alexander

17
ALEXANDER GREA T TH E Themes: Religion, Divinity and Propaganda

Upload: malia

Post on 14-Jan-2016

28 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

DESCRIPTION

ALEXANDER. THE. GREAT. Themes: Religion, Divinity and Propaganda. Alexander’s Ancestors. Heroes to be honoured Achievers to match… …and to surpass?. The Conquest of Asia Minor. Troy. Granicus River (334BC). Gordium. Miletus. Halicarnassus. Issus (333BC). Tarsus. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: ALEXANDER

ALEXANDER

GREAT

THE

Themes: Religion, Divinity and Propaganda

Page 2: ALEXANDER

Alexander’s Ancestors

Heroes to be honoured

Achievers to match…

…and to surpass?

Page 3: ALEXANDER

Miletus

Halicarnassus

Gordium

Granicus River (334BC)

Tarsus Issus(333BC)

The Conquest of Asia Minor

map: www.wargamer.com

Troy

Page 4: ALEXANDER

The Visit to Troy

Why Troy?

• A very famous place

• Alex’s army was new Gk army, reconquering the East.

• Alex wanted to stress his association with Achilles

• Personal curiosity may have played a part.

Re-enactment

• Tomb of the first Greek soldier to set foot on Trojan soil.

• Sacrificed to several gods during crossing.

• Visited Troy, where Alexander and Hephaistion laid wreaths on the tombs of Achilles and Patroclus.

• Performed sacrifices at Troy.

Page 5: ALEXANDER

The Gordian Knot

Read Hamilton’s account of Alexander at Gordium (pg.64) and note down the different ways that the primary sources say Alexander solved the problem of the Gordian Knot:

Callisthenes: (Aristotle’s nephew and Alex’s official historian)

Aristobulous:

(One of Alex’s generals)

Page 6: ALEXANDER

Egypt Welcomes Alexander

Three stops:

1. Memphis (Cairo)

2. Alexandria

3. Siwah Hamilton, page 74

Hamilton, page 74

Hamilton, page 75

Video click here.

Page 7: ALEXANDER
Page 8: ALEXANDER

Callisthenes and Proskynesis

What does this issue have to do with:

• Religion?

• Propaganda?

• Alexander’s nature?

Page 9: ALEXANDER

The Rock of Aornus

Not strategically important, but…

Page 10: ALEXANDER

The Town of Nysa

Also not strategically important, but…

'Sire, it is the request of the people of Nysa that you show your reverence far Dionysus by leaving them free and independent. For when Dionysus, after his conquest of the Indians, was on his way homeward towards the Greek sea, he founded this city as a memorial of his long journey and his victory, leaving to inhabit it those of his men who were no longer fit for service - who were also his Priests. He did but as you have done; for you too founded Alexandria in the Caucasus and Alexandria in Egypt and many other cities as well, and will found yet more hereafter, in that you will have surpassed the achievements of Dionysus.” - Arrian

Page 11: ALEXANDER

The Mutiny at the River Beas (Hyphasis)

Soon after the Jhelum battle, Alexander’s men refused to go any further.

Alexander sulked in his tent, but his men refused to budge.

So Alexander ordered a sacrifice to the gods to see whether the Macedonians should cross the Beas River.

The priests reported that they should turn back.

Page 12: ALEXANDER

The Theoroi (Sacred Envoys)

“If Alexander wants to be the son of Zeus, let him. Why not Poseidon too, while he’s at it?”

– Demosthenes of Athens

Page 13: ALEXANDER

Alexander’s Competitive Nature and Need for Glory

Troy

Achilles / Greeks

Gordium

Zeus’s wagon

Siwah

Son of Zeus?

Nysa

Dionysus

Babylon

A Living God?

Gedrosian Desert

Persian KingsRock of AornusHeracles

Page 14: ALEXANDER

The Request for Deification

Alexander’s megalomania reached its peak in 324BC, when he requested to be deified (acknowledged as a god). This request was unusual for a living person to make, but would put him on a par with past heroes like Heracles.

“If Alexander wants to be the son of Zeus, let him. Why not Poseidon too, while he’s at it?”

– Demosthenes of Athens

Soon after this, Alexander received sacred envoys (theoroi) from the Greek States to grant his wish by crowning him with gold. They may also have come to question him about the Exiles Decree.

Page 15: ALEXANDER

The Death of Hephaestion

Hamilton pages 145-146

1. When, how and why did Hephaestion die?

2. List the ways that Alexander grieved for him.

A great site telling Hephaistion’s story: http://myweb.unomaha.edu/~jreameszimmerman/Hephaistion/hephaistion.html

Page 16: ALEXANDER

Alexander caught malarial fever after a night of heavy drinking and died two weeks later on June 10, 323BC.

Read Hamilton’s account pages 151-153.

Q: What is the possible ‘conspiracy theory’ surrounding Alexander’s death?

The Death of Alexander

Three Bad Omens…

Read Hamilton pgs 147-148 and explain what these were.

Page 17: ALEXANDER

After Alexander – ‘The Hellenistic Age’

SeleucusPtolemy

Lysimachus

Cassander

300BC – The Kingdoms of the Successors