Alexander

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by Guy Maclean Rogers


  to bear the pain was a form of vanity. Others marveled at his bravery and contempt for death.

  Calanus’ end made a deep impression upon all who witnessed it, and his name became proverbial for

  calm courage in the face of death.

  THE CROWN OF PROMACHUS

  There followed a less dignified event. After leaving the funeral pyre, Alexander invited a number of

  his friends and officers to dine with him and proposed a contest in drinking neat wine—no doubt to

  help everyone forget what they had just witnessed. The prize was a crown worth a crown. The

  winner, Promachus, drank four pitchers (about twelve quarts) of fortified wine. Promachus

  unfortunately survived just three days to enjoy his victory. According to Chares, who, as chamberlain,

  was in a position to know, forty-one other competitors from the contest also died from the effects of

  the wine, having been seized with a violent chill after the debauchery ended. The episode should have

  been a warning sign to Alexander. But the road of excess usually does not lead to the palace of

  wisdom; more often, it has brought its travelers directly to the Elysian fields.

  HONORS FOR BRAVERY

  Alexander now took the army along the royal road to Susa, which he reached by March 324. Just

  before he entered the city, Nearchus appeared once more, having safely brought the fleet from

  Harmozeia.

  Alexander now offered sacrifices for the safety of his ships and men, and contests were celebrated.

  Awards of golden crowns for conspicuous bravery during the campaign in India also were made: to

  Peucestas for saving the king’s life; to Leonnatus for saving Alexander, service in India, his victory in

  Oria, his defeat of the Oreitae and their neighbors, and settling affairs in Oria; to Nearchus for his

  voyage from India; to Onesicritus, master of the royal galley; and to Alexander’s friend Hephaestion

  and the other members of the bodyguard.

  THE MASS MARRIAGE AT SUSA

  A larger and more significant ceremony followed. After the battle of Issos Alexander had pledged to

  Darius’ mother, Sisygambis, that he would provide for the marriage of her captive daughters even

  more generously than her son had promised to do. How Alexander now fulfilled that promise was not

  perhaps quite what the queen mother, the royal daughters, or especially the Macedonians themselves

  would have envisioned.

  For at Susa the royal daughters of the Persian king and many other royal ladies were wedded to

  Alexander and ninety-one of his Companions and friends. Alexander himself married Barsine

  (Stateira), Darius’ eldest daughter, and also, according to Aristobulus, Parysatis, the youngest

  daughter of Artaxerxes III Ochus.

  Thus Alexander was linked through matrimony to both branches of the Persian royal family. To

  Hephaestion, Alexander gave Drypetis, another of Darius’ daughters and the sister of his own wife

  Barsine, so that Hephaestion’s children should be Alexander’s nephews and nieces. Amastrine,

  daughter of Darius’ brother Oxyartes, was wedded to Craterus. To Perdiccas was given the daughter

  of Atropates, governor of Media. Ptolemy married Artacama, the daughter of Artabazus, and Eumenes

  was joined to her sister Artonis. Nearchus married the daughter of Barsine and Mentor, and Seleucus

  wed Apame, the daughter of the Bactrian Spitamenes. And so it went, with Alexander’s officers being

  given young Persian and Median noblewomen as brides.

  More significantly, however, the weddings were conducted in Persian style. Chairs were set for the

  bridegrooms in order. After toasts to health had been drunk, the brides came in and sat down next to

  their bridegrooms, who took them by the hand and kissed them. Alexander performed the ceremony

  first.

  If the Persian ritual was notable for its simplicity and dignity, Alexander’s arrangements for the

  wedding party were not. Bridal chambers for all the newlyweds were set within a specially

  constructed pavilion, and in it were one hundred couches, each adorned with nuptial coverings made

  of silver. Alexander’s couch had supports of gold. The pavilion was decorated sumptuously with

  expensive draperies and fine linens. Underfoot there were purple and crimson rugs interwoven with

  gold.

  The nuptials lasted for five days, with entertainment provided by Indian jugglers, rhapsodes, harp

  virtuosi, singers, flautists, dancers, and the most famous actors of the day. Ambassadors and guests

  gave wedding presents worth 15,000 talents. Alexander himself provided a dowry for each couple.

  Ten thousand other Macedonians had married Asian women, and now every one of those men

  received a wedding gift from Alexander.

  The mass marriage ceremony at Susa has elicited strikingly contradictory interpretations. Arguing

  against the idea that Alexander wanted to fuse the Macedonian and Persian aristocracies into one, the

  Australian scholar Bosworth has hypothesized that, in the wake of the execution of Orxines and the

  other Iranian pretenders, Alexander may have been leery of giving Persian nobles the prestige of a

  royal marriage. Alexander did not want Persian noblemen marrying Sisygambis’ daughters or other

  Persian noblewomen because of his fears of insurrection. In support of this hypothesis, it has been

  observed that, with two exceptions, all of the grooms were Macedonian or Greek, and all the brides

  were Persian or Median. As far as we know, no Persian noblemen married Macedonian or Greek

  women as part of the ceremony. Thus, the mass marriage ceremony was not an equal fusion of the two

  aristocracies, but rather the absorption of the Persian aristocracy into the Macedonian ruling class.

  On the other hand, the ceremony needs to be seen in its ancient context. We are hard-pressed to find

  another example of a mass marriage of Greek or Macedonian officers or royalty to women of any

  other ethnic group. In fact, previously Alexander had set the precedent of marrying outside his ethnic

  or national group with his first marriage, to Roxane, a Bactrian woman. Yet Alexander’s wedding to

  Roxane had been celebrated according to the Macedonian or Greek form. The marriage ceremony at

  Susa was that of a conquered people. Such an accommodation to the customs of the Persians would

  have been unthinkable only a few years before. No one would have missed the significance of the

  choice of ceremony. The weddings at Susa were not a fusion of cultures on an equal basis, but did

  represent an accommodation that displayed the present and future political order. Although virtually

  all the grooms at the wedding were Macedonian or Greek and all the women were Persian or Median,

  the future ruling class of Alexander’s empire—the issue of the marriages at Susa—would be one of

  mixed Macedonian and Persian blood. Shortly, Alexander would make it crystal clear that a joint

  Macedonian-Persian ruling class was exactly what he had in mind for the administration of his world

  empire. The majority of the Macedonian soldiers understood this very well, and they were far from

  pleased about it.

  THE PAYING OFF OF THE DEBTS

  The Macedonian soldiers’ dissatisfaction with the weddings in Susa helps us to understand their

  suspicious reaction to an extraordinary gesture of generosity. Seeing that many of the soldiers

  somehow had fallen into debt during the campaigns, Alexander decided to pay off all those debts. At

  first the troops were reluctant even to register
to have what they owed paid off, thinking that

  Alexander was trying to identify the spendthrifts among them.

  Learning of these apprehensions, Alexander had banking tables set up in the camp. The king told his

  accountants at the tables to cancel the debts of all who produced any bond, without so much as

  registering their names. The lowest figure given by the sources for the total debt Alexander paid off

  was 9,870 talents, the highest 20,000. Much of the money apparently was owed by the soldiers to

  Asian traders. By paying off the vast debt, Alexander was doing a good deed on behalf both of the

  debtors and their creditors.

  The incident is significant both for the amount of debt it reveals the soldiers to have accumulated

  during the campaigns, despite the gratuities paid to them, and also for the suspicion of Alexander

  among the rank and file that the episode clearly betrays. As so often, generosity did not breed

  gratitude, but resentment.

  THE RETURN OF THE SUCCESSORS

  The growing displeasure of the Macedonian soldiers was further inflamed by the sudden arrival of the

  governors of the new cities that Alexander had founded and of the provinces he had captured. These

  governors brought with them the 30,000 “Successors,” young Persian men from the eastern satrapies,

  selected for their grace and strength before the Hyphasis mutiny. Since their selection they had been

  taught Greek, trained along Macedonian military lines, and given Macedonian battle dress. Upon their

  arrival in Susa they gave a splendid display of their skill and discipline in the use of their weapons;

  Alexander warmly praised their performance. The reaction of the battle-scarred, graying Macedonian

  veterans does not need to be imagined: later, the Macedonians jeered at Alexander’s “ballet-

  soldiers.”

  But the real object of the Macedonians’ simmering anger was not the Successors. Rather, it was the

  king himself.

  From the Macedonians’ point of view, the appearance of the Successors was only another example

  of Alexander’s many efforts to lessen his future dependence upon his own countrymen. Alexander’s

  Median clothes also had caused pain, and the weddings in the Persian style had not been to the

  Macedonians’ taste. The Macedonians also were not happy about Peucestas, the satrap of Persia,

  imitating the Persians in dress and speech, and the inclusion of foreign mounted troops, including

  Bactrians, Sogdians, Arachotians, Zarangians, Areians, Parthyaeans, and Persians, in the units of the

  Companion cavalry. Moreover, a fifth cavalry regiment now was being added, not “wholly

  barbarian” but with some of the “barbarians” picked to serve in it. Some foreign officers also had

  been posted to the Royal Squadron ( agema); their commander, Hystaspes, a Bactrian, and the foreign

  troops were all equipped with Macedonian lances in place of their native javelins. All this caused

  deep indignation among the Macedonians, who felt that Alexander’s whole outlook had become

  “barbarized” and that he no longer esteemed Macedonian customs or the Macedonians themselves.

  Soon the resentment boiled over into a second mutiny. This time, however, the king had prepared

  the ground and would emerge victorious. What had happened at the Hyphasis may have been forgiven

  after what the king and his men endured together in Gedrosia, but it was not forgotten. Like his

  Homeric role model, Alexander did not strive to finish second, even to his own soldiers.

  CHAPTER 27

  The Mutiny at Opis

  A NEW ALEXANDRIA

  The Macedonians departed from Susa in the spring of 324. Hephaestion, leading the majority of the

  infantry brigades, traveled directly down to the Persian Sea (Gulf) by land. Alexander sailed down

  the Eulaeus (modern Karun) to the sea with the hypaspists, the Royal Squadron, and a few of the

  Companion cavalry, and then took the fastest ships along the coast to the mouth of the Tigris. The

  other ships made their way up the Eulaeus to the canal that joined the Eulaeus with the Tigris and

  passed through it (into the Tigris).

  Alexander then navigated up the Tigris to the rendezvous point where Hephaestion was waiting

  with the army. At the confluence of the Eulaeus and the Tigris Alexander paused to found another

  Alexandria, possibly the later Spasinou Charax. Although part of the population of the settlement was

  drawn from a native town (Durine), an elite of Macedonian veterans also was settled there in a

  special quarter known as Pellaeum, an obvious reference to the Macedonian capital of Pella.

  From the newly founded city Alexander then went up the Tigris River with the whole army to Opis.

  On the way he destroyed the artificial cataracts the Persians had constructed along the river to make it

  impassable to invading fleets. Such preparations indicate that Alexander was not exhausted. Nor had

  he lost his desire for future conquests. On the contrary, just as he had done before his expedition to the

  Outer Ocean from Pattala, Alexander was carefully preparing the logistical groundwork for the next

  phase of his plan to conquer the world.

  THE MUTINY AT OPIS

  By midsummer of 324 Alexander and the army had reached the city of Opis. Opis had important links

  to both Babylonian and Persian history; there, in September 539, Alexander’s imperial predecessor

  Cyrus the Great had conquered the Babylonian king Nabonidus and become the ruler of Nabonidus’

  immense empire.

  In Opis Alexander summoned the Macedonians and announced that all men unfit for duty by reason

  of age or disablement were to be discharged from the army and sent home. He also promised to give

  them when they left enough to make them the envy of those in their homes and also to encourage others

  to come out and take part in similar dangers and toils.

  Undoubtedly contrary to Alexander’s expectations, his announcement pleased neither the veterans

  who were being discharged nor those soldiers who were staying on. The Macedonians vehemently

  protested. He had used them up in every kind of service and now he was turning them away in

  disgrace and throwing them upon their cities and parents, no longer the same men he took with him.

  Why not send them all away and write them off as useless, since he had these young ballet-soldiers

  with whom he could go on to conquer the world?

  The troops who were to remain picked up on the call for general demobilization. They demanded

  release for themselves too. Further, they loudly insisted that their years of service should be counted,

  rather than their ages; it was only fair, they argued, that those recruited together should be released at

  the same time. The mutineers then mockingly told Alexander to go to war by himself, along with his

  father Ammon, since he did not respect his soldiers.

  Alexander’s response was ferocious. For the first time, the Macedonians now faced an enraged

  Alexander, the same Alexander whom Asians had come to know and fear from the Hellespont to the

  Indus. The king leaped down from the platform on which he had been standing. Pointing out the

  ringleaders of the mutiny, he ordered his guards to arrest them on the spot. By some accounts,

  Alexander seized the instigators with his own hands. Thirteen soldiers were arrested immediately and

  executed without delay.

  To the rest of the Macedonians Alexander then made an impassioned speech, telling them to go

  wherever they
wanted. At the Hyphasis he had endured Coenus’ long speech; now the Macedonians

  would have to listen to his side of the story. He reminded them that his father had found them a tribe

  of impoverished vagabonds, most dressed in skins, pasturing a few sheep and fighting (without much

  success) to keep them from their neighbors, the Illyrians, the Triballians, and the Thracians. Philip

  had made the Macedonians dwellers of cities, annexed Thrace, subjected Thessaly to Macedonian

  rule, and humbled the Phocians.

  The men of Thebes and Athens, who once had exacted money or obedience from the Macedonians,

  now looked to them for their salvation. Philip had put everything in the Peloponnese into order, and

  when he was made supreme leader of all Greece for the war against Persia, he had won this glory not

  for himself alone, but for the Macedonian people.

  Yet the services of his father were small compared with his own: he had inherited a handful of gold

  and silver cups, and less than sixty talents in the treasury; there was eight times that amount in debts.

  He had had to borrow a further 800 talents. Nevertheless, his cavalry had crushed the satraps of

  Darius at the Granicus and made the Macedonians the masters of the gold of Lydia, the treasures of

  Persia, and the wealth of India. From all this, what was left to Alexander was only the purple—and

  the diadem.

  Alexander then asked if any man believed that he had suffered more for Alexander than Alexander

  had for him. He challenged them to strip and show their wounds; he would show his. No part of his

  body save his back was without scar. He bore the mark of every weapon a man could grasp or fling.

  Through every land and sea, across rivers, mountains, and plains, he had led them, a victorious

  army.

  He had married as they had married.

  He had paid their debts.

  The dead had been given illustrious burials. Their parents were held in high honor, and had been

  freed of all taxes and services. Now he had it in mind to dismiss men no longer fit for service.

  They wished to desert him? Let them go. But when they returned home, they should tell all that they

  had deserted their king, who had crushed everyone, and left him at the mercy of the barbarians they

  themselves had conquered. When these things were announced, they would win praise among men and

 

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