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Alexander the Great: Life and Reign of the King of the Macedonian Empire

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    - Did you know that Alexander the Great
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    had a habit of renaming
    cities after himself,
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    and in one case, he even named a city
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    after his beloved horse.
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    Stick around to learn all
    about Alexander the Great
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    in honor of his birthday.
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    (gentle plucky music)
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    Hello, and welcome to "World
    History Encyclopedia."
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    My name is Kelly, and
    in honor of the birth
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    of Alexander the Great on either the 20th
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    or 21st of July, 356 BCE,
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    we're going to be answering the questions,
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    who is Alexander the Great?
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    Why is he so famous and
    was he ever defeated?
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    Happy birthday, Alexander.
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    Don't forget the easiest way to support us
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    is by giving this video a thumbs up
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    and subscribing to our channel
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    and hitting the bell
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    so you don't miss out on our new uploads,
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    every Tuesday and Friday.
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    (plucky music continues)
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    Alexander the Great, also
    known as Alexander III
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    of Macedon became king of
    Macedon after the death
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    of his father, King Philip II, in 336 BCE.
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    Alexander is known for
    both his military might
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    and his diplomatic skills,
    which aided in his expansion
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    of the Macedonian Kingdom
    to an empire of a size
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    his father had not even dreamed of.
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    Alexander is recognized as
    a key figure in the spread
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    of Greek culture and language
    throughout the ancient world.
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    And his death sparked
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    the beginning of the Hellenistic period,
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    which spanned from 323 to 31 BCE.
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    After his death, his
    campaigns became legendary,
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    and later Greek and Roman generals learned
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    from his successes and failures
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    and were influenced by his tactics.
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    When Alexander was young,
    he was taught to fight
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    and ride by Leonidas of
    Epirus and how to read, write,
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    and play the lyre by
    Lysimachus of Acarnania.
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    When he was 13 or 14, he was tutored
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    by the Greek philosopher,
    Aristotle until he was 16/
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    Perhaps due to Aristotle's teachings
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    which encouraged tolerance,
    Alexander never forced
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    the Greek culture on those he conquered,
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    but simply introduced it to them.
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    Despite his father, Philip
    II laying the groundwork
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    for Alexander to be successful,
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    Alexander claimed all
    the credit for himself
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    and chose to call himself a son of Zeus,
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    claiming to be a demigod,
    modeling his behavior
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    after his two favorite
    heroes, Hercules and Achilles.
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    This claim was in part due to Olympias,
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    Alexander's mother claiming
    that his was a virgin birth
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    and that she was miraculously
    impregnated by Zeus.
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    Alexander's childhood friends,
    Hephaestion, Cassander
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    and Ptolemy would all
    become lifelong companions
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    and generals in his army.
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    And Aristotle's great
    nephew, Callisthenes,
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    who was also a friend, would
    become the court historian
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    and follow Alexander on campaign.
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    At 18 years old in 338 BCE
    at the Battle of Chaeronea
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    fought between the Macedonian Empire
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    and the Greek allied city states,
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    Alexander's military skill
    was first noted when he turned
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    the tide of the battle
    for a Macedonian victory,
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    and afterwards the Greek city states
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    were brought under Macedonian rule.
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    In 336 BCE, just two years
    after the battle of Chaeronea,
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    Philip II died and
    Alexander assumed the throne
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    as King of Macedon.
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    Alexander wasted no time in
    embarking on the extensive
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    campaign that his father
    had been planning,
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    the conquest of the Persian empire.
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    (gentle plucky music continues)
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    As King, Alexander the
    Great moved into Asia Minor,
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    modern day Turkey in 334,
    BCE, with 32,000 infantry
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    and 5,100 cavalry.
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    And in May of 334, he
    fought the Persian satraps
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    or governors at the Battle of
    Granicus and was victorious.
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    According to Alexander, he
    then liberated the cities
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    of Sardis and Ephesus from Persian rule.
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    Although, his word liberated
    has been understood
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    as the conquest of these cities.
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    In 333 BCE, Alexander fought
    the Persian King Darius III
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    at the Battle of Isis, a battle famous
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    for its depiction on the Alexander Mosaic.
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    Alexander defeated Darius's larger force
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    and he then sacked the Phoenician cities
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    of Baalbek and Sidon and
    in 332, he laid siege
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    to the island city of Tyre.
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    The siege of Tyre is a famous
    example of his commitment
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    to victory and his ruthfulness.
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    In order to bring his siege
    engines within striking distance
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    of Tyre's walls, he had his
    army build a land bridge
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    out to the island, which
    is how the island city
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    became linked to the land
    as the site still is today.
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    And in response to the
    stubbornness of the inhabitants
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    of the city refusing to surrender,
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    he slaughtered most of them
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    and then sold the survivors as slaves.
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    In 331, he moved to Egypt and conquered it
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    and founded the city of Alexandria there,
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    named after himself, of course.
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    Alexander had a habit of naming cities
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    after himself and even
    his horse Bucephalus,
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    but we'll get to that later.
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    Alexander marched his army
    across the desert to the oasis
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    of Siwa so that he could
    visit the Oracle of Zeus Ammon
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    that presided there.
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    Alexander knew of the infallible
    reputation of the oracle
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    who had been consulted by the
    hero's Heracles and Perseus.
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    Alexander asked the
    oracle whether his father
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    was truly Philip II, and the
    Oracle declared his true father
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    to be Zeus Ammon.
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    There was no military
    value to marching to Siwa
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    and losing some men to the desert.
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    It was either to satisfy his megalomania
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    or a cleverly calculated
    PR stunt to spread the myth
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    of him being a demigod or both.
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    We will never know.
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    The next phase of Alexander's conquests
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    is known as the Persian campaigns.
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    In 331, Alexander met Darius
    III in battle, once again.
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    This time at the battle of Gaugamela,
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    which is also known as
    the battle of Arbela.
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    Alexander was victorious again.
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    Darius fled the battle,
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    and then Alexander took the
    cities of Babylon and Susa,
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    which both surrendered to him.
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    It's safe to say that
    Alexander was on a roll.
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    In the winter of 330,
    Alexander and his army
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    marched to Persepolis and
    defeated the Persian hero,
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    Ariobarzanes and his
    sister Youtab Ariobarzane
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    at the battle of the Persian Gates,
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    and after Alexander was victorious,
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    he set Persepolis on fire,
    probably in a drunken folly.
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    In the summer of the same
    year, Darius was assassinated
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    by his cousin and General Bessus,
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    which Alexander thought was deplorable.
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    After the death of Darius,
    Alexander crowned himself
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    the King of Asia, gave Darius the burial
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    of a Persian emperor and
    then marched his army
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    into Bactria what is now
    modern day Afghanistan.
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    If you haven't noticed by
    now, this man does not stop.
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    Between the years 330 and
    327, Alexander campaigned
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    in Bactria and Sogdiana
    and won every engagement.
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    And in 329, he destroyed
    the city of Cyropolis,
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    defeated the Scythians and
    founded another city named
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    after himself, Alexandria
    Eschate on the Jaxartes River.
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    It was around this point that Alexander
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    began to portray himself
    not just as a liberator
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    of cities, but as a God.
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    He adopted the title that the rulers
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    of the first Persian
    empire used shahansha,
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    which means king of kings.
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    And the Persian custom of proskynesis,
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    which meant that those who
    addressed him had to kneel
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    and kiss his hand.
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    To say that his Macedonian
    troops were unhappy about this,
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    is an understatement.
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    His troops became increasingly
    unhappy with his adoption
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    of Persian customs and were growing more
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    and more uncomfortable.
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    So much so that assassination
    plans were formed.
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    Of course, the conspirators
    and those who committed treason
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    or questioned his authority
    were found out and executed,
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    including his close friends, Cleitus,
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    who was killed with the javelin
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    and Callisthenes who was
    imprisoned and died in confinement.
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    In 327, Alexander married
    the Batrian woman, Roxana,
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    and then set his sights on India.
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    The Indian king Ambhi of
    Taxila surrendered quickly,
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    but the Aspasioi and
    Assakenoi tribes resisted.
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    By 326, Alexander had subdued the tribes,
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    then fought King Porus of Paurava
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    and his war elephants at the
    battle of Hydaspes River.
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    In true Alexander
    fashion, he won the battle
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    and then made Porus
    ruler of a larger region
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    than he'd previously held.
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    because of how bravely he
    and his troops had fought.
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    During this battle, his
    horse Bucephalus was killed,
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    and so of course, he named
    the city Bucephala after him.
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    By now, Alexander's troops were exhausted
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    and they didn't wanna go any further,
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    and it took some convincing.
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    But finally, Alexander
    decided to head back to Susa.
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    Half his troops were sent by sea,
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    and half he marched through
    the Gedrosian Desert
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    where many died of thirst and starvation.
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    Why he chose to do this,
    we don't really know.
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    When he finally arrived back
    in Susa, he found that many
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    of the satraps he left in
    charge had abused their power,
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    so he executed them, as well as those
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    who vandalized Cyrus the Great's tomb.
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    Alexander wanted to merge
    the cultures of Macedonia
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    and Persia more, so in 324, he
    held a mass marriage service
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    in Susa, where he married
    Persian noble women
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    to senior members of his staff
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    and to connect himself to Persian royalty,
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    he married one of Darius III's daughters.
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    His men rejected this cultural merging
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    and his adoption of Persian dress,
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    and they really didn't like
    how he merged the Macedonian
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    and Persian army units
    and promoted Persians
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    to high positions, even though it seems
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    this was an effective policy
    in furthering his goal
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    of uniting the two cultures.
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    So after looking at all these battles,
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    which Alexander the Great took part in
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    during his short life,
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    was Alexander the Great ever defeated?
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    No, no, he was not.
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    (gentle plucky music continues)
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    In the year 324, his closest
    companion, Hephaestion died
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    of a fever and Alexander's
    grief was inconsolable.
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    Arian wrote that Alexander
    killed Hephaestion's doctor
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    because he failed to heal him.
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    Alexander declared a period of mourning
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    and gave him the funeral rights
    usually reserved for a king.
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    A year after the death of his
    closest friend and companion,
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    Alexander the Great suffered
    10 days of a high fever
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    before he died on June 10 or
    11 in 323 at the age of 32.
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    There are a few competing
    hypotheses regarding the death
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    of Alexander the Great,
    ranging from poisoning
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    or assassination, typhoid or malaria,
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    and new hypotheses
    continue to be suggested.
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    More recent suggestions for
    the cause of Alexander's death
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    are the West Nile Virus or
    Guillain-Barre syndrome.
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    Ancient sources say that Alexander's body
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    didn't begin decomposing until six days
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    after he was proclaimed dead,
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    and GBS could be the reason why.
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    Alexander may have been
    experiencing paralysis,
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    which meant his body would not
    have needed as much oxygen,
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    so it may have looked as
    if he wasn't breathing.
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    Ancient doctors didn't use the pulse
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    to determine if someone was alive,
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    but rather if they were breathing or not.
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    So when Alexander was confirmed dead,
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    he may have not actually been
    dead for another six days.
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    He left no will and named no successor,
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    resulting in the wars then
    waged by his generals,
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    which tore apart the
    empire he had created.
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    Out of these two so-called
    successor states,
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    two became powerful
    states in their own right.
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    Ptolemaic Egypt and Seleucid, Persia.
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    Do you believe Alexander
    the Great really was great?
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    Let us know why or why not,
    down in the comments below.
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    sure to give it a thumbs up
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    every Tuesday and Friday.
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    (gentle plucky music continues)
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    and we'll see you soon with another video.
Title:
Alexander the Great: Life and Reign of the King of the Macedonian Empire
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Duration:
13:29

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