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*Grainger, J., 1990b, Seleukos Nikator: Constructing a Hellenistic Kingdom (London: Routledge).
*Grainger, J., 1992, Hellenistic Phoenicia (Oxford: Oxford University Press).
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*Green, P., 1990, Alexander to Actium: The Historical Evolution of the Hellenistic Age (Berkeley: University of California Press).
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*Green, P. (ed.), 1993, Hellenistic History and Culture (Berkeley: University of California Press).
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*Hammond, N. G. L., Griffith, G. T., and Walbank, F. W., 1972/1979/1988, A History of Macedonia, 3 vols. (Oxford: Oxford University Press). The third volume, by Hammond and Walbank, is of most relevance to this book.
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*Heckel, W., 1992, The Marshals of Alexander’s Empire (London: Routledge, 1992). [Much of the material of this book is repeated in id., Who’s Who in the Age of Alexander: Prosopography of Alexander’s Empire (Oxford: Blackwell, 2006).]
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*Heckel, W., and Tritle, L. (eds.), 2009, Alexander the Great: A New History (Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell).
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*Hughes Fowler, B., 1989, The Hellenistic Aesthetic (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press).
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*Kuhrt, A., and Sherwin-White, S. (eds.), 1988, Hellenism in the East: The Interaction of Greek and Non-Greek Civilizations from Syria to Central Asia after Alexander (Berkeley: University of California Press).
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*Lane Fox, R., 1973, Alexander the Great (London: Allen Lane).
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*Lloyd, G. E. R., 1973, Greek Science after Aristotle (New York: Norton).
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*Manning, J., 2007, “Hellenistic Egypt,” in W. Scheidel et al. (eds.), The Cambridge Economic History of the Greco-Roman World (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 434–59.
*Manning, J., 2010, The Last Pharaohs: Egypt under the Ptolemies, 305–30 BC (Princeton: Princeton University Press).
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*Meeus, A., 2008, “The Power Struggle of the Diadochoi in Babylonia, 323 BC,” Ancient Society 38, 39–82.
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*Mikalson, J., 2006, “Greek Religion: Continuity and Change in the Hellenistic Period,” in Bugh 2006a, 208–22.
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