12 Μαρτίου, 2026

Modern historians about Macedonia – Ory Amitay

 




 

The great importance of Alexander’s historical achievement for the development of Christianity has long been recognized. It would seem that J. G. Droysen, Alexander’s first great modern historian, embarked on his Hellenistic studies in order to understand the connection between the extension of Greekdom to the East and Christianity’s birth. The ingenious W. W. Tarn made Alexander “the pioneer of one of the supreme revolutions in the world’s outlook, the first man known to us who contemplated the brotherhood of man or the unity of mankind.” The relevance to the teachings of Christ is inescapable. This general notion was taken a step further by A. R. Anderson, who claimed that Alexander unconsciously “prepared the ground in which Christianity was to grow,” and styled him “a forerunner of Jesus, earlier representations of whom portrayed him in Alexander’s likeness.”²

 



Introduction

 

 

Herakles begat Hyllos; Hyllos begat Kleadates and he Aristomachos; Aristomachos begat Temenos, who ruled in Argos.¹ Three of the descendants Temenos went from Argos as exiles; the youngest of these, Perdikkas, became the ruler of the Macedonians. Perdikkas begat Argaios, Argaios Philippos and Philippos Aeropos; his son was Alketes and his Amyntas. Amyntas begat Alexander, who ran the stadion in Olympia and was recognized as a Greek from Argos by the Hellenodikai—the official referees of the ancient Olympic games.² This Alexander bore Amyntas and he Arrhidaios and he Amyntas, who was King.³ His son was Philippos, who subdued all of Hellas. His son was Alexander. Or so might a Macedonian serving under Alexander relate the essential history of his Royal House.⁴

A fan of Euripides—there were many in the Macedonian court, not least of them Alexander⁵—might tell a different story: Archelaos, a son of Temenos, had been exiled from Argos by his brothers. Having fled to Thrace, he won renown as a warrior, but also aroused the suspicion of the local king, who attempted to kill him off. Archelaos managed to slay the king and was once more forced to flee. Inspired by Apollo and led by a goat, he arrived in Macedonia and founded its ancient capital—Aigai (Goatville).⁶

The connection of the Macedonian Royal House with Herakles was no trifle. The story of King Alexander (‘the first’, as he is known to modern historians) is proof enough.



page 1

 


The pothos of Alexander has become a familiar topic in scholarship, both ancient and modern.¹⁹ It would be difficult to deny that strong sentiment and desire always formed a part of Alexander’s motivation; one can hardly understand his striving for achievement otherwise. On the bank of the Istros Alexander had his first chance to surpass all who had come before him, and to set a precedent. No commander setting out from Greece had ever reached that far north before. Philippos had reached the river itself, but did not cross it; Alexander now had a chance to do exactly that.²⁰ The drive to pass known boundaries would become a dominant factor in Alexander’s future campaigns.




page 12


Amitay, Ory. From Alexander to Jesus. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2010 (Hellenistic Culture and Society 52). 



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...