13 Ιουλίου, 2023

AP Archive:Discovery of Alexander era tomb sparks interest in Macedonian empire(2015)

 


 

(20 Nov 2014) LEADIN:

In an excavation over the past three months near ancient Amphipolis, 600 kilometres (375 miles) north of Athens, Greek archaeologists have uncovered a three-chamber tomb decorated with marble statues of sphinxes and young women, and a large mosaic pavement.

The discovery has intrigued archaeologists who are trying to solve the riddle of who was buried there in opulent splendour, during the twilight of Alexander the Great's reign in the late 4th century B.C. and sparked interest in the Macedonian civilisation.

STORYLINE:

They were the ancient world's ultimate social climbers.

In one generation, the Macedonians emerged from Greece's rustic northern fringes to rule most of the world they knew.

In the process, and particularly in the bloodbath that followed Alexander the Great's death at the age of 33 in 323 B.C. they set new standards for ambition, bloody intrigue and excess - funded by the loot of the Persian Empire - that remained unrivalled until the more colourful periods of Imperial Rome.

Alexander's Greek armies, which combined heavy infantry formations armed with the formidable Sarissa pike and elite cavalry units, won him an empire stretching from modern Greece to India, where he only stopped because his exhausted veterans decided enough was enough.

The discovery of a cavernous underground tomb in Amphipolis, northern Greece, dating to the twilight of Alexander's reign, has revived interest in the Macedonians.

Interest began in the late 1970s with the discovery of a lavishly-furnished tomb in northern Greece belonging to Alexander's father, Philip II, under whom Macedonian expansion began.

In recent decades, archaeologists in northern Greece have also excavated the old Macedonian royal seat of Aigai, with its palace and cemeteries, and the later capital at Pella, where Alexander was born.

Yiannis Xydopoulos, assistant professor of ancient Greek history at the Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, says the Macedonians were more worthy fighters than the Athenians and eventually became the Macedonian king's main army.

"He (the Macedonian) was a much more worthy fighter (compared to the Athenian), a farmer of vegetables and livestock who tried to survive on a daily basis in the face of not only regional adversities but also of external threats. You understand that this automatically created people that later became the backbone of the Macedonian army on which the Macedonian king could rely."

They proved effective for King Philip II, who came into power at a very young age, during a time when Xydopoulos says people needed unity under a single leader.

Angeliki Kottaridi is the head of the archaeological sites at Vergina .

She says Philip II was the first individual who succeeded at establishing a united Greek state.

"Philip effectively receives a fractured state in 359 (B.C.) when he becomes king, and in 25 years, succeeds in creating the greatest power at the time by revising, making substantial reforms in the military, economy, society," she says .

Philip succeeded in protecting his kingdom from external invaders but also created a major military power, in part due to the introduction of a long spear called the sarissa.

Spearheads from the sarissa were found in Philip's tomb in Vergina along with body armour, a gold wreath and other artefacts as part of his funerary pyre.

Philip never fulfilled his dream of destroying the Persians. He was assassinated in 336 B.C. 

Alexander insisted on marriages between his army and native women in an attempt to unite cultures.  


AP Archive




Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:

Hans-Georg Gadamer erzählt die Geschichte der Philosophie

      Wie es anfing - Thales, Heraklit, Platon, Aristoteles     Hellenismus und Weltbürgertum - Epikur, die Stoa und Plotin         Moral u...