180 likes | 321 Views
The Struggle for Succession. The Diadochoi or successors to Alexander through the balance of power established after Ipsos (301 BCE). Essay assignment Due in Blackboard by 5pm Thursday.
E N D
The Struggle forSuccession The Diadochoior successors to Alexander through the balance of power established after Ipsos (301 BCE)
Essay assignmentDue in Blackboard by 5pm Thursday • Alexander’s approach to world conquest was complex and varied with the circumstances – the timing, the location, the people involved, and, of course, the stakes. Analyze Alexander’s method for conquest and offer a critique of his approach. Include specific details about his campaign from the destruction of Thebes in 335 until his death in 323/2. Cite HCW and any primary sources we examine where appropriate – i.e., HWAR 4-25)
Friday’s class • What are the three most imporant issues in the reading, and why? • What two pieces of evidence in HWAR are most germane, and why? • 1-35: Arnush (HWAR 32, 38) • 28-50: Kyl, Andrew, Adam, Chris, Dana • 51-76: Dylan, Margaret, Tyler, Z, Shawna • 77-103: Elizabeth, Kristina, Sam, Kate, Joanna • 103-119: Becca, Krista, Callie, Emily • 119-142: Daniel, Matthew, Jessica, Sarabell
Final project discussion & primary sources • Building on the short essay you wrote on Alexander’s approach to world conquest, deepen your study and analysis by drawing on the following primary sources (in addition to HWAR 4-25) • Plutarch Life of Alexander • DiodorusSiculusBibliotheke17.1-18.45 • Justin Epitome of the Philippic History of PompeiusTrogus9-12
Debate between Macedonians and Persians: what should we do now that Alexander has died? • Macedonians: Elizabeth, Sam, Dylan, Kyl, Kristina, Joanna, Dana, Callie, Sarabell, Jessica, Chris • Persians: Becca, Margaret, Tyler, Adam, Emily, Daniel, Matthew, Krista, Andrew, Shawna, Kate, Z • Who are the stakeholders? • What is at stake?
Kingdoms in 310 BCE: Antigonus(Asia Minor), Ptolemy (Egypt), Seleucus (Asia), Cassander (Macedonia), Lysimachus (Thrace) Cassander Lysimachus Antigonus Seleucus Ptolemy
Kingdoms in 270 BCE: Antigonids(Macedonia, Greece), Ptolemies(Egypt, Syria, Cilicia), Seleucids (Asia/Persia), Independents (Aetolians, Achaeans, Pergamon) Antigonids Aetolians Galatia Pergamon Achaeans Seleucids Ptolemies
The Struggle following Alexander • Alexander’s last words: the kingdom should be left “to the strongest” • Leads to a struggle among the diadochoior “successors” • Crisis over succession • Alexander’s unborn son by Roxane, later Alexander IV (his rights supported in advance by infantry) • His mentally challenged half-brother, Philip III Arrhidaios(supported by cavalry) • Compromise and regency • Perdiccasarranges for Alexander IV and Philip III to be proclaimed joint kings • Keeps power for himself as regent
The Diadochoi • 40+ year struggle between his actual successors (322-276) • First Phase: Perdiccas, the regent for the kings, tries to rule through them • Second Phase: the empire formally divided among Alexander’s leading generals, who subsequently fight among themselves • Third Phase: equilibrium is reached with major Hellenistic kingdoms established in Macedonia, Syria-Mesopotamia, and Egypt
Response to the Succession Crisis • Asians remain passive observers of Macedonian disunity • Greeks in central Asia revolt and start to march home • They are defeated and forced to return to their garrisons and colonies • From these emerges the great Greek kingdom of Bactria • Greeks at home revolt: Lamian War (323-322 BCE) • Harpagus’ flight to Athens, Demosthenes’ agitation • A general Greek revolt locks Antipater up in the Thessalian fortress of Lamia • Macedonian forces returning from the East under crateros defeat Greek rebels at Crannon • Greeks surrender, Demosthenes executed, Athens becomes a broad oligarchy
Perdikkas’ Regency • Perdiccas allies with Antipater and Crateros, strongest Macedonian leaders • Perdiccas and Craterosboth marry daughters of Antipater • Imperial expansion ended • Satrapies reorganized and reallocated • Recognizes strength of the regional generals • AntigonusMonophtholmus (“One-Eyed”) rebels against Perdiccas • Flees to Macedonia and splits Antipater from the regency • Ptolemy, satrap of Egypt, intercepts Alexander’s funeral cortege • Alexander’s body used as a propaganda tool • Perdiccas killed while invading Egypt (320 BCE)
Settlement of Triparadeisos • Antipater, most senior and powerful Macedonian leader, imposes a settlement • Antipater invades Asia, meets leading Macedonian generals at Triparadeisos in Syria (320 BCE) • Antipater reconfirmed as strategosof Europe • Brings the kings home to Macedonia under the control of Antipater & Cassander • Serves as regent • Antigonusappointed strategosof Asia • Takes over Perdiccas’ supervision of Asia • Aspires to independent kingship and soon fights with the other generals • Antipater dies • Antipater’s son Cassander succeeds in Macedonia • Antigonus’ “Decree of Macedonians” in 315 BCE • Cassander, Antipater’s son, to give up kings • Greeks “free” • Ptolemy given Egypt; Seleucus given Babylonia
Territorial Holdings of the Original Diadochoi • Macedonia: Antipater & kings; Cassander • Thrace: Lysimachos • Egypt: Ptolemy • Asia Minor /Syria: Antigonus& son Demetrius • Babylonia and the East: Seleucus
Shifting Tides of Power • Antigonusand his son adopt title basileus • Kings killed (c. 310 BCE) • Kings not of places, but individual monarchs • Byzantine Suda:“It is neither descent nor legitimacy that gives monarchies to men, but the ability to command an army and handle affairs competently.” • Others follow suit, the empire officially ends • Battle of Ipsos (301 BCE) • Antigonos killed • Ptolemy gains coasts of Phoeneciaand Palestine, but “Coele-Syria” (“Hollow-Syria”) a point of contention between Ptolemy and Seleucus • Demetrius son of Antigonus escapes, on the loose as a “king without a kingdom” (but a powerful navy) • later captured by Seleucus, dies in captivity • Antigonus’ grandson, AntigonusII Gonatos, recoups the family’s losses • Lands in Europe and defeats invading Gauls • Becomes king in Macedonia (276 BCE)
Hellenistic World, Final Divisions • Antigonid Macedonia • Dominates most of Greece, although independent leagues arise • Seleucid Syria • Adds Asia Minor but soon loses much of the East • Ptolemaic Egypt
Hellenistic Cities • Kings increasingly establish Greek cities in their realms • A new wave of Greek colonization throughout the Near East • Serve as both centers of cultural Hellenization and sources of military manpower • “Independent” but in the control of the kings • Focus more on “Greekness” in terms of Greek culture and institutions, such as the gymnasium • Still, the institutions of the Greek polis are faithfully recreated • Often bear dynastic names • E.g. Alexandria, Cassandreia, Seleuceia, Antiocheia (Antioch)
Debate between Macedonians and Persians: what should we do now that Alexander has died? • Macedonians: Elizabeth, Sam, Dylan, Kyl, Kristina, Joanna, Dana, Callie, Sarabell, Jessica, Chris • Persians: Becca, Margaret, Tyler, Adam, Emily, Daniel, Matthew, Krista, Andrew, Shawna, Kate, Z • Who are the stakeholders? • What is at stake?