep 20 Alexander then constructed two towers 150 feet high and moved them to the end of the causeway The Tyrians however quickly devised a counterattack They used an old horse transport ship filling it with dried branches pitch sulfur and various other combustibles They then lit it on fire creating what we might call a primitive form of napalm and ran it up onto the causeway The fire spread quickly engulfing both towers and other siege equipment that had been brought up citation needed This convinced Alexander that he would be unable to take Tyre without a navy Fate would soon provide him with one Presently the Persian navy returned to find their home cities under Alexander s control Since their allegiance was to their city they were therefore Alexander s He now had eighty ships This coincided with the arrival of another hundred and twenty from Cyprus which had heard of his victories and wished to join him Alexander then sailed on Tyre and quickly blockaded both ports with his superior numbers He had several of the slower galleys and a few barges refit with battering rams the only known case of battering rams being used on ships Alexander started testing the wall at various points with his rams until he made a small breach in the south end of the island He then coordinated an attack across the breach with a bombardment from all sides by his navy Once his troops forced their way into the city they easily overtook the garrison and quickly captured the city Those citizens that took shelter in the temple of Heracles were pardoned by Alexander It is said that Alexander was so enraged at the Tyrians defense and the loss of his men that he destroyed half the city Alexander granted pardon to the king and his family whilst 30 000 residents and foreigners taken were sold into slavery There was a family though that Alexander gave a very high position in his government but the only contact he ever had with them was when he spent the night with the wife of the household citation needed Egypt Edit Siege of Gaza Edit Main article Siege of Gaza The stronghold at Gaza was built on a hill and was heavily fortified 21 The inhabitants of Gaza and their Nabataean allies did not want to lose the lucrative trade which was controlled by Gaza 21 Alexander Mosaic showing Battle of Issus from the House of the Faun Pompeii Batis the commander of the fortress of Gaza refused to surrender to Alexander Though a eunuch Batis was physically imposing and ruthless After three unsuccessful assaults the stronghold was finally taken by force 22 but not before Alexander received a serious shoulder wound When Gaza was taken the male population was put to the sword and the women and children were sold into slavery According to the Roman historian Quintus Curtius Rufus Batis was killed by Alexander in imitation of Achilles treatment of the fallen Hector A rope was forced through Batis s ankles probably between the ankle bone and the Achilles tendon and Batis was dragged alive by chariot beneath the walls of the city Alexander who admired courage in his enemies and might have been inclined to show mercy to the brave Persian general was infuriated at Batis s refusal to kneel and by the enemy commander s haughty silence and contemptuous manner With Gaza taken Alexander marched into Egypt His entry was described as closer to a triumphant procession than an invasion 7 They welcomed Alexander as their king placed him on the throne of the Pharaohs 7 giving him the crown of Upper and Lower Egypt and named him the incarnation of Ra and Osiris He set in motion plans to build Alexandria and though future tax revenues would be channeled to him he left Egypt under the management of Egyptians which helped to win him their support citation needed Mesopotamia Edit Battle of Gaugamela Edit The Battle of Gaugamela took place in 331 BC in what is now Iraqi Kurdistan possibly near Dohuk 23 24 and resulted in a decisive victory for the Macedonians After the Siege of Gaza Alexander advanced from Syria towards the heart of the Persian Empire crossing both the Euphrates and the Tigris rivers without any opposition Darius was building up a massive army drawing men from the far reaches of his empire and planned to use sheer numbers to crush Alexander Though Alexander had conquered part of the Persian empire it was still vast in area and in manpower reserves and Darius could recruit more men than Alexander could dream of Also present in the Persian army a sign that the Persians were still very powerful were the feared war elephants While Darius had a significant advantage in number of soldiers most of his troops weren t as organized as Alexander s citation needed Alexander s decisive attack The battle began with the Persians already present at the battlefield Darius had recruited the finest cavalry from his eastern satrapies Darius placed himself in the center with his best infantry as was the tradition among Persian kings The Macedonians were divided into two with the right side of the army falling under the direct command of Alexander and the left to Parmenion Alexander began by ordering his infantry to march in phalanx formation towards the center of the enemy line Darius now launched his chariots which were intercepted by the Agrianians and quickly rendered useless Alexander while leading the charge formed his units into a giant wedge which quickly smashed right into the weakened Persian center Darius charioteer was killed by a spear and chaos rang out as everyone incorrectly thought it was Darius who had been killed The Persian line then collapsed and Darius fled Darius escaped with a small core of his forces remaining intact although the Bactrian cavalry and Bessus soon caught up with him The remaining Persian resistance was quickly put down In all the Battle of Gaugamela was a disastrous defeat for the Persians and possibly one of Alexander s finest victories citation needed Bactria Edit Alexander s first victory over the Persian king Darius depicted in medieval European style in the 15th century romance The History of Alexander s Battles After the battle Parmenion rounded up the Persian baggage train while Alexander and his own bodyguard chased after Darius in hopes of catching up Substantial amounts of loot were gained following the battle with 4 000 talents captured as well as the King s personal chariot and bow Darius planned to head further east and raise another army to face Alexander while he and the Macedonians headed to one of the Persian capitals Babylon and then to another Susa There Alexander found wealth that even he had never imagined possible He paid his troops and sent a sum of money six times the annual income of Athens to Greece in order to put down a Spartan rebellion Darius meanwhile dispatched letters to his eastern satrapies asking them to remain loyal The satrapies however had other intentions and quickly capitulated to Alexander citation needed Bessus fatally stabbed Darius before fleeing eastwards Darius was found by one of Alexander s scouts moaning in pain Darius dying and chained to a baggage train being pulled by an ox was lying next to a lone dog and his royal robes were covered in blood He asked for water and then clutching the Macedonian soldier s hand said that he was thankful that he would not die utterly alone and abandoned Alexander who may have felt genuinely saddened at Darius death buried Darius next to his Achaemenid predecessors in a full military funeral Alexander claimed that while dying Darius had named Alexander as his successor to the Achaemenid throne and had asked Alexander to avenge his death a striking irony since it was Alexander who had pursued him to his death The Achaemenid Persian Empire is considered to have fallen with the death of Darius citation needed Alexander viewing himself as the legitimate Achaemenid successor to Darius viewed Bessus as a usurper to the Achaemenid throne and eventually found and executed this usurper The majority of the existing satraps were to give their loyalty to Alexander and be allowed to keep their positions Alexander s troops now thought the war was over Alexander was unsure how to deal with this so he decided to scare them into submission He gave a speech arguing that their conquests were not secure that the Persians did not want the Greeks to remain in their country and that only the strength of Macedon could secure the country The speech worked and Alexander s troops agreed to remain with him Alexander now the Persian King of Kings adopted Persian dress and mannerisms which in time the Greeks began to view as decadent and autocratic They began to fear that Alexander the king they had hero worshiped was turning into an eastern despot although a young eunuch was eventually introduced to Alexander and helped to keep his decadence in check citation needed Battle of the Persian Gate Edit Main article Battle of the Persian Gate Map of the Persian Gate In the winter of 330 BC at the Battle of the Persian Gate northeast of today s Yasuj in Iran the Persian satrap Ariobarzanes led a last stand of the Persian forces 25 26 After the Battle of Gaugamela in present day Iraqi Kurdistan Alexander had advanced to Babylon and Susa A Royal Road connected Susa with the more eastern capitals of Persepolis and Pasargadae in Persis the Persian Empire had several capitals and was the natural venue for Alexander s continued campaign After the conquest of Susa Alexander split the Macedonian army into two parts Alexander s general Parmenion took one half along the Royal Road and Alexander himself took the route towards Persis Passing into Persis required traversing the Persian Gates a narrow mountain pass that lent itself easily to ambush 27 Believing that after his victory over the Uxians he would not encounter any more enemy forces during his march Alexander neglected to send scouts ahead of his vanguard and thus walked into Ariobarzanes ambush Once the Macedonian army had advanced sufficiently into the narrow pass the Persians rained down boulders on them from the northern slopes From the southern slope Persian archers and catapults launched their projectiles Alexander s army initially suffered heavy casualties losing entire platoons at a time 28 Ariobarzanes had hoped that defeating Alexander at the Persian Gates would allow the Persians more time to field another army and possibly stop the Macedonian invasion altogether Ariobarzanes held the pass for a month 29 but Alexander succeeded in encircling the Persian army and broke through the Persian defenses The defeat of Ariobarzanes s forces at the Persian Gate removed the last military obstacle between Alexander and Persepolis Upon his arrival at the city of Persepolis Alexander appointed a general named Phrasaortes as successor of Ariobarzanes Four months later Alexander allowed the troops to loot Persepolis A fire broke out and spread to the rest of the city It is not clear if it had been a drunken accident or a deliberate act of revenge for the burning of the Acropolis of Athens during the Second Greco Persian War 30 Siege of the Sogdian Rock EditAfter Alexander defeated the last of the Achaemenid Empire s forces in 328 BC he began a new campaign to Ariana in 327 BC He wanted to conquer the entire known world which in Alexander s day ended on the eastern end of India Greeks of Alexander s day knew nothing of China or any other lands east of Bactria The Siege of the Sogdian Rock a fortress located north of Bactria in Sogdiana occurred in 327 BC Oxyartes of Bactria had sent his wife and daughters one of whom was Roxana to take refuge in the fortress as it was thought to be impregnable and was provisioned for a long siege When Alexander asked the defenders to surrender they refused telling him that he would need men with wings to capture it Alexander asked for volunteers whom he would reward if they could climb the cliffs under the fortress There were some 300 men who from previous sieges had gained experience in rock climbing Using tent pegs and strong flaxen lines they climbed the cliff face at night losing about 30 of their number during the ascent In accordance with Alexander s orders they signaled their success to the troops below by waving bits of linen and Alexander sent a herald to shout the news to the enemy s advanced posts that they might now surrender without further delay The defenders were so surprised and demoralized by this that they surrendered Alexander fell in love with Roxana whom ancient historians call the most beautiful woman in the world not an uncommon claim for an ancient queen on sight and eventually married her The story of the siege is told by the Roman historian Arrian of Nicomedia in Anabasis section 4 18 4 19 6 citation needed Indian Campaign EditMain articles Indian campaign of Alexander the Great and Battle of the Hydaspes Campaigns and landmarks of Alexander s invasion of the Indian subcontinent After the death of Spitamenes and his marriage to Roxana Roshanak in Bactrian to cement his relations with his new Central Asian satrapies Alexander was finally free to turn his attention to the Indian subcontinent Alexander invited all the chieftains of the former satrapy of Gandhara in the north of what is now Jhelum River Pakistani region Modern History to come to him and submit to his authority Omphis ruler of Taxila whose kingdom extended from the Indus to the Hydaspes complied but the chieftains of some hill clans including the Aspasioi and Assakenoi sections of the Kambojas known in Indian texts also as Ashvayanas and Ashvakayanas refused to submit In the winter of 327 326 BC Alexander personally led a campaign against these clans the Aspasioi of Kunar valley the Guraeans of the Guraeus valley and the Assakenoi of the Swat and Buner valleys 31 A fierce contest ensued with the Aspasioi in which Alexander himself was wounded in the shoulder by a dart but eventually the Aspasioi lost the fight Alexander then faced the Assakenoi who fought bravely and offered stubborn resistance to Alexander in the strongholds of Massaga Ora and Aornos The fort of Massaga could only be reduced after several days of bloody fighting in which Alexander himself was wounded seriously in the ankle According to Curtius Not only did Alexander slaughter the entire population of Massaga but also did he reduce its buildings to rubbles 32 A similar slaughter then followed at Ora another stronghold of the Assakenoi In the aftermath of Massaga and Ora numerous Assakenians fled to the fortress of Aornos Alexander followed close behind their heels and captured the strategic hill fort after the fourth day of a bloody fight This fight was the challenge Alexander was looking for an army with huge elephants that were almost able to defeat Alexander A painting by Charles Le Brun depicting Alexander and Porus Puru during the Battle of the Hydaspes After gaining control of the former Achaemenid satrapy of Gandhara including the city of Taxila Alexander advanced into Punjab where he engaged in battle against the regional king Porus whom Alexander defeated in the Battle of the Hydaspes in 326 BC 33 34 but was so impressed by the demeanor with which the king carried himself that he allowed Porus to continue governing his own kingdom as a satrap 35 Although victorious Battle of the Hydaspes was also the most costly battle fought by the Macedonians 36 East of Porus kingdom near the Ganges River was the powerful Nanda Empire of Magadha According to the Greek sources the Nanda army was five times larger than the Macedonian army 37 Fearing the prospects of facing the powerful Nanda Empire armies and exhausted by years of campaigning his army mutinied at the Hyphasis River refusing to march further east This river thus marks the easternmost extent of Alexander s conquests As for the Macedonians however their struggle with Porus blunted their courage and stayed their further advance into India For having done all they could do to repulse an enemy who mustered only twenty thousand infantry and two thousand horse they violently opposed Alexander when he insisted on crossing the river Ganges also the width of which as they learned was thirty two furlongs its depth a hundred fathoms while its banks on the further side were covered with multitudes of men at arms and horsemen and elephants For they were told that the kings of the Ganderites and Praesii were awaiting them with eighty thousand horsemen two hundred thousand footmen eight thousand chariots and six thousand fighting elephants 38 Asia in 323 BC the Nanda Empire and Gangaridai Empire of Ancient India in relation to Alexander s Empire and neighbors Alexander spoke to his army and tried to persuade them to march further into India but Coenus pleaded with him to change his opinion and return the men he said longed to again see their parents their wives and children their homeland Alexander seeing the unwillingness of his men agreed and diverted Along the way his army conquered the Malli clans in modern day Multan In the territory of the Indus he nominated his officer Peithon as a satrap a position he would hold for the next ten years until 316 BC and in the Punjab he left Eudemus in charge of the army at the side of the satrap Porus and Taxiles Eudemus became ruler of a part of the Punjab after their death Both rulers returned to the West in 316 BC with their armies In 321 BC Chandragupta Maurya founded the Maurya Empire in India and overthrew the Greek satraps Return from India EditAlexander now sent much of his army to Carmania modern southern Iran with his general Craterus and commissioned a fleet to explore the Persian Gulf shore under his admiral Nearchus while he led the rest of his forces back to Persia by the southern route through the Gedrosian Desert now part of southern Iran and Makran now part of Pakistan According to Plutarch during the 60 day march through the desert Alexander lost three quarters of his army to the harsh desert conditions along the way 39 Battle record EditOutcome Date War Action Opponent s Type Country present day RankVictory 338 08 02 2 August 338 BC Philip II s submission of Greece Chaeronea Battle of Chaeronea Thebans Athenians and other Greek cities Battle Greece Prince Victory 335 335 BC Balkan Campaign Mount Haemus Battle of Mount Haemus Getae Thracians Battle Bulgaria King Victory 335 12 December 335 BC Balkan Campaign Pelium Siege of Pelium Illyrians Siege Albania King Victory 335 12 December 335 BC Balkan Campaign Pelium Battle of Thebes Thebans Battle Greece King Victory 334 05 May 334 BC Persian Campaign Granicus Battle of the Granicus Achaemenid Empire Battle Turkey King Victory 334 334 BC Persian Campaign Miletus Siege of Miletus Achaemenid Empire Milesians Siege Turkey King Victory 334 334 BC Persian Campaign Halicarnassus Siege of Halicarnassus Achaemenid Empire Siege Turkey King Victory 333 11 05 5 November 333 BC Persian Campaign Issus Battle of Issus Achaemenid Empire Battle Turkey King Victory 332 January July 332 BC Persian Campaign Tyre Siege of Tyre Achaemenid Empire Tyrians Siege Lebanon King Victory 332 10 October 332 BC Persian Campaign Tyre Siege of Gaza Achaemenid Empire Siege Palestine King Victory 331 10 01 1 October 331 BC Persian Campaign Gaugamela Battle of Gaugamela Achaemenid Empire Battle Iraq King Victory 331 12 December 331 BC Persian Campaign Uxian Defile Battle of the Uxian Defile Uxians Battle Iran King Victory 330 01 20 20 January 330 BC Persian Campaign Persian Gate Battle of the Persian Gate Achaemenid Empire Battle Iran King Victory 329 329 BC Persian Campaign Cyropolis Siege of Cyropolis Sogdians Siege Turkmenistan King Victory 329 10 October 329 BC Persian Campaign Jaxartes Battle of Jaxartes Scythians Battle Uzbekistan King Victory 327 327 BC Persian Campaign Sogdian Rock Siege of the Sogdian Rock Sogdians Siege Uzbekistan King Victory 327 May 327 March 326 BC Indian Campaign Cophen Cophen campaign Aspasians Expedition Afghanistan and Pakistan King Victory 326 04 April 326 BC Indian Campaign Aornos Siege of Aornos Asvaka Siege Pakistan King Victory 326 05 May 326 BC Indian Campaign Hydaspes Battle of the Hydaspes Porus Battle Pakistan King Victory 325 November 326 February 325 BC Indian Campaign Aornos Siege of Multan Malli Siege Pakistan King See also EditAncient Macedonian army Military tactics of Alexander the Great Wars of Cyrus the Great Diadochi Roman Persian warsReferences Edit Freeman Charles The Greek Achievement The Foundation of the Western World Allen Lane 1999 ISBN 9780713992243 p 172 In scope and extent his achievements ranked far above that of the Macedonian king Alexander the Great who was to demolish the empire in the 320s but fail to provide any stable alternative Bowra C Maurice 1994 1957 The Greek Experience London Phoenix Orion Books Ltd p 9 ISBN 1 85799 122 2 Sacks David 1995 Encyclopedia of the Ancient Greek World London Constable and Co Ltd ISBN 0 09 475270 2 p 16 Strudwick 2013 p 97 Philip II king of Macedonia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Inc McCarty Alexander the Great p 30 31 Plutarch The Age of Alexander p 262 263 Renault The Nature of Alexander the Great p 61 62 Fox The Search For Alexander p 72 a b c d Strudwick 2013 p 96 McCarty Alexander the Great p 31 Plutarch The Age of Alexander p 263 Renault The Nature of Alexander the Great p 72 Fox The Search For Alexander p 104 Bose Alexander the Great s Art of Strategy p 95 Bose Alexander the Great s Art of Strategy p 96 Renault The Nature of Alexander the Great p 72 Arrian The Campaigns of Alexander p 44 48 Renault The Nature of Alexander the Great p 73 74 Arrian The Campaigns of Alexander p 50 54 Renault The Nature of Alexander the Great p 77 Plutarch Phocion p 17 cf Justinus Marcus Junianus Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus p 11 6 Strauss Barry Masters of Command p 50 Strauss Barry Masters of Command p 48 a b Strauss Barry Masters of Command p 51 Strauss Barry Masters of Command pp 51 53 https issuu com sonjcemarceva docs alexander the great historical so see page 72 Arrian 1 16 7 Murison C L 1972 Darius III and the Battle of Issus Historia Zeitschrift fur Alte Geschichte 21 3 399 423 ISSN 0018 2311 JSTOR 4435274 Stafford Ned 14 May 2007 How geology came to help Alexander the Great Nature com Retrieved 17 May 2007 a b Siege of Tyre and Gaza Retrieved 19 January 2007 Leaders and Battles Gaza Siege of Leaders and Battles Database Archived from the original on 22 October 2006 Retrieved 18 January 2007 KurdishGlobe The Location of the Battle of Gaugamela Discovered www kurdishglobe net Archived from the original on 13 April 2014 HighBeam Robinson Cyril Edward 1929 A History of Greece Methuen amp Company Limited ISBN 9781846031083 Farrokh Kaveh 24 April 2007 Shadows in the Desert Ancient Persia at War General Military Osprey Publishing p 106 ISBN 978 1846031083 ISBN 978 1846031083 For the identification see Henry Speck Alexander at the Persian Gates A Study in Historiography and Topography in American Journal of Ancient History n s 1 1 2002 15 234 more Quintus Curtius Rufus N G L Hammond 1992 The Archaeological and Literary Evidence for the Burning of the Persepolis Palace The Classical Quarterly 42 2 p 358 364 John Prevas 2005 Envy of the Gods Alexander the Great s Ill Fated Journey Across Asia Da Capo Press p 38 ISBN 978 0 306 81442 6 Narain A K 1965 Alexander the Great Greece and Rome 12 pp 155 165 Curtius in McCrindle Op cit p 192 J W McCrindle History of Punjab Vol I 1997 p 229 Punajbi University Patiala Editors Fauja Singh L M Joshi Kambojas Through the Ages 2005 p 134 Kirpal Singh Fuller p 198 While the battle raged Craterus forced his way over the Haranpur ford When he saw that Alexander was winning a brilliant victory he pressed on and as his men were fresh took over the pursuit The Anabasis of Alexander Book V Chapter XVIII The Anabasis of Alexander Book V Chapter XIX Peter Connolly Greece and Rome at War Macdonald Phoebus Ltd 1981 p 66 Bongard Levin G 1979 A History of India Moscow Progress Publishers p 264 Plutarch Alexander p 62 Plutarch The Life of Alexander 66 Bibliography EditArrian 1976 140s AD The Campaigns of Alexander trans Aubrey de Selincourt Penguin Books ISBN 0 14 044253 7 Bowra C Maurice 1994 1957 The Greek Experience London Phoenix Orion Books Ltd p 9 ISBN 1 85799 122 2 Farrokh Kaveh 24 April 2007 Shadows in the Desert Ancient Persia at War General Military Osprey Publishing p 106 ISBN 978 1846031083 ISBN 978 1846031083 Lane Fox Robin 1973 Alexander the Great Allen Lane ISBN 0 86007 707 1 Lane Fox Robin 1980 The Search for Alexander Little Brown amp Co Boston ISBN 0 316 29108 0 Green Peter 1992 Alexander of Macedon 356 323 B C A Historical Biography University of California Press ISBN 0 520 07166 2 Plutarch 2004 Life of Alexander Modern Library ISBN 0 8129 7133 7 Renault Mary 1979 The Nature of Alexander Pantheon Books ISBN 0 394 73825 X Robinson Cyril Edward 1929 A History of Greece Methuen amp Company Limited ISBN 9781846031083 Strudwick Helen 2013 The Encyclopedia of Ancient Egypt London Amber Books ISBN 978 1 4351 4654 9 Wilcken Ulrich 1997 1932 Alexander the Great W W Norton amp Company ISBN 0 393 00381 7 Worthington Ian 2003 Alexander the Great Routledge ISBN 0 415 29187 9 Worthington Ian 2004 Alexander the Great Man and God Pearson ISBN 978 1 4058 0162 1 Further reading EditAlexander the Great in Fact and Fiction edited by A B Bosworth E J Baynham New York Oxford University Press USA 2002 Paperback ISBN 0 19 925275 0 Baynham Elizabeth Alexander the Great The Unique History of Quintus Curtius Ann Arbor University of Michigan Press 1998 hardcover ISBN 0 472 10858 1 2004 paperback ISBN 0 472 03081 7 Brill s Companion to Alexander the Great by Joseph Roisman editor Leiden Brill Academic Publishers 2003 Cartledge Paul Alexander the Great The Hunt for a New Past Woodstock NY New York The Overlook Press 2004 hardcover ISBN 1 58567 565 2 London PanMacmillan 2004 hardcover ISBN 1 4050 3292 8 Vintage 2005 paperback ISBN 1 4000 7919 5 Dahmen Karsten The Legend of Alexander the Great on Greek and Roman Coins Oxford Routledge 2006 hardcover ISBN 0 415 39451 1 paperback ISBN 0 415 39452 X De Santis Marc G At The Crossroads of Conquest Military Heritage December 2001 Volume 3 No 3 46 55 97 Alexander the Great his military his strategy at the Battle of Gaugamela and his defeat of Darius making Alexander the King of Kings Fuller J F C A Military History of the Western World From the Earliest Times to the Battle of Lepanto New York Da Capo Press Inc 1987 and 1988 ISBN 0 306 80304 6 Gergel Tania Editor Alexander the Great 2004 published by the Penguin Group London ISBN 0 14 200140 6 Brief collection of ancient accounts translated into English Larsen Jakob A O Alexander at the Oracle of Ammon Classical Philology Vol 27 No 1 January 1932 pp 70 75 Lonsdale David Alexander the Great Killer of Men History s Greatest Conqueror and the Macedonian Way of War New York Carroll amp Graf 2004 ISBN 0 7867 1429 8 Pearson Lionel Ignacius Cusack The Lost Histories of Alexander the Great Chicago Ridge IL Ares Publishers 2004 paperback ISBN 0 89005 590 4 Thomas Carol G Alexander the Great in his World Blackwell Ancient Lives Oxford Blackwell Publishers 2006 hardcover ISBN 0 631 23245 1 paperback ISBN 0 631 23246 X External links EditWars of Alexander the Great at Wikipedia s sister projects Definitions from Wiktionary Media from Commons News from Wikinews Quotations from Wikiquote Texts from Wikisource Textbooks from Wikibooks Resources from Wikiversity Primary sources Plutarch Of the Fortune or Virtue of Alexander the Great in English Justin Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus in English Alexander the Great An annotated list of primary sources from Livius org Wiki Classical Dictionary extant sources and fragmentary and lost sourcesOther A Bibliography of Alexander the Great by Waldemar Heckel Archived 7 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Pothos org Alexander s Home on the Web Alexander III the Great entry in historical sourcebook by Mahlon H Smith Alexander the Great on the Web a comprehensive directory of some 1 000 sites Alexander The Great in the French museum Le Louvre Alexander The Great Mystery by T Peter Limber in Saudi Aramco Magazine Trace Alexander s conquests on an animated map Alexander the Great of Macedon a project by John J Popovic Alexander in the Punjab A Photo Essay photos of all sites Alexander visited Alexander the Great Coins a site depicting Alexander s coins and later coins featuring Alexander s image Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Wars of Alexander the Great amp oldid 1149300033, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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