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Alexander the Great

Historical Figure

Alexander the Great

d. 323 BC

Military commander, King of Macedon from 336 to 323 BC

Classical

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Biography

Alexander III of Macedon, most commonly known as Alexander the Great, was king of the ancient Greek kingdom of Macedon. He succeeded his father Philip II to the throne in 336 BC at the age of 20, and spent most of his reign conducting a lengthy military campaign throughout Asia and Egypt. By the age of 30, he had created one of the largest empires in history, stretching from Greece to northwestern India. He was undefeated in battle and is widely considered to be one of history's greatest and most successful military commanders.

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In Their Own Words (5)

Timeline

The story of Alexander the Great, told in moments.

343 BC Life

At age 13, his father hires Aristotle as his private tutor. For three years, in a rural village called Mieza, the greatest philosopher of the age teaches the boy who will conquer the known world. Aristotle gives him a copy of the Iliad. Alexander will carry it with him for the rest of his life, sleeping with it under his pillow alongside a dagger.

334 BC Event

Crosses into Asia with 37,000 troops and defeats the Persian army at the Granicus River. He is 22. Darius III rules an empire stretching from Egypt to India. Alexander has a single kingdom and a massive debt. He charges the Persian cavalry personally.

332 BC Event

Arrives at the Oracle of Ammon in the Siwa Oasis after an 8-day march through the Libyan desert. His army nearly dies of thirst. The priests greet him as Son of Zeus. He never tells anyone what the oracle said to him in private. He believes it for the rest of his life.

331 BC Event

Destroys the Persian army at Gaugamela, present-day Iraq. Darius has assembled perhaps 250,000 men. Alexander has 47,000. He drives a cavalry wedge straight at Darius, who panics and flees. The Persian Empire, which has lasted 220 years, falls in a single afternoon.

330 BC Event

Burns Persepolis, the ceremonial capital of the Persian Empire. The richest city in the world. Some sources say Thais, an Athenian courtesan, suggests it during a drunken banquet. Others say Alexander ordered it deliberately to avenge the Persian burning of Athens 150 years earlier. Either way, the fire lasts hours.

326 BC Life

Reaches the Hydaspes River in India and defeats King Porus in a monsoon battle, using elephants against elephants. But his army refuses to go further. They've been marching for eight years. They've crossed deserts, mountains, and three empires. His soldiers weep and beg to go home. Alexander locks himself in his tent for three days. Then he turns back.

323 BC Death

Dies in the palace of Nebuchadnezzar II in Babylon. He is 32. He'd been drinking and developed a fever that worsened over eleven days. When the common soldiers heard he was dying, they forced their way into the palace and filed past his bed one by one. He was too weak to speak. He waved. Asked on his deathbed to whom he left his empire, he reportedly answered: "To the strongest."

323 BC Legacy

His generals immediately begin fighting over the empire. Within 40 years, it fragments into rival kingdoms: the Ptolemies in Egypt, the Seleucids in Persia, the Antigonids in Macedonia. None of them can hold what he built. But the Greek language and culture he spread across Asia persist for centuries. A Greek-speaking court rules Egypt until Cleopatra.

Artifacts (12)

Gold ring with a carnelian intaglio

3rd century BCE · Gold with carnelian
The Met View

Alexander the Great

Viktor Brodzki

19th century · Head and base: white marble; cuirass and drapery: red Siena marble
The Met View

Block with cartouche of Alexander the Great or his son Alexander IV of Macedon

332–323 B.C. · Limestone
The Met View

Gold stater of Alexander the Great

336–323 BCE · Gold
The Met View

The Meeting of Alexander the Great and Diogenes

Gaspar de Crayer

Oil on canvas
The Met View

Alexander the Great Rescued from the River Cydnus

Pietro Testa

ca. 1650 · Oil on canvas
The Met View

Intaglio

Lapis lazuli
The Met View

Gold ring

late 4th–3rd century BCE · Gold
The Met View

Tetradrachm of Alexander the Great

ca. 325–319 BCE · Silver
The Met View

Gold stater

ca. 323/2–315 BCE · Gold
The Met View

Tetradrachm of Alexander the Great

ca. 318–316 BCE · Silver
The Met View

Tetradrachm of Alexander the Great

ca. 311–305 BCE · Silver, bronze
The Met View

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