Writing about Alexander over the years, I have been handling chronological dates for his whereabouts in the correct time frame. There is, however, another approach to consider and that is Alexander’s age.
A comparison with any modern monarchy is impossible because there are hardly any kings left and they no longer go to war at the head of their army. To compare Alexander with young men his age today is out of the question also simply because life and the circumstances of living are too far apart.
Alexander has been taught by Aristotle but again this kind of education cannot be identified with the teaching of a young man in our modern world. I believe that even Philip, although he intended to do what was best for his son, underestimated the vastness of Aristotle’s knowledge. Alexander was meant to rise above Philip because he understood how to draw from Aristotle’s vast database (to use modern terminology) and merge it expertly with his innate infallible instinct - his genius.
However, Philip
may well have realized the potential of his 16-year-old son when he
entrusted him with the seal of
Two years later, Philip put his son in command of his cavalry at the Battle of Chaironeia. Alexander did more than his share and annihilated the entire Theban Band, all three hundred of them!
We don’t know how much time the young prince spent among the soldiers growing up in Pella, but I think it is safe to assume it was a lot. Leading the small contingent against the Maedi and the cavalry in Chaironeia speaks volumes. An army has that instinctive flair to recognize a true leader, one they can and will trust.
This trust would only grow when Alexander
became king after his father was murdered. In the next two years, he
successfully led his troops against the Illyrians and the Thracians to secure
his northern borders, sacked the city of Thebes
in retribution for its betrayal, and confirmed his position as Hegemon of
Greece as per the Treaty
of Corinth. Alexander could never have
contemplated his campaign in
He crossed the Hellespont shortly before his
22nd birthday and fought the Persian army for the first time at the Granicus
River. Later that summer, he marched to Sardes
and took Ephesos,
Priene,
Miletus,
Didyma,
and Halicarnassus.
Alexander spent the following winter in
When he was 23 years old, he headed north to
Sagalassos
and from there to Gordion
where he cut the knot. Crossing Cappadocia, he returned to the shores of the
At the age of 24, he laid siege on two more
cities, Tyre
(building a mole in the process) and Gaza.
His reception in
Many more sieges and battles were to follow
in Central Asia and
Although Alexander is usually depicted sitting on his horse, we have to keep in mind that he moved at the pace of his foot soldiers. Riding bareback was not comfortable, not for the rider and not for the horse (see: No saddles and no stirrups for Alexander’s cavalry).
It is impossible to imagine anyone covering
such a distance on foot. It would imply walking an average of
Speaking of walking: how many pairs of shoes, boots, and sandals would the Macedonians have worn out? Providing new ones for some 40,000 men or more would have implied production on an industrial scale! Maybe we should believe the sources suggesting that the soldiers fought and walked sections of the route barefoot?
Sadly, Alexander
died far too young, and so did Hephaistion,
but men like Ptolemy
and Seleucos
lived to the ages of 84 and 77 respectively. Age clearly is not everything!
If Alexander had lived long as Ptolemy or Seleucos,now we (or our counterparts) would live in a completely different world....and most likely we would speak Greek.
ReplyDelete... and what a wonderful world it would have been! ;-)
Delete