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    Chapter IV

    Philip II and Alexander III

    Artemis Absence

    Two very famous things happened on the night of July 20th, 356 BC. First, an arsonist,

    wishing to have his name live forever, set ablaze one of the seven wonders of the ancient world:

    the Temple of Artemis of Ephesus. That very same night, as the temple was being consumed in

    flames, Alexander the Great was born.

    Little remains of the Temple of Artemis today

    except a single column, restacked in the marshy swamp

    where the temple once stood. Located on the western

    coast of Turkey, the city of Ephesus pre-dates Christianity by

    over 1,000 years, and was an Eastern outpost of Greek

    culture in Ionia.

    Older than Apollos shrine in the nearby city of

    Didymaitself a place of pilgramage and worship to the

    Greeks, the Temple of Artemis was finished in the 6th

    century BC, when that land was controlled by the kingdom

    of Lydia. It was re-built many times over the course of the

    next few hundred years, and was in its fourth version (called

    temple D) when Alexander was born in 356 BC. A staggering

    220 feet wide and 425 feet long, the temple was enormous, supported by 127 columns that

    stretched like a forest of tall trees, 60ft up into the sky. To put it in more American terms, thetemple was 1 football fields long, 2/3 of a field wide. If the columns were laid flat, they would

    stretch from the end zone to mid-field. It was not only the largest temple in the world, but it

    also exerted significant political and financial influence in Ephesus.

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    On that fateful night in 356 BC, an arsonist named Herostratus set ablaze the great

    temple, wishing to have his name live forever by commiting this act of intentional destruction.

    As the later Roman historian Valerius Maximus said:

    A man was found to plan the burning of the temple of Ephesian Diana (Artemis)

    so that through the destruction of this most beautiful building his name might be

    spread through the whole world. (Valerius Maximus, VIII.14.ext.5)

    In their hatred, the Ephesians ordered Herostratus put to death, and

    anyone who spoke his name to share the same fate as the arsonist.

    In the aftermath of the destroyed temple, the Ephesians decided yet

    again to rebuild the famous temple. The re-building of the temple was notpurely for religious reasons. It must not be overlooked that the temple was

    sacred anda money maker for the Ephesians. Worshippers and admireres

    came from all over the Greek world to see this amazing sight, and the

    business it created for the local economy was immense. Rebuilding a

    templeeven a modest onew as never a quick process, and the Temple of Artemis was still

    under reconstruction when Alexander marched through with his Macedonian army twenty-two

    years later in 334 BC. He even offered to pay for its rebuilding, with an eye probably towards

    the public relations gain of such a gesture. However, they politely refused his offer, and

    continued on their own, finishing it eleven years later.

    For another three hundred and fifty years people came to Ephesus to see the Temple of

    Artemis. Then, in the first century AD of the Roman Empire, the Apostle Paul stopped at

    Ephesus to preach the gospel. The Temple of Artemis supported a bustling local business in

    iconography1, which is described in the Biblical chapter titled Ephesians. Paul feared going into

    the city because a local silversmith, Demetrius, had stirred up resentment to Paul and his

    message. Changing to a different faith meant a cut, if not elimination, of the local merchants

    livelihood, since they relied on selling the iconic images of the Temple of Artemisthose lovely

    trinkets all tourists and would-be pilgrims pick up from famous sites. In other words, Demetrius

    was an early advocate for been there, got the t-shirt. Pauls companions, Gaius and

    Aristarchus, were shoved into the theatre (Paul himself dared not step foot inside the city

    1Iconography in Ephesus was the business of selling images of the Temple of Artemis.

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    because of the mobs anger). Once inside, they faced the real possibility of being killed by the

    enraged merchants. However, a town-clerk managed to calm the crowd, and eventually

    everyone dispersed.

    A legend arose the night the temple burned: it was said that the goddess Artemis, who

    always watched over her temples safety, left her beloved sanctuary and traveled across the

    Aegean to witness the birth of Alexander. In her absence, Herostratus found everlasting

    infamy.

    Theatre of Ephesus

    Achilles Fate

    As the fire burned through the wooden timbers and brought the

    temple roof crashing down, so too did the birth of Alexander begin a fire

    that would spread across Asia. Alexander was the son of twenty-year-old

    Olympias (375-316 BC), a princess from the kingdom of Epirus, and Philip

    II (382-326 BC), the twenty-six year old king of Macedonia. The young

    Alexander spent his childhood hearing the stories of Homers Iliad, and

    the tales of the gods on Mount Olympus. To him they were real.

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    Alexander grew up knowing in his heart that the fate of a man lies not within himself or

    his own deeds, but with the will of the gods. Olympias constantly told him of his ancestry, and

    that he was a descendant of Achilles and Herakles. She herself could claim her bloodline back to

    Andromache, wife of Hector, who was taken back to Greece by Achilles son, Neoptolemeus.

    Alexander intended to surpass in glory these heroes of history and mythology, but he would also

    share Achilles fate. Once he left Greece for his famous march into Persia, he would never see

    her shores again. Alexander, whether he knew it or not, had chosen kleos over nostos, as had

    Achilles. Alexander felt the gods governed a mans fate, and he would die when the gods

    deemed it his time. At heart, he was a deeply religious man.

    Philip II

    Pella, the capital city of Macedonia, was in the northernmost

    reaches of Greece, roughly four days travel north of Mt. Olympus. The

    Athenians and other Greeks of central and southern Greece looked

    upon the Macedonians as semi-barbaric, hard drinkers, who

    shamelessly had a history of offering invading Persian armies fire and

    water. As it has been mentioned earlier, such symbols of submission

    were demanded of Alexander I, who ruled Macedonia during the

    Persian Wars. Essentially snubbed as Greek groupies by the

    Athenians and other older city-states of central Greece, the

    Macedonians werein a manner of speakingthe loud out of town

    guests who move in to a loft apartment above some gentile older couple. It was under the

    leadership of Philip II, Alexanders father, that the Greek city-states would be united under one,

    single rulehis own.

    Philip II spent his early years as a hostage in Thebes, receiving an education from its

    leading general Epaminondas. This was the same general who smashed the Spartan army at

    the Battle of Leuctra. In 364 BC, at age 18, Philip returned to Macedonia. Five years later, after

    the deaths of his two elder brothers, he ascended to the throne of Macedonia. In that same

    year, he secured his kingdoms western border, which had been invaded by Thracians, and

    Philip II of Macedon

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    defeated a force of 3,000 Athenians, who were trying to put their own puppet king on the

    Macedonian throne. He spent these crucial early years reforming the Macedonian army into

    one of the most powerful military forces of the ancient world.

    Philip instituted changes to the standard Greek hoplite, radically changing phalanx

    warfare. His soldiers were no longer the temporary farmer-soldier. He paid his them, and made

    them train all year round.2

    They even trained during winter, in an effort to strengthen their

    endurance. The phalanx was deepened from the traditional depth of 8 to 16 men, forming a

    square of 256 soldiers called a syntagma. The large hoplite shield, which had changed very little

    for the past thousand years, was reduced in size. Now, with the addition of a shoulder strap, it

    could be wielded without using the left hand. This left both hands free to hold the new spear,

    the sarissa. Philip ordered the traditional spear length doubled, making it roughly 14-17 feet

    long, and took both hands to use. This turned a phalanx into a rolling pin cushion. Before anenemy could even touch the first man in a syntagmahe had to get through the first five rows of

    sarissae that bristled out in front. Behind them, the remaining men of the syntagma held their

    spears at a 45 degree angle to help block incoming missiles.

    Questions and Reflection

    1. What was the nameof the arsonist who

    burned down the

    Temple of Artemis?

    2. What year wasAlexander the Greatborn?

    3. What city did PhilipII spend his early

    years as a hostage?

    4. What is the namefor the 256 man

    phalanx formation?

    Reflection Essay

    1. Compare Alexanders birth and destruction of the temple to someone having been born onSeptember 11

    th, 2001.

    2This classifies Philip IIs army as professional, since their sole occupation became was war, and they were

    paid , unlike the Spartans.

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    Consolidation of Power

    Philip spent the next 13 years in an almost constant state of war and diplomacy, usually

    against Athens and her allies. He ruthlessly expanded his control in nearly every direction of the

    compass, however, it was not without sacrifice. In 355 Philip besieged the Athenian city of

    Methone, and lost an eye from a nearly fatal arrow. The year before he lost an eye, he gained a

    son.

    Portents and signs preceded Alexanders birth3. Philip dreamt that he tried to seal up

    Olympias womb, and engraved on the seal was the figure of a lion. The lion has long been a

    sign of kingship, and it was believed that this was a sign that Philips son would become king.

    Olympias also suffered strange dreams before giving birth. She awoke one night, having dreamt

    that lightning struck her womb with a thunderous crash, and a blinding light thereupon shone

    from it. On the day Alexander was born, news was brought to Philip that his right-hand general

    and old friend, Parmenio, won a great victory over the Illyrians in the north. Word also reached

    him that his horse won in the Olympic Games. As the saying goes, everything happens in

    threes.

    Olympias was not Philips first wife, nor his second, or even his thirdshe was in fact his

    fourth4. More of a political arrangement, Philips marriage to Olympias linked him to the royal

    bloodline of King Arymbas of Epirus; she was the kings niece. The marriage with Olympias

    helped to strengthen Philips ties to that kingdom and secure his western border, allowing him

    to focus on his Thracian and Athenian problems.

    Bucephalus

    As Alexander grew up under Philips watchful eye, Philip continued waging war and

    expanding Macedonian territory. In 346 BC a tentative peace was made with Athens, and Philip

    turned to threaten Sparta. Even though Spartas military prestige was shattered at Leuctra in

    371 BC, they were still a military power to be worried about. Philip sent a message to Sparta,

    3Alexander the Great was named Alexander III.

    4Olympias name was, according to the historian Plutarch, originally Polyxena, but it was changed Myrtale

    due to her initiation in the secretive cult of Dionysius. He also claimed that she loved to sleep with snakes,which were symbolic of the cult. When Philips horse won at the Olympic Games, her name changed yet

    again.

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    You are advised to submit without further delay, for if I bring my army into your land, I will

    destroy your farms, slay your people, and raze your city. The Spartans, in their customary

    Laconic language, sent a simple reply: if. Philip left Sparta alone.

    As Philip was consolidating his power in 346 BC, Alexander was a young, ten-year-old

    boy. He greeted some Persian ambassadors who came to Pella seeking an audience with Philip.

    Charmed by the inquisitive young prince, they happily answered all his questions. Alexander

    asked what the extent of the Persian Empire was, its military strength, and who was its king and

    how did he rule the lands. The Persian

    ambassadors did not feel threatened. After all,

    he was just a boy. Hindsight is truly 20/20.

    There is another story that gives an

    insight into the young boys character, and itconcerns perhaps Alexanders closest friendhis

    horse Bucephalus. A horse trader came to sell

    Philip a black horse of immense size and volatile

    temperament. It had a single, distinguishing

    white mark on his head the shape of an ox, and

    for that it got its name, Bucephalus (translates

    as ox-head in Greek).5

    The trader demanded

    13 talents from Philip for the horse, a staggering

    amount, since it amounted to 858 pounds of

    silver. The horse would not let anyone ride him,

    and could not seem to be broken.6

    When Philip tried and gave up in frustration, Alexander

    offered his father a wager (it is important to remember that he is only ten-years-old). He told

    his father that if he could not ride the horse, he would pay for it himself. As Philip and his

    entourage looked on, Alexander carefully walked up to the horse, and with the gentlest of

    motions, turned him to face the sun. The young prince noticed something no one else had;

    Bucephalus was afraid of his own shadow. When Bucephalus shadow disappeared, Alexander

    slipped onto his back, and rode him away at a gallop. Things were tense for Philip, as Plutarch

    says:

    5The other story is that the horses extreme stubbornness was the origin of its name.

    6A wild horse had to be broken before it could be rode. This meant taming the horse so a rider could

    mount on its back without being thrown.

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    Philip and his friends looked on at first in silence and anxiety for the result, till

    seeing him turn at the end of his career, and come back rejoicing and triumphing

    for what he had performed, they all burst out into acclamations of applause; and

    his father shedding tears, it is said, for joy, kissed him as he came down from his

    horse, and in his transport said, "O my son, look thee out a kingdom equal to

    and worthy of thyself, for Macedonia is too little for thee."

    While John Drydens translation of Plutarch is a bit old fashioned, one can still see in

    Alexander a keen awareness of things that others would miss, and an exceptional fearlessness

    he would have all his life.

    Education

    Growing up, Alexander had an early tutor named

    Leonidas, who was exceedingly strict. One day as a young boy,

    Alexander was offering sacrifice, and heaped a large amount of

    incense on the altar fire. Leonidas scolded the young Alexander

    for throwing too much and said that when he conquered all the

    spice bearing lands could he then afford to be so generous to the

    gods. Many years later, in 332 BC, Alexander conquered the city

    of Gaza on his way to Egypt. Gaza was a key city on the spice

    trade between Persia and Egypt. Leonidas awoke to find that six

    hundred talents of frankincense and myrrh had been shipped to

    himthats nearly 40,000 pounds! Again, a childhood episode

    gives a glimpse into how Alexander thought. He could harbor a grudge for years, and was

    patient and calculatinga very dangerous combination.

    When Alexander was fourteen, Philip hired the famous philosopher, Aristotle, to

    continue tutoring the young prince. In a quiet grove, along with some of Alexanders closest

    friends, Aristotle taught him rhetoric, astronomy, biology, politics, ethics, logic, and many other

    Aristotle

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    wide ranging subjects. Aristotle was, after all, Platos most brilliant pupil; and Plato himself was

    a pupil of Socrates. Things do indeed happen in threes.

    Questions and Reflection

    5. What was Buchephalus afraid of?6. What kingdom was Olympias from?7. What were the names of Alexanders two tutors?Reflection Essay

    2. How is having multiple wives for Philip II different than modern polygamist marriges?

    The Battle of Chaeronea

    When Alexander was eighteen, he took part in a battle with his father against a united

    army of Athenians, Thebans and their allies. They fought to prevent Macedonian hegemony

    over Greecethe Spartans, of course, did not show. The Battle of Chaeronea in 338 BC had two

    significant events: first, this battle ended the Greek effort for independence and recognized

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    Family Trouble

    Olympias was not the last wife of Philip. In fact, in 337 BC Philip II married Eurydice,

    niece of Attalus, an officer and nobleman in the Macedonian army. She was wife number eight,

    and a hated rival of Olympias. Eurydice, unlike Alexanders mother, was of pure Macedonian

    blood. Thus, if a child came of that marriage, it would have a greater hereditary claim to the

    throne than Alexander. This argument nearly came to blows at a dinner banquet, when Attalus

    made a toastin front of Alexanderthat he hoped Philips new marriage would result in a

    legitimate heir. Insulted, Alexander got into a shouting match with Attalus, and asked if he

    took Alexander to be a bastard. Alexander then threw his wine glass at him. Infuriated, Philip

    drew his sword to strike at Alexander for this insult. However, Philip unsurprisingly had too

    much wine that night, and he tripped and fell over a table. With a bit of smugness, Alexander

    said to the dinner crowd, Look, men, here is the man who was getting ready to cross from

    Europe to Asia, and he cannot even cross from one table to another without falling down.

    This incident prompted Olympias to return to Epirus7

    and Alexander to campaign up

    north. Soon, however, Philip realized he needed Alexander, as he was a good soldier and able

    leader in Philips absence. If Philip was going to lead his great invasion into Persia, he would

    need his son at his side. Fate, however, had a different plan for him. In 336 BC, Philip ordered

    Attalus set out with an advance force into Asia Minor in preparation for the invasion of Persia.

    Philip decided now was the appropriate time to visit Delphi and seek confirmation before setting

    out against Persia. The Oracles advice was typically cryptic, and said Wreathed in the bull, all

    is done. Philip took the message to mean that King Darius III of Persia was going to be offered

    up as a sacrifice on the altar. Now satisfied, he had one more thing to do before setting out on

    his Persian campaign in the spring of the following year.8 Philip decided to arrange one more

    marriage; this time for his daughter, Cleopatra. She was Olympias and Philips daughter, born

    the same year as Alexander, and his sister. She was to marry Alexander I of Epirus, Olympias

    own brother. That meant that Cleopatra was going to marry her own uncle. Putting aside the

    obvious familial issues here, one can see that Philip was motivated by political reasons. By

    making Alexander I of Epirus his son-in-law, Philip tightened his grip on the kingdom of Epirus.

    Olympias was, in a manner of speaking, having the political door shut in her face.

    7Her brother, also named Alexander (I), had been placed as king by Philip a few years before.

    8335 BC.

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    Philip IIs Assassination

    In celebration of this marriage, Philip arranged a public ceremony in the theatre of

    Aegae (pictured above) in October of 336 BC. Appearing with Alexander I of Epirus on one side,

    and Alexander III, his son, on the other side, Philip made his way through the city to the theatre.

    Here representatives of almost all the major Greek city-states were present. Philips rule over

    Greece was tenuous at best, despite his claim that he was about to wage war on behalf of all

    Greeks for the atrocities of the Persian Wars over a century earlier. As Philip entered the

    theatre, Pausanias, chief of Philips Royal Guard, approached him when he was alone, and

    stabbed him.9

    Running from the theatre to a waiting horse, Pausanias tripped and was stabbed

    to death by Philips loyal guards who had given chase to the assassin.

    Cleopatra and Alexander I had the good instinct to leave back to Epirus. Alexander, age

    twenty, was proclaimed king the next day by the Macedonian army. Olympias, feeling secure in

    9Pausanius was one of seven soldiers in Philips Royal Bodyguard. His motivation for killing Philip was

    officially that he was on the Persian take, while another darker reason was that he was avenging being

    spurned by Philip when his sexual advances were denied.

    Theatre of Aegae

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    her position, had Eurydice and her new infant killed.10

    Enraged at his mothers actions,

    Alexander felt that Attalus was now a threat to his rule. He was at that time over in Asia Minor,

    preparing for the forthcoming invasion of Persia. Alexander also learned that Attalus was in

    conversation with Demosthenes, Athens most famous orator and outspoken critic of Philip and

    the Macedonian hegemony over Greece. It would not take much convincing for Athens to

    throw off Alexanders rule, and Attalus conversations with Demosthenes were enough of a

    danger to order his assassination. The Greek world held its collective breath to find out what

    was going to happen next.

    Questions and Reflection

    8. What two city-states fought against Philip atChaeronea?

    9. What did Philip do to commemorate the SacredBand that died at Chaeronea?10. What Greek city-state did not recognize Philip as

    the Captain-General of Greece?

    11. What was the name of Philips assassin?Reflection Essay

    3. How is being thrown the keys to a new car anapt analogy for Alexanders ascension to the

    throne in 336 BC?

    Demosthenes of Athens

    PPhilip II's burial larnax

    11

    10It is uncertain if there was a child, but the name Europa is given. Some sources say that Olympias had

    them burned alive, forced to hang themselves, or dragged over a burning brazier. While the method is not

    clear, the result is all the same.11

    In Vergina (Aegae), the box (larnax) holding Philip IIs remains is on display in the museum there.