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Alexander the Great and the Hellenistic Age (The Great Courses)
This series of lectures examines a crucial period in the history of the ancient world, the age ushered in by the extraordinary conquests of Alexander the Great. In all the annals of the ancient world, few stories are more gripping than that of the Hellenistic Age. Between the conquests of Alexander the Great and the rise of Rome, Greek culture became the heart of a world-historical civilization whose intellectual, spiritual, and artistic influence endures to this day. [b]Caesar’s Shame[/b] Julius Caesar lamented when he was in his early 30s that by his age Alexander had conquered the world, "and I have done nothing." In just 10 years, this young prince from the small, hill kingdom of Macedon subdued the largest tract of the earth’s surface ever conquered by one individual. His vast empire—encompassing all or part of 23 present-day countries—stretched from Mount Olympus and the Sahara Desert to the frontiers of India and Central Asia. In the opening lectures, we explore the enigma of Alexander, son of a brilliant father, yet always at odds with the man whom he succeeded. We trace his early campaigns against the Persians and follow him to Egypt, where he was acclaimed as the son of god. We look at his career after this and find in him a blend of greatness and madness as he strove to replace the Persian empire of the Achaemenid dynasty with a new, mixed ruling class of Macedonians and Persians. Alexander’s death in 323 BC ushered in a period of catastrophic change as ambitious warlords carved up Alexander’s realm into their own separate empires. It is said that as the 33-year-old Alexander lay dying in Babylon in 323 B.C., he was asked who would inherit his empire. "The strongest," he answered. Their struggle created three kingdoms, ruled by a small group of Macedonian nobles, that spanned from the eastern Mediterranean to the Hindu Kush: [list][*]Ptolemaic Egypt (323-31 B.C.), whose last ruler was Cleopatra [*]Seleucid Syria (323-64 B.C.), whose attack on the Temple in Jerusalem in 166 B.C. led to the Maccabean revolt [*]The Attalid Empire in Asia Minor (281-133 B.C.), which, while smaller than the other two, produced a cultural flourishing in its capital Pergamum that rivaled Alexandria in Egypt. [/list]North Africa. In the Nile valley, the Ptolemies played the role of pharaohs and were treated by their subjects as gods. At the same time, however, their capital, Alexandria, was cut off from Egypt and run by Greek bureaucrats. Greek culture thrived here in the museum and library, and the Ptolemies were great patrons of the arts. The library itself boasted half a million books. The Middle East. In the Seleucid empire, the rulers also built Greek cities, such as Antioch, but in older regions, including Mesopotamia, they too were ready to be worshipped as living gods. On the edges of the Hellenistic world, in places as far away as Afghanistan and Pakistan, Greek cities grew up around trading posts and military settlements. Here, philosophy and literature from old Greece went hand in hand with gymnasiums and theaters to plant Greek culture far from the Mediterranean. By military and cultural conquest, then, much of central Asia was incorporated into the Greek world. Despite the geographic extent of this civilization, we see that the heartland remained the eastern Mediterranean. It was here, in such new cities as Alexandria and Pergamum and such old ones as Athens, that Greek culture developed its distinctive Hellenistic appearance. [hide=Course Lecture Titles] [list][*]Greeks and Macedonians [*]Alexander the Divine? [*]The Blazing Star [*]Alexander—Myth and Reality [*]The Formation of the Kingdoms [*]Egypt Under the Early Ptolemies [*]Alexandria and the Library [*]The Seleucid Realm [*]Pergamum [*]Bactria, the Edge of the Hellenistic World [*]Sculpture [*]Poetry [*]The Greek Novel [*]Stoics, Epicureans, and Skeptics [*]Kingship and Legitimacy [*]Benefaction [*]The Maccabean Revolt, Part I [*]The Maccabean Revolt, Part II [*]Rulers and Saviors [*]Economic Growth and Social Unrest [*]The Mood of the Hellenistic Age [*]Hellenism and the Western Mediterranean [*]The Freedom of the Greeks [*]Pax Romana [/list] [/hide]