All accounts on the whereabouts of Alexander’s Tomb agree up to and including Ptolemy X, who, in 89 BC used the King’s golden sarcophagus to wipe up his financial situation. He replaced the coffin with a translucent alabaster one.
Alexander’s remains were saved from the disastrous tsunami that flooded the North African coast in 365 AD. They were moved to a safe location until the new Christian Emperor Theodosius decided that the cult of Alexander was a threat to his dogma. In the early 5th century the tomb disappeared from the radar.
Andrew Chugg in his book The Lost Tomb of Alexander the Great links the disappearance of Alexander’s corpse to the first appearance of St Mark’s tomb when in 828 AD, the Saint was abducted by the Venetians. ‘San Marco’ was placed in a tomb in the crypt of the Basilica built for that purpose in 1094 – or was it Alexander?
Alexandre
Schoedler-Tziamouranis has followed another track using Arab writings. He
picked up the account of Hassan-Al-Wassan, also known by his Roman name Leonis Africanus, published in
Another source
is found in the 16th century’s description of Luis
The next witness is said to be George Sandys, a
geographer and emissary who saw Alexander’s
mummified body and sarcophagus in the same crypt in 1621. The tomb's guardians told him that in 954 Alexander
was visible at the mosque Dûl-I-Qarnaïn-Nabi. In the
Quran, to this day, Alexander is
considered a prophet. From that mosque, Alexander
was moved to another mosque and again to where
Alexander may well have a special god looking after him because, in the 18th century, he was found safely hidden in underground tunnels in Alexandria. This seems to be the site where the French diplomat, Octave Borelli came to see the tomb in 1898. After a diplomatic meeting at the consulate, he was led to the basement where he allegedly caught a glimpse of some gold through a crack in the wall. This most certainly was not the gold of his sarcophagus since Ptolemy X had removed it. Somehow Borelli managed to dig deeper inside the basement where he recognized the body of Alexander the Great, his shield, and other artifacts and gifts (maybe this is the gold Borelli saw?) The tale sounds too good to be true!
Alexandre
Schoedler-Tziamouranis’ account mentions that Borelli returned several
times to sketch the tomb and take notes with the intention of bringing Alexander to
Apparently, Alexander's sarcophagus had not moved from the consulate’s basement since the early 20th century, but the consulate no longer exists. It has been replaced by a residential building whose owner refuses access or any excavation to be carried out.
The above is widely based on an article Alexandre Schoedler-Tziamouranis published in the Greek Reporter in November 2022.
A previous claim was made ten years ago when the crypt of an early Christian church in Alexandria yielded a richly decorated mausoleum that was attributed to Alexander based on the inscription reading “King of Kings, and Conqueror of the World, Alexander III”. That story was never updated (see: New speculation about Alexander’s tomb).
And let us not forget the ongoing excavation project in Alexandria’s
One may wonder what hidden reasons are keeping Alexander hidden over the centuries.
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