РефератыИностранный языкThThe Dark Side Of Alexander The Great

The Dark Side Of Alexander The Great

Essay, Research Paper


Hardison 1


Alexander the Great, born in 356 BC, was the son of Philip


II and his queen Olympias.1 Tradition maintains that he was


taught about Greece culture and philosophy by Aristotle.2


Alexander fought many campaigns on his father s behalf but after a


quarrel was sent into exile with some of his companions.3


Alexander returned after the murder of Phillip in 336 and was


hailed as king although he was careful to eliminate any possible


rivals to the throne.4 Alexander undertook the invasion of Asia


which Philip had already begun and went on to take over nearly the


entire known world at that time.5 On June 10, 323 BC, while


returning from a recent expedition, Alexander became ill and


died.6


Alexander was one of the greatest military leaders in


history but he also brought together the sharing of ideas and


traditions on a much larger scale than had ever taken place


before.7 In modern times, this has caused people to be misled


about Alexander s motives behind his actions.8 By western


academics, Alexander has been hailed as the founder of a


Hardison 2


brotherhood of man while at the same time he was being the


perpetrator of a spiraling reign of terror. 9 Alexander was a


cruel and autocratic ruler whose conviction of his own


invincibility led to megalomaniac intentions and pretensions to


divinity. 10


Alexander s flaws can be traced to his youth where he


inherited many qualities of his parents.11 Alexander s


father Philip was the son of the Macedonian Amyntas, but his


mother Eurydice was an Illyrian. 12 Therefore, by blood,


Eurydice was a pure barbarian.13 Consequently, Alexander s father


was half a barbarian.14 So Alexander wasn t a pure Macedonian


but had barbarian blood in his veins.15


Both Philip and Olympias were unusually strong and


impulsive in temperament. 16 Philip showed signs of


foolhardiness which can be seen in his body, which was covered


with scars showing his bravery and delight in battle.17 Philip s


acts, however, bear witness to a tireless energy and strength of


will, and to an indomitable pertinacity in following out his


Hardison 3


secret purposes. 18 On the other hand, Olympias had a demonic


passion, in whom the quality was magnified to its highest


extent.19 These traits assuredly rubbed off on Alexander, for he


also showed these qualities, perhaps even to a higher degree.20


When Philip died in June 336, signs of Alexander s lust for


power and fame began to show.21 He quickly killed his half-


brother and cousin, the only possible rivals to the throne.22


Then he gained support of the army and named himself king. 23


Alexander was only twenty years old at the time.24


Alexander s megalomanic nature combined with his thirst for


power eventually led to violence and cruelty.25 Alexander would


mainly use his harsh cruelty in punishing people. On one


occasion, Bessus, the leader of a movement to depose Darius, was


captured by a Alexander and brought before a full meeting of his


officers.26 They accused Bessus of treachery to Darius and


Alexander then gave orders that his nose and the tips of his ears


should be cut off, and that thus mutilated he should be taken from


Ecbatana to suffer public execution before his own countrymen, the


Hardison 4


Medes and the Persians. 27 Another time, Alexander had


Glaucias, the doctor, crucified for not being there to give


Hephaestion a medicine to cure his illness.28 Furthermore,


after the death of Alexander s friend Hephaestion, it is believed


that Alexander did something unfitting not only for a great


potentate like Alexander, but for any king. 29 Alexander


flung himself on the body of Hephaestion and lay there nearly the


entire day in tears, and refused to be parted from him until he


was dragged away by force by his Companions.30


However, in some instances, Alexander would focus his


cruelty on a larger scale.31 An example of this would be in


Ephesus, a town which had been taken over by a garrison of Persian


mercenaries.32 Alexander s men easily took over the town and


then recalled everyone who had be expelled for supporting him.33


Alexander, after realizing that the mercenaries ransacked the


temple and helped smash up the statue of Philip which stood there,


continued in the hunt for the guilty men and indulging his lust


for revenge, would, out of personal hatred or greed, kill many who


Hardison 5


were innocent as well, firmly called a halt, with the result that


his popularity never stood higher than it did on this occasion by


his handling of the situation at Ephesus. 34 Alexander s use


cruelty for political gain was clearly evident on several


occasions.35


Another one of Alexander s main faults was that he was, what


could be described as, a barbaric drinker.36 Often, he would


drink heavily and for a prolonged periods, causing him to have


poor judgement and to be angered at minor incidents.37 One


situation where Alexander s drunkenness got the best of him was at


Marakanda in the autumn of 328.38 Cleitus, who had already


drunk too much, spoke some harsh words against Alexander, shouting


that Alexander was a coward and that it is the blood of these


Macedonians and their wounds which have made you so great. 39


Cleitus s words made Alexander furious and unable to control his


rage.40 Alexander seized a spear from one of his guards and


ran him through.41


The last major flaw in Alexander, and by far his most


Hardison 6


noticeable one, was his claim to divine origin.42 Because of


this, Alexander was very religious and believed that he was


invincible.43 He would offer sacrifices daily and took nearly


all prophecies seriously.44 This is clearly shown in


April/May 323 when Alexander was wearing a hat with a diadem, a


band which signified royalty.45 Suddenly a gust of wind blew


the diadem off his hat and one of the sailors swam after it.46


Not wanting to get the band wet, the sailor wore it on his head


and swam back to the ship.47 Upon arrival, Alexander gave the


man a talent for reward of his willing service, then had him


beheaded in obedience to the prophecy which warned him not to


leave untouched the head with had worn the diadem.48


Overall, Alexander was a brilliant general who was admired


and emulated in antiquity as in modern times. 49 By no means did


his faults outweigh his contributions. Alexander the Great had


brought together the blending of two cultures on a larger scale


than ever before.50 The full impact of Alexander s world-


shaping deeds were not obvious until after his death.51


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However, it is important to know the his intentions were not


solely to spread Hellenism, as modern academics suggest, but to


appease his megalomania.52 Although he founded many cities,


these were for strategic reasons rather than for the spread of


Hellenism. 53 Furthermore, his expedition had a disastrous


effect upon the population and economy of Macedon.54


Hardison 8


Notes


1Graham Speake, ed. The Peguin Dictionary of Ancient


History (New York, New York: Penguin Group, 1995) 23.


2Peter N. Stearn, and Barry K. Beyer. World History: Traditions and New Directions (Menlo Park, California: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company, 1991) 98.


3Speake, 23.


4Ibid.


5Larry S. Krieger, Kenneth Neil, and Steven L. Jantzen. World History: Prospectives on the Past (Lexington, Massachusetts: D. C. Heath and Company, 1992) 123.


6Shepard B. Clough. A History of the Western World (Chicago: D. C. Heath and Company, 1964) 76.


7Stearn and Beyer, 100.


8Speake, 23.


9Robin Lane Fox. The Search for Alexander


(Boston: Little Brown and Company, 1980) 46.


10Speake, 23.


Hardison 9


11Ulrich Wilcken. Alexander the Great


(New York, New York: W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., 1967) 53.


12Ibid.


13Ibid.


14Ibid.


15Ibid.


16Ibid.


17Ibid.


18Ibid.


19Ibid, 54.


20Ibid, 53.


21Speake, 23.


22Stearn and Beyer, 96.


23Ibid.


Hardison 10


24Jacques Legrand. Chronicle of the World


(New York, New York: Chronicle Communications Ltd, 1989) 145.


25Speake, 23.


26J. R. Hamilton. Arrian: The Campaigns of Alexander


(New York, New York: Penguin Group, 1971) 212.


27Ibid.


28G. T. Griffith. The Age of Alexander: Nine Greek Lives By


Plutarch. (New York, New York: Penguin Group, 1973) 329.


29Hamilton, 371.


30Ibid, 370.


31Ibid, 78.


32Ibid.


33Ibid.


34Ibid.


35Ibid.


36Ibid, 214.


37Ibid, 215.


Hardison 11


38Griffith, 307.


39Ibid, 308.


40Ibid.


41Ibid, 309.


42Speake, 23.


43Ibid.


44Hamilton, 387.


45Ibid.


46Ibid.


47Ibid.


48Ibid.


49Speake, 23.


50J. M. Roberts. A Concise History of the World


(New York: Oxford University Press, 1995) 134.


51Ibid.


Hardison 12


52Speake, 23.


53Ibid.


54Ibid.


Hardison 13


Bibliography


Clough, Shepard B. A History of the Western World. Chicago:


D. C. Heath and Company, 1964.


Fox, Robin Lane. The Search for Alexander. Boston: Little Brown


and Company, 1980.


Griffith, G. T. The Age of Alexander: Nine Greek Lives By


Plutarch. New York, New York: Penguin Group, 1973.


Hamilton, J. R. Arrian: The Campaigns of Alexander. New York,


New York: Penguin Group, 1971.


Krieger, Larry S., Neil Kenneth, and Steven L. Jantzen. World


History: Prospectives on the Past. Lexington,


Massachusetts: D. C. Heath and Company, 1992.


Legrand, Jacques. Chronicle of the World. New York, New York:


Chronicle Communications Ltd, 1989.


Roberts, J. M. A Concise History of the World. New York: Oxford


University Press, 1995.


Speake, Graham, ed. The Peguin Dictionary of Ancient History.


New York, New York: Penguin Group, 1995.


Hardison 14


Stearns, Peter N., and Barry K. Beyer. World History: Traditions


and New Directions. Menlo Park, California: Addison-Wesley


Publishing Company, 1991.


Wilcken, Ulrich. Alexander the Great. New York, New York: W. W.


Norton & Company, Inc., 1967.

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