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Alexander III of Macedon
Antiquity | Ancient Macedonia

Alexander III of Macedon

Also known as: Alexander the Great Β· Iskandar

King of Macedon - General - Conqueror

ConquestMilitaryPoliticsCulture
Born: 356 BC
Died: 323 BC
Era: Antiquity
Region: Ancient Macedonia
Birthplace: Pella (356 BC)
Alexander III of Macedon, known as Alexander the Great, was a king of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedon. By the age of thirty, he had created one of the largest empires in history, stretching from Greece to northwestern India. Undefeated in battle, he is widely considered one of history's greatest military commanders. Tutored by Aristotle, he spread Greek culture and language across the known world, ushering in the Hellenistic age.

Locations

Geographic Footprint

Life & Battles

Timeline

356 BC Event

Born in Pella

Born to King Philip II of Macedon and Olympias of Epirus in the royal capital of Pella.

343 BC Event

Tutored by Aristotle

Philip II invited Aristotle to tutor the young Alexander, who studied philosophy, medicine, science, and rhetoric at the school of Mieza.

338 BC Event

Battle of Chaeronea

At just 18, Alexander commanded the Macedonian left wing and led the decisive charge that crushed the Sacred Band of Thebes, securing Macedonian dominance over Greece.

338 BC Victory

Battle of Chaeronea

Chaeronea, Boeotia - vs Athens and Thebes - Established Macedonian hegemony over all of Greece; Alexander personally destroyed the elite Sacred Band of Thebes.

336 BC Event

Becomes King of Macedon

After the assassination of Philip II, Alexander claimed the throne at age 20 and swiftly suppressed rebellions across Greece and the Balkans.

334 BC Event

Invasion of Persia

Crossed the Hellespont into Asia with an army of 40,000 men, visiting Troy before winning his first major victory at the Granicus River.

334 BC Victory

Battle of the Granicus

Granicus River, Asia Minor - vs Persian satraps - Alexander's first victory on Persian soil, opening Asia Minor to his advance.

333 BC Event

Battle of Issus

Routed the Persian army of Darius III despite being outnumbered; Darius fled the battlefield, leaving his family behind.

333 BC Victory

Battle of Issus

Issus, Cilicia - vs Darius III - Routed Darius III's numerically superior army; the Persian king fled, abandoning his family to Alexander.

332 BC Victory

Siege of Tyre

Tyre, Phoenicia - vs Tyre - Seven-month siege of an island fortress; Alexander built a causeway to breach it, one of the greatest engineering feats of the ancient world.

331 BC Event

Founds Alexandria & Defeats Darius at Gaugamela

Founded the city of Alexandria in Egypt and then utterly defeated Darius III at Gaugamela, effectively ending the Achaemenid Persian Empire.

331 BC Victory

Battle of Gaugamela

Gaugamela, Assyria - vs Darius III - The decisive battle of the Persian campaign; Darius III fled and was later murdered by his own satraps, ending the Achaemenid Empire.

330 BC Event

Burns Persepolis

Captured and burned the Persian ceremonial capital of Persepolis, avenging the Persian destruction of Athens in 480 BC.

327 BC Event

Marries Roxana & Enters India

Married the Bactrian princess Roxana and led his army through the Khyber Pass into the Indian subcontinent.

326 BC Event

Battle of the Hydaspes

Defeated the Indian king Porus at the Hydaspes River in a tactically brilliant battle. His army then refused to march further east.

326 BC Victory

Battle of the Hydaspes

Hydaspes River, Punjab - vs King Porus of Paurava - Alexander's last and arguably most tactically impressive victory, defeating war elephants with a brilliantly executed night crossing.

323 BC Event

Dies in Babylon

Died in the palace of Nebuchadnezzar II in Babylon at age 32, possibly of typhoid fever complicated by his battle wounds. His vast empire was divided among his generals.

Family Tree

Parents

Philip II of Macedon

Father

382-336 BC

Olympias of Epirus

Mother

c. 375-316 BC

Subject & Siblings

Alexander the Great

Self

356 BC - 323 BC

Cleopatra of Macedon

Sister

c. 355-308 BC

Philip III Arrhidaeus

Half-brother

c. 359-317 BC

Spouses

Roxana

Wife I

c. 340-310 BC

Stateira II

Wife II

died 323 BC

Children

Alexander IV

Son

323-309 BC

Key Contributions

  1. Sword Undefeated General

    Never lost a battle in 15 years of continuous warfare, conquering an empire stretching from Greece to northwestern India.

  2. Scroll Student of Aristotle

    Educated by the greatest philosopher of antiquity, instilling a love of science, philosophy, and medicine.

  3. State Hellenistic Spread

    Spread Greek language and culture across the Middle East and Central Asia, reshaping civilization for centuries.

  4. Map Founded Alexandria

    Founded over 20 cities bearing his name, most notably Alexandria in Egypt, which became the greatest city of the ancient world.

Fact Cards

Horse

Bucephalus

Alexander tamed the wild horse Bucephalus at age 12 when no adult could. The horse carried him through most of his campaigns; when Bucephalus died in India, Alexander founded a city named Bucephala in his honor.

Scroll

Slept with the Iliad

Alexander kept a copy of Homer's Iliad β€” annotated by Aristotle β€” under his pillow alongside a dagger, modelling himself on the hero Achilles.

City

Named 20+ Cities After Himself

Alexander founded or renamed over 20 cities 'Alexandria' across his empire, from Egypt to Afghanistan, as living monuments to his conquest.

Health

Died at 32

Despite conquering half the known world, Alexander died at just 32 in Babylon. His cause of death remains debated β€” typhoid fever, excessive drinking, and poisoning are all proposed.

Final Chapter

Disputed β€” typhoid fever, poisoning, or alcoholism

June 10/11, 323 BC

Last Scene

Location: Palace of Nebuchadnezzar II, Babylon

Burial: Alexandria, Egypt

To the strongest. - reportedly said when asked who should inherit his empire.

Those Involved

  • Roxana

    Wife; gave birth to Alexander IV shortly after his death

  • Perdiccas

    Senior general who received Alexander's signet ring and initially acted as regent

  • Ptolemy I

    General who seized Egypt and eventually claimed Alexander's body for burial in Alexandria

  • Antipater

    Regent of Macedon; some ancient sources accused him of poisoning Alexander

Aftermath

Alexander's death without a clear, capable adult heir triggered the Wars of the Diadochi, fragmenting his empire into rival Hellenistic kingdoms β€” the Ptolemaic Kingdom in Egypt, the Seleucid Empire in the east, and the Antigonid dynasty in Macedon β€” that reshaped the ancient world for the next three centuries.

Chain of Events

1

Late May, 323 BC

Alexander falls gravely ill

After a banquet, Alexander developed a high fever that worsened over several days despite the efforts of his physicians.

2

June 10/11, 323 BC

Death at age 32

Alexander died in Babylon, having lost the ability to speak. His generals gathered around his deathbed; when asked to whom he left his empire, he reportedly answered 'to the strongest'.

3

323-281 BC

Wars of the Diadochi

His generals β€” the Diadochi β€” fought a series of devastating wars over his empire, ultimately carving it into separate Hellenistic kingdoms.

The cause of Alexander's death remains one of history's great unsolved mysteries. A 2019 study suggested he may have suffered from Guillain-BarrΓ© syndrome, which could explain reports that his body showed no signs of decomposition for six days after death.

"There is nothing impossible to him who will try."

Attributed to Alexander the Great