19 Οκτωβρίου, 2023

Ο Μέγας Αλέξανδρος στις ελληνικές δραχμές

 

16.04.1956 - Alexander the Great in Modern Greek Bank Note of one thousand Drachmas



1918 - Alexander the Great in Modern Greek Bank Note of two Drachmas  



1921  – Alexander the Great in Modern Greek Bank Note of fifty Drachmas




1923 – Alexander the Great in Modern Greek Bank Note of Five Drachmas





 18.06.1941 – Alexander the Great Wearing the Horn of Ammon in Modern Greek Bank Note of two Drachmas




1-10-1941 – Alexander the Great in Modern Greek Bank Note of one thousand Drachmas





Η ΕΝ ΙΣΣΩ ΜΑΧΗ

16 - 04 - 1956 





 

18 Οκτωβρίου, 2023

Modern historians about Macedonia – J. E. G. Whitehorne



Quote:

Perdiccas II was one of five sons of Alexander I, the king who had first proved the hellenic bona fides of the Argead House to the game marshals at Olympia. Despite a subsequent blot upon his record as a good Greek when he failed to join in immediate pursuit of the defeated Persians as they withdrew through his territories in 479/8 BC



 Quote:

Out of the rich spoils of his victory over them he was able to dedicate solid gold statues of himself at the major Greek shrines of Delphi and Olympia.


Quote:

The inherent value of these splendid monuments (incidentally the earliest know portait statues of a Greek ruler) has ensured they have long since dissapeared, but their dedication was enough to secure Alexander’s hellenic status for all time.

 


“Cleopatras”, by  John Edwin George Whitehorne,page 15



Publisher:Routledge,1994  



17 Οκτωβρίου, 2023

Modern Historians about Macedonia – L.S. Stavrianos

 



Quote:

Recent philological and archaeological research indicates that the ancient Macedonians were in fact Greeks, whose civilization had not kept up with that of the tribes which had settled further to the south. Their language closely resembled the classical Greek from which it differed no more than one English dialect from another.

Various non-Greek peoples apparently had come under the rule of the Macedonian nobles and kings, but these latter definitely were Greeks in language and outlook, and invited Greek men of learning to their courts.

 



“The Balkans since 1453” by L.S. Stavrianos,page 18 


First edition:1958


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...