Alexander the Great -
History Channel Documentary. The true story of Alexander the Great (king of the ancient
Greek kingdom of
Macedon and member of the
Argead dynasty) and the
Macedonian Empire, which introduced the
Hellenistic Period of ancient
Greek civilization. Alexander the Great, king of Macedon, 356
BCE - 323 BCE: "Your ancestors came to
Macedonia and the rest of
Greece and did us great harm, though we had done them no prior injury. I have been appointed leader of the
Greeks, and wanting to punish the Persians I have come to
Asia, which I took from you."
(
Alexander's letter to
Persian king Darius in response to a truce plea, as quoted in "
Anabasis Alexandri" by
Roman historian Arrian,
Book 2.14.4, Greek original: “οἱ ὑμέτεροι πρόγονοι ἐλθόντες εἰς Μακεδονίαν καὶ εἰς τὴν ἄλλην Ἑλλάδα κακῶς ἐποίησαν ἡμᾶς οὐδὲν προηδικημένοι: ἐγὼ δὲ τῶν Ἑλλήνων ἡγεμὼν κατασταθεὶς καὶ τιμωρήσασθαι βουλόμενος Πέρσας διέβην ἐς τὴν Ἀσίαν, ὑπαρξάντων ὑμῶν.”
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Arr.+An.+2.14.4&fromdoc;=
Perseus%3Atext%3A2008
.01.0530)
"We must remember too that
Philip and Alexander were Greeks, descended from
Heracles, wished to be recognised as Greeks, as benefactors of the Greeks, even as Heracles had been." (
Nicholas Hammond,
British scholar and expert on Macedon, 'Alexander the Great', p.257)
“
Afterwards he [Alexander] revived his father's
League of Corinth, and with it his plan for a pan-Hellenic invasion of Asia to punish the Persians for the suffering of the Greeks, especially the Athenians, in the
Greco-Persian Wars and to liberate the Greek cities of
Asia Minor.”
(
Victor Davis Hanson, “
Makers of
Ancient Strategy: From the
Persian Wars to the
Fall of Rome”,
Princeton University Press,
2012, p.
119)
"They (ancient
Macedonians) felt as Greeks, and they had no temptation to destroy what they claimed was their mother country. They had clearly no wish to swallow up Greece in Macedonia, but rather to make Macedonia, as a
Greek state, the ruling power of Greece. Such was undoubtedly the aim of Philip and Alexander too."
(
Theodore Ayrault Dodge, military historian, “Alexander”, p.
187)
"His [Philip's] course seems to have been directed towards the establishment of stability in Greece, not conquest."
(
Eugene Borza, “
Shadows of
Olympus”, p.230)
"
Philip II of Macedon was anxious to pacify and unify Greeks at any cost."
(
Encyclopedia of
Ancient Greece, Routledge,
2006)
“
In the end, the Greeks would fall under the rule of a single man, who would unify Greece: Philip II, king of Macedon (360-336 BC). His son, Alexander the Great, would lead the Greeks on a conquest of the ancient
Near East vastly expanding the Greek world.”
(
Michael Burger, “The
Shaping of
Western Civilization: From
Antiquity to the
Enlightenment”,
University of Toronto Press, 2008, p.76)
“To a certain extent the
Macedonian monarchy had already been a unifying element in
Greek history, even before the conquests of Alexander.”
(
Michael Crawford,
Fergus Millar,
Emilio Gabba, "Sources for
Ancient History", p. 12,
Cambridge University Press)
“After Philip's assassination at
Aegae in
336, Alexander inherited, together with the Macedonian kingdom, his father's
Panhellenic project to lead the Greeks in the conquest of
Persia.”
(
Waldemar Heckel,
Lawrence A. Tritle, “Alexander the Great: A
New History”, Wiley-Blackwell, 2009, p.99)
Yale University,
USA: "We know the ancient Macedonians were fundamentally Greeks. That is to say they were Greek speakers and ethnically they were Greeks."
(Yale University Courses, Lecture https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cuOxGMoHMMY,
Introduction to
Ancient Greek History, Philip,
Demosthenes and the
Fall of the
Polis,
2007) on 01m 48s
- published: 17 Mar 2015
- views: 122274