“To the
strongest” are the last words Alexander
pronounced on his deathbed in Babylon
when pressed to name his successor.
His Companions
and generals were obviously panicking at the thought of being left behind so many
miles away from Macedonia
without their king to guide them. They desperately needed him.
Ever since he became
king in 336 BC Alexander had shown his commanders the way and led his
men by example. He certainly did not
expect to die at the age of 33 and not in his bed. How could he have foreseen
to be incapacitated and unable to be his own self?
The only person
who had always been at his side and enjoyed his full confidence had died the
previous year. Hephaistion had been
officially appointed as his Chiliarch, his second in command. The sudden death
of his dearest friend left him in total disarray and maddened by grief. He was
truly alone at a time when he had to make the hardest decision of his life and
elect a successor. “Who, Alexander? Tell us who!” are the words Oliver Stone
put in the mouth of Ptolemy. How
appropriate!
“To
the strongest” has often been understood as a weak and evasive statement, although, in
reality, Alexander’s last words are one final proof of his genius! Had he
not been so much afflicted by his illness and impaired by the high fever, he
would have found the strength to elaborate a solution to the Succession with
his close Companions. He would likely have appointed Perdiccas. Even so, Alexander’s decision may have lost its power two years onward, and
the commanders would have taken the matter into their own hands anyway.
Of
course, everyone around the king’s deathbed still hoped to be appointed and hear his
name called out. However, matters were not as straightforward as one might
think. On the one hand, he had to name an heir since, as King, he needed a
successor, and on the other hand, as commander in chief of his army, he had to
appoint a capable military leader.
At
this point, his most experienced generals were Craterus and Perdiccas.
Yet, Craterus was in Cilicia taking 10,000 veterans back to Macedonia with Alexander’s instructions
to replace Antipater as
Regent in Pella. Perdiccas was
in Babylon and
took the king’s succession into his hands.
Roxane was pregnant, but the
child had not been born yet, and there was no guarantee it would be a boy. Alexander had
never recognized Heracles,
his son by Barsine. In any case, Roxane’s son
and Heracles were too young to rule, and the generals would
have to choose a Regent pending their coming of age. The next best option was
to push Arrhideus forward. He was Alexander’s simple-minded
half-brother and not capable of becoming the de facto ruler.
As a result, Perdiccas was
elected Regent at the Partition of Babylon.
This
implied, however, that he would rule over Alexander’s Companions
and generals. Perdiccas’ success was short-lived, though, and in 321 BC
he was sidelined at Triparadeisus as the commanders decided
to divide the kingdom among themselves. When Perdiccas escorted Alexander’s remains
to be buried in Macedonia, Ptolemy hijacked the mummified body and took it to Egypt. In a desperate attempt to
recover his king’s remains, Perdiccas failed totally to march
his men across the Nile. His losses were
so excessive that his soldiers revolted and killed him.
None
of the great men who fought alongside Alexander for almost
twelve years emerged as the strongest. They all had learned a lot, but none
could come close to Alexander’s charisma and exceptional genius.