Before and After Alexander

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Before and After Alexander Page 41

by Richard A. Billows


  sarissa (sarisa), 107–11, 108f9, 115, 139, 255

  sarissophoroi, 125–26

  “Sayings of Kings and Comanders” (Plutarch), 83

  Second Athenian Confederacy, 47

  Seleucid kingdom, 241; and Antiochus III, 252–54; army of, 259–60

  Seleucus I Nicator, 78, 129, 131, 170, 227f17; as administrator, 215; and Antioch, 217; and Babylon, Settlement of, 188, 190; and Babylonia, 226–28; and bull, 34; and cities, 179, 217; and colonization, 179, 215–16, 219–221; and Cyroupedium, Battle of, 238, 239; death of, 239; and Demetrius, 238; and Egypt, flight to, 213; and Gaza, Battle of, 224; and Ipsus, Battle of, 235–37; as king, 232; and Phoenician fleets, 222; and succession wars to 301, 221–37; and Susa, 207; and the Diadochi, first War of, 196; and the Diadochi, second War of, 206; and Tigris, Battle of, 227–28; and transport, 217, and Triparadeisus, Settlement of, 198–200

  Seleucus II (“Callinicus”), 244, 252

  Seleucus III, 252

  Seleucus IV, 254, 260

  Septuagint, 271

  Serbs, and Macedonia, 17

  shields: and cavalry scouts, 123; and hoplite, 58; Macedonian, 18, 19f2, 109, 139; and petlasts, 126; and Sparta, 55

  ships, 217, 230

  siege towers, 128, 233

  siege trains, 104, 126–28

  Silver Shields (argyraspides), 114, 116; and Eumenes, 204, 205, 206; and Gabiene, Battle of, 209, 211–12; and Perdiccas, assassination of, 196, and treasure, guards of, 200, 204

  Simmias, 157

  Sirrhas, 45

  Sitalces, 86, 172

  sitophylakes, 265

  skirmishers, 124–25, 212

  Social War, the, 98, 250

  soldiers, passivity of, 113

  Sosibius, 257–58

  Sparta: and “common peace,” 54–55; and Agis III, 159–60; and Amphipolis, 68; and army, make-up of, 113; and Common Peace (Philip), 102; and Epaminondas, 97–98; and King’s Peace, 46–47; and laws of war, 55–56; and Macedonian question, 23, 24; military tactics of, 113; and peligones, 24; and Peloponnesian League, 60; and Second Athenian Confederacy, 47; and Thebes, 55; war tactics of, 59; warriors of, 58–59

  spears, 51, 107–8, 107f8, 122

  Stageira, 91

  stoa, 261, 261f23, 264

  Strabo, 24

  strategos (strategoi), 84, 130, 131, 177, 215, 264, 265

  Study of History (Toynbee), 293

  Successors. See Diadochi

  Suda, 139, 243, 300

  “sword and shield” tactic, 136

  symposium (symposia), 40, 51–52, 75, 98, 144

  synedrion, 31, 76, 234

  syntrophoi, 52

  Tahafut al-Falasifa (al-Ghazali), 293

  Tahafut al-Tahafut (Ibn Rushd), 293

  Tarn, William, 130, 170, 173, 175

  Tataki, Argyro, 25

  taxes, 111

  Taxiles, 163

  telesias, 60

  Telesphorus, 223

  Temenids, 22–23

  Teos, 219, 267, 268

  tetrarchoi, 256

  Teutamus, 205

  Thasos, 86

  theatron, 25

  Theban Sacred Band, 113, 134–36, 135f12

  Thebes: and Alexander, 128; and Chaeroneia, battle of, 102, 134; destruction of, 148; and King’s Peace, 54–55; and Perdiccas, 61, 147–48; and Philip, 57–60, 133; and Sacred Band, 113, 134–36; and Sparta, 55–57

  Themistocles, 24

  Theocritus, 273

  Theogony (Hesiod), 20

  Theophrastus, 270

  Theopompus of Chios: on Macedonian sexuality, 98; on Philip, and Olynthus, 90; on Philip, companions of, 77, 106; on Philip’s elite soldiers, 114–15; reputation of, 273, 296

  Thessalonice (city), 90

  Thessalonice (sister of Alexander), 186

  Thessalonice (wife of Cassander), 226, 238

  Thessaly: and Amyntas, 43, 44, 46, 48; and Antigonid dynasty, 241; and Antipater, revolt against, 191; and Catalogue of Ships, 19–20; cavalry of, and Crannon, Battle of, 193; cavalry of, at Gaugamela, Battle of, 157–58; cavalry of, at Granicus, Battle of, 151–52; and Cynoscephalae, Battle of, 251; and grain, 38; and Leonnatus, 193; and Macedonians, similarity to, 40; and Philip, 79, 85, 92–100; society of, 40–41; and Thebes, 56–57; topography of, 37

  Thorax, 236

  Thucydides: on Antiochus, 73; on Archelaus, 29; and Macedonia, cavalry of, 32, 122; and Macedonia, expansion of, 23; and Macedonia, infantry of, 33; and Macedonia, and kings, lineage of, 27; and Macedonian question, 22–23; and phalanx, 105; reputation of, 273, 278, 282, 285

  Thyia, 21

  Timocleia, 171

  Timotheos, 48

  torsion principle, 127–28

  Toynbee, Arnold, 293

  Trajan, 176, 279

  Triparadeisus, Settlement of, 198–215

  Troglodytai, 246

  True Stories (Lucian), 283

  Tyre: and Alexander, 149, 155; and Antigonus, 222

  Tyre, Proclamation of, 223–25

  Tzetzes, Johannes, 269

  Works and Days (Hesiod), 20

  Xenophon: and Acanthus, 47; on Amyntas III, 43; legacy of, 273, 282; and Macedonian infantry, 33; and Olynthian League, 46; and phalanx, 105

  Xouthus, 21

  Yahya al-Nahwi, 290

  Zarathustra, 271

  Zenodotus of Ephesus, 271–73

  Ziaelids, 252

  Zoe, 297

  Zopyros, 263

  RICHARD A. BILLOWS is a professor at Columbia University specializing in Ancient Greek and Roman Epigraphy. He is the author of the widely praised Marathon: How One Battle Changed Western Civilization, published in eight countries and available from Overlook, as well as Antigonos the One-Eyed and the Creation of the Hellenistic State, Kings and Colonists: Aspects of Macedonian Imperialism, and Julius Caesar: The Colossus of Rome. He lives near New York City.

  Jacket design by Talia Rochmann

  Jacket images © PRISMA ARCHIVO / Alamy and Bridgeman Images

  Author photograph © Clare Kudera

  Printed in the United States of America Copyright © 2018 The Overlook Press

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