The name Alexander is already very popular in the days of Alexander the Great and may lead to confusion.
For a start, there was Alexander of Epirus, Olympias’ brother and King Alexander’s uncle. I usually refer to him as Alexandros to make the difference. He is the one who married Alexander’s sister Cleopatra in 336 BC, the day King Philip of Macedonia was assassinated.
Then there is Alexander of Lyncestis, in
In Alexander’s campaign, the Lyncestian was soon appointed to command the Thracian detachment and later the Thessalian cavalry. However, two years later, Parmenion, who was spending the winter near Gordion, caught a messenger carrying a secret letter from the Persian King Darius for Alexander of Lyncestis. It revealed that Darius promised to pay him a thousand talents of gold to kill Alexander and would proclaim him King of Macedonia instead! Parmenion sent the messenger with a trusted escort to Alexander, where the man repeated the same story.
This was an extremely serious matter that Alexander put before his assembled
Companions in order to make the appropriate decision. It was agreed to send a
trusted man, a brother of Craterus,
to Parmenion. He would travel
incognito, dressed as a local and accompanied by guides from Perge,
and deliver his message verbally, as it was thought better not to write anything
on a matter of this importance. Alexander’s
envoy reached Parmenion without being
detected and reported the instructions he was carrying. Alexander of Lyncestis was arrested and put in chains. He was tried
for plotting against his king and put in prison. Being the son-in-law of Antipater, acting as the king’s Regent
in
The Lyncestian was dragged around for about three years, when in 330 BC, in the wake of Philotas’ trial and execution for a similar plot, the Macedonians demanded that he should be tried and punished accordingly as well. When he was brought in from confinement to plead his case, he was faltering and nervous, and found no words to reply and defend himself. This was perceived as a guilty conscience, and the bystanders ran him through with their spears.
It should be noted that Queen Eurydice I, Alexander’s paternal grandmother, was born in
Lyncestis. She married King Amynthas III of Macedonia, the father of Philip II,
in 390 BC to consolidate the relations between the two countries.
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