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Alexander I of Macedon

A Wisdom Archive on Alexander I of Macedon

Alexander I of Macedon

A selection of articles related to Alexander I of Macedon

More material related to Alexander I Of Macedon can be found here:
Index of Articles
related to
Alexander I Of Macedon
Alexander I of Macedon

ARTICLES RELATED TO Alexander I of Macedon

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia - Battle of Plataea

The Battle of Plataea took place in 479 BC between an alliance of Greek city-states Sparta, Athens, Corinth, Megara, and others against the Persians. Battle of Plataea - Background. After the Battle of Salamis, Xerxes I returned to Persia, leaving Mardonius in charge of the conquered Greek territories. Mardonius, through Alexander I of Macedon, asked for a truce with Athens, offering autonomous government and Persian aid in rebuilding their city. Athens rejected this and asked for Spartan help, though the S ...

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Read more here: » Battle of Plataea: Encyclopedia - Battle of Plataea

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia - Battle of Marathon

The Battle of Marathon (490 BC) was the culmination of King Darius I of Persia's first major attempt to conquer the remainder of the Greeks and add them to the Persian Empire, thereby securing the weakest portion of his Western border. Battle of Marathon - Background. Hippias, tyrant of Athens, had been expelled in 510 BC by his people, with the assistance of Cleomenes I, King of Sparta. He fled to the court of Darius to seek assistance. With the failure of the Ionian Revolt (499 BC - 494 BC), Darius ...

Including:

Read more here: » Battle of Marathon: Encyclopedia - Battle of Marathon

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Battle of Marathon - Background

Hippias, tyrant of Athens, had been expelled in 510 BC by his people, with the assistance of Cleomenes I, King of Sparta. He fled to the court of Darius to seek assistance. With the failure of the Ionian Revolt (499 BC - 494 BC), Darius was intent on subjugating the Greeks and punishing them for their part in the revolt. In 492 BC Darius dispatched an army under his son-in-law, Mardonius. This army reduced Thrace and compelled Alexander I of Macedon to submit again to Persia. However, in attempting to advance into Greece much of the fleet was wrecked in a s ...

See also:

Battle of Marathon, Battle of Marathon - Background, Battle of Marathon - Battle, Battle of Marathon - Aftermath, Battle of Marathon - Conclusion, Battle of Marathon - Date of the battle, Battle of Marathon - Marathon run

Read more here: » Battle of Marathon: Encyclopedia II - Battle of Marathon - Background

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedon - Hellenic controversy

The controversy whether or not ancient Macedonia should be considered a Hellenic state is addressed variously: based on ancient sources, and on linguistic evidence. Neither approach is conclusive, Herodotus seems to assert that the Macedonian aristocracy was of Achaean origin while Macedonian people were of Dorian stock. Linguistics seems to point inconclusively to either Macedonian as an archaic form of Greek, Macedonian as part of a Graeco-Macedonian subfamily of Indo-European, or Macedonian as an in ...

See also:

Macedon, Macedon - Early history, Macedon - Expansion, Macedon - Decline, Macedon - Calendar, Macedon - Language, Macedon - Hellenic controversy, Macedon - Herodotus, Macedon - Linguistics

Read more here: » Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedon - Hellenic controversy

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedonia region - History

Macedonia region - Ancient Macedonia 500 BC to 146 BC. For a more complete treatment of early Macedonia, see Macedon. Macedonia is known to have been inhabited since Neolithic times. Its recorded history began with the emergence of the ancient kingdom of Macedon in what is now the Greek part of Macedonia and the neighbouring Bitola district in the south of today's Republic of Macedonia. By 500 BC, the early Macedonian kingdom had become subject to the Persian Empire but played no significant part in t ...

See also:

Macedonia region, Macedonia region - Etymology of the name of Macedonia, Macedonia region - Boundaries and definitions, Macedonia region - Demographics, Macedonia region - History, Macedonia region - Ancient Macedonia 500 BC to 146 BC, Macedonia region - Medieval Macedonia, Macedonia region - Macedonia's Division, Macedonia region - Macedonia after World War II, Macedonia region - Independence of the Republic of Macedonia, Macedonia region - Controversy: Republic of Macedonia and Greece, Macedonia region - Controversy: Republic of Macedonia and Bulgaria

Read more here: » Macedonia region: Encyclopedia II - Macedonia region - History

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Histories Herodotus - Storyline

Histories Herodotus - Book I Clio. The rulers of Lydia (on the west coast of modern Turkey): Candaules, Gyges, Alyattes, Crœsus How Gyges took the kingdom from Candaules The singer Arion's ride on the dolphin Solon's answer to Crœsus's question that Tellus was the happiest person in the world Crœsus's efforts to protect his son Atys, his son's accidental death by Adrastus Crœsus's test of the oracles The answer from the Oracle of Delphi concerning wh ...

See also:

Histories Herodotus, Histories Herodotus - Storyline, Histories Herodotus - Book I Clio, Histories Herodotus - Book II Euterpe, Histories Herodotus - Book III Thalia, Histories Herodotus - Book IV Melpomene, Histories Herodotus - Book V Terpsichore, Histories Herodotus - Book VI Erato, Histories Herodotus - Book VII Polymnia, Histories Herodotus - Book VIII Urania, Histories Herodotus - Book IX Calliope

Read more here: » Histories Herodotus: Encyclopedia II - Histories Herodotus - Storyline

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Battle of Plataea - Battle

Mardonius fortified the Asopus river in Boeotia, hoping that the Greeks would be unable to unite against him. However, the Athenians sent 8,000 men and marched with the Spartan force of 40,000 (5,000 Spartiates and 35,000 Perioci and Helots) to the pass over Mount Cithaeron, where they could successfully defend themselves from Persian raids. Mardonius sent a cavalry charge under the commander Masistius to take the pass, but Masistius was resisted by the Megarans and Athenians under the command of Olympiodorus. Masistius was killed and his ca ...

See also:

Battle of Plataea, Battle of Plataea - Background, Battle of Plataea - Battle, Battle of Plataea - Aftermath

Read more here: » Battle of Plataea: Encyclopedia II - Battle of Plataea - Battle

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedonia region - Boundaries and definitions

The name of Macedonia has not been always used with regard to the region as defined above. In its beginnings, the ancient state of Macedon encompassed only a part of this region, approximately equal to the present-day Greek Macedonia. The Roman province of Macedonia covered a much larger area than Macedon, including almost all of present-day geographical region of Macedonia, along with large parts of central Albania and Greece. In the Byzantine empire, there was a number of different themas (provinces) dividing the geographical region ...

See also:

Macedonia region, Macedonia region - Etymology of the name of Macedonia, Macedonia region - Boundaries and definitions, Macedonia region - Demographics, Macedonia region - History, Macedonia region - Ancient Macedonia 500 BC to 146 BC, Macedonia region - Medieval Macedonia, Macedonia region - Macedonia's Division, Macedonia region - Macedonia after World War II, Macedonia region - Independence of the Republic of Macedonia, Macedonia region - Controversy: Republic of Macedonia and Greece, Macedonia region - Controversy: Republic of Macedonia and Bulgaria

Read more here: » Macedonia region: Encyclopedia II - Macedonia region - Boundaries and definitions

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedonia region - Demographics

As a frontier region where several very different cultures meet, Macedonia has an extremely diverse demographic profile. Greeks form the majority of its population, living almost entirely in Greece. The second largest group of people in the region are the Macedonians, a Slavic people who form the majority of the population in the Republic of Macedonia. There is a small 3,000-strong Macedonian minority in the Bulgarian region of Blagoevgrad, which is otherwise known as Pirin Macedonia. The number of Slavic Macedonians in Greek Macedoni ...

See also:

Macedonia region, Macedonia region - Etymology of the name of Macedonia, Macedonia region - Boundaries and definitions, Macedonia region - Demographics, Macedonia region - History, Macedonia region - Ancient Macedonia 500 BC to 146 BC, Macedonia region - Medieval Macedonia, Macedonia region - Macedonia's Division, Macedonia region - Macedonia after World War II, Macedonia region - Independence of the Republic of Macedonia, Macedonia region - Controversy: Republic of Macedonia and Greece, Macedonia region - Controversy: Republic of Macedonia and Bulgaria

Read more here: » Macedonia region: Encyclopedia II - Macedonia region - Demographics

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedon - Language

See main article: Ancient Macedonian language. The language spoken by the area's inhabitants prior to the 5th century BC, and continued into the early centuries of the Common Era by the rural population, is attested in some hundred words from various glosses (mainly those of Hesychius of Alexandria, 5th century AD), as well as placenames and personal names. The majority of these words can be confidently identified as Greek, and the language was either closely related to Greek, or perhaps even a dialect of Greek. There are words, however, that are not easily identifiable as Greek, a number of which for example show voiced stops ...

See also:

Macedon, Macedon - Early history, Macedon - Expansion, Macedon - Decline, Macedon - Calendar, Macedon - Language, Macedon - Hellenic controversy, Macedon - Herodotus, Macedon - Linguistics

Read more here: » Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedon - Language

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Battle of Marathon - Battle

On the ninth day (either 12 September or possibly 12 August 490 BC reckoned in the proleptic Julian calendar) it became known to the Athenians that Eretria had fallen by treachery. This meant that Artaphernes was now free to move, and might attack Athens. The Athenian army went out to face the Persians. This was probably a combined decision by the generals, although Herodotus reports that they were rotating days of command and that Miltiades was in charge at this point, since he had a large part in persuading the others to do so. According t ...

See also:

Battle of Marathon, Battle of Marathon - Background, Battle of Marathon - Battle, Battle of Marathon - Aftermath, Battle of Marathon - Conclusion, Battle of Marathon - Date of the battle, Battle of Marathon - Marathon run

Read more here: » Battle of Marathon: Encyclopedia II - Battle of Marathon - Battle

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Battle of Marathon - Aftermath

As soon as Datis had put to sea, the Athenians marched to Athens. They arrived in time to prevent Artaphernes from securing a landing. Seeing his opportunity lost, Artaphernes set about and returned to Asia. The Spartans arrived afterwards, toured the battlefield at Marathon, and agreed that the Athenians had won a great victory. The Greek upset of the Persians, who had not been defeated on land for many decades, caused great problems for the Persians. Seeing that the Persians were not invincible, many peoples subject to their rule rose up following the defeat of their overlords at Marath ...

See also:

Battle of Marathon, Battle of Marathon - Background, Battle of Marathon - Battle, Battle of Marathon - Aftermath, Battle of Marathon - Conclusion, Battle of Marathon - Date of the battle, Battle of Marathon - Marathon run

Read more here: » Battle of Marathon: Encyclopedia II - Battle of Marathon - Aftermath

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedon - Early history

The first Macedonian state emerged 8th or early 7th century BC under the Argead Dynasty, when the Macedonians are said to have migrated to the region from further west. Their first king is recorded as Perdiccas I. Around the time of Alexander I of Macedon, the Macedonians started to expand into Eordaia, Bottiaea, Pieria, Mygdonia, and Almopia. Near the modern city of Edessa, Perdiccas I (or, more likely, his son, Argaeus I) b ...

See also:

Macedon, Macedon - Early history, Macedon - Expansion, Macedon - Decline, Macedon - Calendar, Macedon - Language, Macedon - Hellenic controversy, Macedon - Herodotus, Macedon - Linguistics

Read more here: » Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedon - Early history

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedon - Expansion

Under Philip II, (359-336 BC), Macedon expanded into the territory of the Paionians, Thracians, and Illyrians. This brought into its orbit the Monastir (now Bitola) and Gevgelija districts of what is now the Republic of Macedonia. Macedon became more politically involved with the south-central city-states of Ancient Greece, but it also retained more archaic features like the palace-culture, first at Aegae (modern Vergina) then at Pella, resembling Mycenaean culture more than classic Hellenic city-states, and other archaic customs, like Philip's multiple wives in addition to his Epirote ...

See also:

Macedon, Macedon - Early history, Macedon - Expansion, Macedon - Decline, Macedon - Calendar, Macedon - Language, Macedon - Hellenic controversy, Macedon - Herodotus, Macedon - Linguistics

Read more here: » Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedon - Expansion

Alexander I of Macedon: Encyclopedia II - Macedonia region - Etymology of the name of Macedonia

According to ancient Greek mythology, Macedon - ancient Greek Μακεδών Makedōn, poetic Μακηδών Makēdōn - was the name of the first phylarch (tribal chief) of the Μακεδόνες Makedónes, the part of the Μακεδνοί MakednoíSee also:

Macedonia region, Macedonia region - Etymology of the name of Macedonia, Macedonia region - Boundaries and definitions, Macedonia region - Demographics, Macedonia region - History, Macedonia region - Ancient Macedonia 500 BC to 146 BC, Macedonia region - Medieval Macedonia, Macedonia region - Macedonia's Division, Macedonia region - Macedonia after World War II, Macedonia region - Independence of the Republic of Macedonia, Macedonia region - Controversy: Republic of Macedonia and Greece, Macedonia region - Controversy: Republic of Macedonia and Bulgaria

Read more here: » Macedonia region: Encyclopedia II - Macedonia region - Etymology of the name of Macedonia

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