Dan Carlin's Hardcore History
Dan Carlin's Hardcore History

Show 72 - Mania for Subjugation II

1/3/20253:51:2640,215 words
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Is it safe to hand control of the deadliest army in the world to a 20-year old? If you are Thracian, Triballian, Illyrian or Theban, the answer is definitely no. Alexander becomes king and fights off...

Transcript

EN

What you're about to hear is part two of a multi-part series on Alexander the...

If you missed part one and need to catch that first, we recommend it.

If you didn't hear part one, but don't mind, starting a story in the middle will please feel free to keep going. And for the rest of you, without further ado, part two of Mania for Subjugation. December 7, 1941, a date which will live in information.

The secret is that it's history. The events. The secret is that it's a true society, but this is so that you just have to get it from them.

But have to find yourself. Not twice as the more it's met, it's not over, it's your melody. From this time and play. On the other side, in the words, "It's been I in the Alina."

"This is the world which offers care down this world."

"The drama." "It's an example of your story and what a piece of it can completely go after someone in the mansion." I welcome this kind of examination, because people have got a role, whether or not they are president. "Do not question." "But I'm not a crock."

"We dig deep in our history and our doctor. And remember that we are not descended from a fearful man."

"It's hard core history. One of the things that I find terrifying about life is how fortune can just turn on a dime."

And I think it's more of a cynical pessimist's way of looking at that sort of dynamic and an optimist and optimist would say, "Thank goodness, life can turn on the dime. You could hit the lottery tomorrow, change everything, wouldn't it?" So that's a certain kind of personality, maybe, but I have more of the person who just says, "Okay, gosh, just protect me from a bolt from the blue." "What's a great term of bolt from the blue?" Protect me from something that just instantly changes my world and turns it upside down. Probably for the worst, right?

And this bolt from the blue aspect of our existence is operating on every level, right? Your individual levels of making it happen in your life, we are soft, squishy, beings, and doesn't take much for us to get hurt. I mean, so things happen all the time, right? Illness is, things strike a bolt from the blue in your personal life. But this works on the giant super macro scale, too. Something happens, and all of our worlds are thrown in a completely different direction as quickly as a billiard ball,

carums off another billiard ball, and changes its trajectory entirely. I mean, if you're old enough to have consciously lived through something like the 9/11 attacks, you know what, what that's like. That's wake up in one world, go to bed that night and completely different world, and know it. And Pearl Harbor was that way, too, just to take a couple of American things, but this is so common. Every people on the planet can name historical bolts from the blue that had that same sort of an effect in their world.

It's not uncommon at all, right? And your personal life all the way up to global affairs. And in a lot of cases, we should remember a bolt from the blue that impacts global affairs, can still be a bolt from the blue at ground zero on an individual level, too. I mean, to just go back to the 9/11 attacks.

We're all affected by the 9/11 attacks. The minute it happens, right, your sense of stability is upset. You don't know what's going to happen next. We're all a bit traumatized, but the families of people who died in the 9/11 attacks, well, they get all of that that we get, and then they get the impact on ground zero in their family.

Where they've suffered, you know, a bolt from the blue where the ripples of pain will continue to

emanate in their individual world for a generation two or three, right?

For 20 year old Alexander III, right, the future Alexander the Great as we will know him. It's very possible watching his dad get stabbed to death publicly in front of a crowd of for the most part, important people to watch that from a few feet away. Well, that has the potential to be both those things, doesn't it?

Because obviously you take out the most important person in the history of th...

if we're talking about sort of the great man theory of history, or the just in the geopolitical kings' conquest, you know, politics, real, politics, and all that sort of stuff.

You're taking out the most important figure potentially in the history of the region.

If not, well, one of the top ones, certainly the most important during this time period,

you take out this guy, you change the whole world. I mean, you tried to find other people in history where it would have been this big. What about Hitler in 1940, not to compare the two in a moral sense, but I mean, you take out out of Hitler in 1940 or 1939, and you can't even fantasize on how things are different. Then you could say the same thing about someone like, you know, Franklin Roosevelt or Churchill, too, and no question had those two not get died of a heart attack

or something at the start of the Second World War. A bazillion things change in major ways, but those systems of diffused power and sorts of internal rules of succession and all that would have fared much better, right? The US is just going to plug a different president into the White House, and it's going to be different, but in a lot of ways, it's not.

You take Hitler from the leadership position of Germany, right at the start of the Second World

War, and you can't even imagine what happens. The situation in Macedonia when Philip II is murdered is much more similar to that. It has to do with the fact that so much power is wrapped up in one person, right? And the system itself isn't really set up for what happens without that person. They created this intricate web that really relies on them being the spider in the middle of it for it to all work, and you take the spider out and then what do you have? So that is a 9/11 moment,

right? The minute it happens, everybody watching it knows that everything has changed. They don't know how it's changed. And I get this sense after Philip's murder that everyone's walking around the way we were walking around for the next week, after the 9/11 attacks. We all had like little swirls in our eyes, and we just couldn't believe or absorb what had happened, and it was like everyone was experiencing this at the same time, and I get the feeling that it must have been similar.

Especially in the area of the assassination, you know, with the people who saw this. And one of them, of course, being Alexander, and I keep trying to figure out, you know, because this is the side of the story where it's a 9/11 attack for Alexander also, maybe even again, more than for most people, because now he's in the spotlight in terms of the most likely person to succeed, but it's a personal one. It's Dad. Dad just got

shanked in front of me. Do you get PTSD from that? Just wondering. And the reason I ask is because there's a couple of historians that have put forward the theory that maybe Alexander during his lifetime was suffering from PTSD, but most of the time they they draw it back to the many horrific experiences he had in a career of personal combat. This would be at the very beginning,

basically, but I mean, if I told you that some person on the other side of the room, you know,

whispered in the rear, you know, that poor guy, his dad was murdered in front of him, wouldn't you expect that this would be a monumental, you know, milestone moment, negatively speaking for that person in their life? Wouldn't you think they'd be visiting and getting some psychiatric care, maybe for the rest of their life, tie any major problems they have to that. Certainly, you could say PTSD, you're watching your parents murdered. I mean, that's a superhero origin

story, isn't it? That's how you get Batman. But a psychologically dark as the comic book

origin story of Batman is, right? A little boy sees his parents murdered in front of him by a criminalist. Dark as that is, think about how much more sinister it gets. If the person who killed Bruce Wayne's parents leading to the creation of the, you know, avenging dark night that sometimes is a little bit psychologically unbalanced, if the person that killed Bruce Wayne's parents was Bruce Wayne, if he killed his own parents in that lead to the creation of Batman, that's a

even more psychologically dark and twisted tale, isn't it? And in the Alexander story, the reason it matters is because Alexander is a pretty different person in our eyes in the way you might see him, isn't he? If he killed his own father, right? Can you get PTSD witnessing your dad's murder? If you orchestrated it, that's just popped into my head. But I mean, think about the way you'd see this guy differently. One version of him is a victim, sees his dad killed in front of him, has nothing to

do with it. You know, burns in anger against the people that did this all that kind of thing, right?

Legitimately, inherits basically, dead, Ferrari and everything else. The other versions seen through a Mormon end as like lens where, you know, Alexander is the kind of guy who'd whack his own

Dad, right?

story. I want to think of each of us as a filmmaker. I'd love it if you would make the definitive Alexander the great movie, right? And if you did so, you're going to run into times in this guy's life where it's a blank spot. Or it's like a fork in the road. He can do this or he can do that. And you don't know which he did or you don't know why a person like yours truly has the freedom to say one historian says this or another person thinks that. But if you're making the movie,

you have to just decide it to fill in the blank spots. And the way you do that leads at the end of your

movie to a different Alexander, a different Alexander than the person who's also making their movie,

but made different choices at the, you know, 10 or 15 crucial spots in this guy's story where you

don't know what happened. In the introduction to the landmark area in which we're just about to introduce as a source in this story, Cambridge classicist Paul cartilage explains that everyone's got their own version of Alexander because they fill in the gaps, their own way, and have throughout history. And it may account for why there's so many different versions of this guy. As we said, it runs the gamut from on one extreme, you know, he's this philosopher King.

On the other extreme, he's a drunken genocidal butcher and you know everything in between. Well, what accounts for that may be how you fill in the blanks? Some people will come back to me and say, why even have a story like this, if you don't know this much about the guy, but there's a lot you do know about the guy. So it's one of those deals where and it's ancient history where you just sort of have to piece together what you can. And as we

said, there can be different end results in your movie, do you decide he killed Philip or do you

decide he didn't? That's a key difference right there. And this is perhaps the first major moment

in his life where we run into one of those things. But the next stage of what happens is also unknown. The stage where he goes from watching his father bleeding out in his supposedly white tunic there on the ground to the time when he becomes acknowledged as King. Because as we said in the first part of this show, that is not a given in the Macedonian royal world. And apparently anyone who's got a connection sort of to the royal family bloodline can somehow plausibly

be inserted into the job. And it's always been something that outside powers used to keep

Macedonia divided. They'd find an outsider branch of the Macedonian royal family and then back that person as a competing puppet sort of thing. So it's not a given that Alexander's going to get this gig. It would have been a given maybe a year or two before. But remember there was this breach in the royal family. Right Philip Mary's is super young bride supposedly for love. Then we have that story which I love because it brings in what I like to call potentially

the most important cocktail party in world history when you know in a drunken Macedonian cocktail

party. The uncle of the bride, Attalus, who will feature in this story momentarily, supposedly gives that toast right where he says hopefully this will bring a legitimate heir to the Macedonian throne. While Alexander the legitimate heir is in the room, which leads to are you calling the ambassador, throwing goblets at each other. And supposedly the moment where a drunken Philip gets up off his couch, pulls his sword and goes after Alexander falls on his face and Alexander

others that wonderful line, the variation of which he is. Look everybody, here's the guy that's about to cross from Europe into Asia and he can't get from one couch to another. Love that story. Who knows if that's true, but apparently this moment where Alexander and his mother flee back to the mom's home country is, people seem pretty sure about that. And of course she comes from a place where the Macedonian sort of prejudice and bigotry, ironically the same sort of prejudice and bigotry,

some Greeks had toward Macedonia, sort of sees it as a land where there's, well not Hicks for sure, people who are just sort of country bumpkins, but also sorceresses, magic vampires, you know, all those kinds of things. And sort of makes the case for what Atlas was saying when he said, you know, we need a legitimate heir who's Macedonian on both sides who won't go fleeing back to the land of vampires and sorcerers, you know, when the going gets tough. But we know that Alexander did

that, and that's a sign that there was some sort of breach in the family. This wedding where Philip dies was in part and attempt to sort of publicly heal that breach. So where do things stand when Philip's taken out, right? It's the unexpected moment. It's the 9/11 day where people are walking around with stars in their eyes going, what now? Everybody's in shock. And that's where sort of,

you know, how quickly you move in a situation like this is that it's the last second of musical

chairs games when the music stops and everybody sort of scrambles and whoever can sort of

Amass the public support the quickest wins.

this is because the losers often are just liquidated. But whatever Alexander's situation at that moment, it's clear he's still got the inside track and apparently he's got this relationship

with an important Macedonian general named Antipider, which as we said in the last show,

Antipider sort of, we don't have the real information, but sort of just like throws his arms around Alexander says, this is the guy and some other people do too. Here's the way Alexander historian, the late great A.B. Bosworth put it in conquest and empire. He said quote,

"The first few days of Alexander's reign must have been among the most critical of his career.

Unfortunately, no connected account survives of them. There are scraps of epitome and random flashbacks from later history, but most of the crucial details are irretrievably lost. There is infinite scope for speculation and imaginative reconstruction, but the sources themselves allow very little to be said. We must be prepared to admit our ignorance, however galling that may be," he continues. At first there was turmoil. Alexander's friends

gathered round him and occupied the palace already armed for battle. There was every reason to expect

trouble, given the dinastic troubles of Philip's last year. The family and supporters of

Atlas will certainly not have welcomed his accession, and there were other figures who might

oppose him or form a focus for opposition." To me, this whole moment in time sort of sounds

like a coup vibe, doesn't it? If you've ever seen news footage of red stories or talk to people who've been in or maybe been in, a military coup somewhere, there's a vibe for a while where no one knows who's in charge, where everybody's very like on pins and needles, where the various sides that might have a chance at the power are sort of jockeying either openly or behind the scenes, because the stakes are huge and everyone knows it, because the losers in

this game are going to be liquidated. So when A. B. Bosworth says that Alexander and his friends arm themselves run to the palace, which is sort of the seat of legitimate authority, so you're trying to sort of claim the ground around the throne, one gets a sort of a sense of an up in the air, kind of moment, and then the ancient sources don't give us timelines. They don't say three hours later, or the next day, so no one knows it. One gets a sense that everything

happens really quickly, though, and I have a theory about this, and the theory is that there is so much invested right now in this expedition that's already started, right? We mentioned earlier of Philip and the Greeks of declared war on the Persians. They've sent 10,000 men there as an advanced force, which ironically is commanded by two guys, one of whom is Atlas.

The other is his father-in-law, Parminian, so this is going to get a little family oriented in a second.

But when you have to think of the, I had a professor who tried to get me to think about this all the

time, think about the stuff that's going on that you know is going on, but that no one has to tell you is going on, right? Think of the investment in something like this. You're going to take an army of 30 or 40,000 people with animals, and you're going to send it hundreds and hundreds, maybe we don't know how far you're going to send it far away, and you're going to feed it every day. Maybe you can live up the land here there, maybe you can steal from the locals, maybe you got

to have supply dumps, you got to have merchants, you got to have people who put their money, their reputation, their livelihoods on the line, there's a lot invested from the top levels in society, down to the ground levels in society on this ongoing effort. And just because the top guy is gone, things kind of have to go on, or a lot of people are going to really suffer. Now that doesn't mean a new leader can't make a hundred-naked degree turn and do something different,

but it means if you're a general like antipider who's probably one of those guys, who's got a lot riding on this, and you see Alexander and you've already seen how gifted this guy is, you know, you've done a little work with him, you've watched him drawing up antipider's going to be a guy who's stretches from the rain before Alexander, to after Alexander, he's kind of an interesting dude in this whole story. If you see this moment in history up in the air, and you're in a position to sort of put the hammer down

and stop it, right? We can stop this whole cool moment, we can stop this whole up in the air moment, I'm going to put my armor on Alexander, I'm going to bring him to the troops, I'm going to say, this is the guy, which is kind of what the sources suggest he did. And before you know it, the sources have him out there as the king involving himself in affairs of state in that royal role. We don't exactly know how we get from one place to the other, but there you go.

By the time he takes over, he's got all kinds of challenges because as you might imagine, the news that Philip II has been assassinated spreads like a shockwave. And I compare the

Difference between the way news is today and the way information travels and ...

receiving end to the way it traveled back then. It probably traveled more quickly than we assume,

right, bad news, especially travels fast. But nowadays, if a major world leaders assassinated, the vast majority of people connected in any way shape or form to anything electronic or going to know about this within 24 hours, probably going to know about it within an hour or two after it happens, no matter how far away from the event you are. But like in this time period,

any news would have had to spread by horse or foot, I think about it like a nuclear explosion where

ground zero happens where Philip is assassinated and then emanating from that spot in the circular sort of pattern is the shockwave. And the shockwave is the news and the news hits close to Macedonia

first and radiates outward in different places, receive this news at different times and the minute

they receive the news, whatever damage or destabilization or good things is going to happen from that news happens then. So think about like a tsunami and how the tsunami will radiate outward from the earthquake and hit different beaches at different speeds and different times. So this news might reach thieves before it reaches Athens, but when it reaches anywhere, you know, Persia for example, it has whatever destabilizing or you know, good effect it's going to have. In this case,

what's bad news for Macedonia is great news for all of the people Macedonia dominates and as soon as they get that news they react to it. And generally the reaction is one of joy and opportunity. I mean, take Athens for instance. I love Athens as everyone does because they kind of remind us in some ways of ourselves, right? The best of them and the worst of them are kind of the best and the worst of us. And, you know, when it's philosophy and culture and learning and art and all these

kinds of things, you know, you justify it. We said they're in God, you know, it's great. It's our

way to amazing, you know, height of society that you look at their craziness and their corruption

and their gluttony and their, they're, I mean, they're just the best in the worst of us, right?

And you see it on display here because remember, these are a people who just told Philip the second hours from his assassination in public, the MS area saying, if anybody would have tried to hurt you, they couldn't get any sanctuary in Athens, send them right back. And now, when the news hits Athens, there's an entirely different reaction to that. And by the way, Demosthenes, who, if you're looking at this from an Athenian perspective, is a little like a Jedi

night fighting to keep, you know, the old Republic stable to the Darth Vader threat that he's been fighting against for more than a decade and now Darth Vader is dead. When the news hits Athens, Demosthenes has already heard about it. So, this is from the ancient world, say he had a spy in Macedonia, and the spy gets to Demosthenes before the news gets to Athens that Philip is dead,

and he breaks his period of mourning over his dead daughter where you're supposed to sort of

dress down and sort of seclude yourself and not take part in politics or public affairs and boom, he's out of the house, dressed to party, it sounds like, you know, flamboyant clothes, telling anyone who will listen that he has had a dream that Athens is about to be blessed with something wonderful, and then the news hits that Philip is dead and Athens explodes. In a good way, if you're looking for something fun to do on an evening in Athens in your,

nice teenager, say what's going on in town? Well, the party starts as soon as the news hits as soon as the shockwave from the nuclear explosion hits. In Plutarch's lives, when he's talking about the life of Demosthenes, he brings this moment up, and by the way, Plutarch is writing a book of sort of moral judgment, so he'll weigh in, and he doesn't think the way the Athenians reacted here reflects to wonderfully on them, because as he points out, you know, you just honored

this guy, I mean, the Athenians lost to him at the Battle of Karine, Philip killed a thousand of them, and what did they do? Well, because he was rather lenient afterwards, they put a pistachio to him, right? And like we said, at the event where he dies, they're saying, don't worry, you know, we're on your side, and the minute he's dead, well, Plutarch doesn't think it looks too good for the Athenians and writes quote. For my own part, I cannot say that the behavior of the Athenians on this

occasion was wise or honorable. To crown themselves with garlands and to sacrifice to the gods, for the death of a prince who in the midst of his success and victories, when they were a conquered people, had used them with so much clemency and humanity. For besides provoking fortune, it was a base thing, and unworthy in itself, to make him a citizen of Athens, and to pay him honors while he lived, and yet as soon as he fell by another's hand, to set no bounds for their jolly to insult over

Him dead, and to sing triumphant songs of victory, as if by their own valor t...

and quote. But Athens is only one of a bunch of places, both in the Greek world and out of the Greek world that sees Philips' death as soon as they get the news, as the equivalent of a starting gun going off saying, "Now is the time to throw off Macedonian domination." What's more, who can blame them for thinking that everything's going to go back to the way it was? I mean, thereafter, what did we say in part one, thereafter, the status quo entered Philip,

right? The way things were before Philip screwed up everything, right? The only people he was good for were the Macedonians, everybody else, you know, were under his thumb, and now they're not,

and it's not that the Macedonians are so powerful, most of these people think, remember,

they've got what we would call today, bigotry, and prejudice, and all those sorts of things,

toward them, especially the Greeks. Can't even get a good slave from there. Remember that's what they

used to say, and if you look at things like that, in your mind, the Macedonians were how they were for so long, because that's just who they are, and the variable that was weird here was Philip, and with Philip gone, everything's going to return back to normal, isn't it? This period, when Alexander first takes over, sort of a great unknown for the rest of the Greek and Macedonian world. I mean, everyone knows how great the Macedonian army is, and how great the generals are,

but they don't know about this kid, it's 20-year-old kid, and what he brings to the table,

and his first stage in Alexander's career, is about showing them.

When you can see that they don't think much of him, because the most of the knees begins to work against him and the Macedonians, the way he worked against his dad, starts taking Persian money allegedly to start this process of returning Macedonia to the way it's supposed to be. Right, let's destabilize their government. Let's bring other royal factions to the fore. Let's make alliances with people that already don't like Alexander. And to most of these,

the ancient sources, to most of these, was telling, I think it was the Persians,

that Alexander's a boy, he's a child, he's a simple ten as what my more than 100-year-old dried-and-translation calls him, I read a more recent accounting of that line, and it translates the word instead of simple ten to boob. So the mosque that he's not telling people, don't worry, I mean, sure Philip was this August guy, but his kids, 20 years old, he's a child, he's a boob, don't worry about him. And then, the mosque that he starts reaching out, or at least the sources say to,

to some of the other big Macedonian generals, and try to get them involved too, right? Let's make it everybody against Alexander, including Macedonian power brokers in that state. So you have this inflection moment now, in this guy's life, in the Alexander the Great Story, that if you're doing the movie and you want to make this guy a superhero instead of a

historical figure, a superhero from history, you have this time now where it's really the first moment

where he's been forced to conceal under a secret identity, his superpowers and hide them.

This is the moment where he unleashes them for the first time, because he has to survive. I mean, let's recall that unless this guy was responsible for his father's death somehow, he was as caught by surprise as anybody. So all of a sudden, in his 9/11 moment, unprepared, he didn't have time to sort of mentally gear himself up for this. He's in Philip's position, and at that moment because Philip's gone now, everybody decides it's a good time to rebel at the

same time, even within his own circle of Macedonians, even within maybe his extended family, he's got people that are going to turn against him. So he's got a bunch of things he's got to do just to get back to where his father was initially, right? He's got to control his own people first, and he begins to do that by killing some of them. It starts at his dad's funeral, which seems to happen pretty darn soon after Alexander takes over. There'll drag a couple of people

from another side of the family and execute them right at Philip's tomb. One source also has them crucifying the corpse of the actual assassin, Palcinius at the tomb. The tomb is we had said in part one was found in 1977. The actual complex where Philip's buried has other remains of six people, one of them in Newborn, and we said in part one that tomb two is most probably where Philip is, because I'd read a lot that said that, and then of course

In December 2023, a journal of archaeological science article made a pretty d...

in tomb one, and the reason why it matters is because, you know, if you're analyzing the remains

in these tombs to decide how tall someone was or reconstruct their facial features or whatever,

if you're studying the wrong remains when you're getting the wrong information, aren't you?

So the fights over that continue, there are certainly the other remains of six people in this tomb complex, and to get an idea of just how murderous things are going to get, you could make a decent case without a huge amount of undue speculation that Alexander's mother Olympius may have been responsible for the deaths of five out of the six of them. It's just going to be that kind of a time

period, as we said the killing starts right at Philip's funeral with the people that Alexander

can get his hands on right away, and he's going to reach out and go after the people that are too far to get instantly by sending out contract killers to get them. One of those people is atiless. Adiless would have had to believe he was on the hit list anyway, don't you think? I mean, when you insult the future king by essentially calling him a bastard at that cocktail party, in front of everybody, and then that guy becomes the king, I would think you'd be thinking

that your life was forfeit, and you might be looking for any way out, right? Put yourself in

his shoes. The good news, if you're Adiless, when Alexander becomes king, that was you're not there,

you're in modern day Turkey, as we said, with the advanced force, and the only person, the only other general that could be a check on your power there, happens to be your father and law. Your wife's dad. So, you know, at least you're safe there, right? And you got 10,000 Macedonian soldiers with you. Good position to be in. The Greeks and Demosthenes are reaching out to you and want

your help. Well, if your life is forfeit anyway, if Alexander gets his hands on you,

wouldn't you listen to some offers? And that's where Adiless's story of Demosthenes, reaching out to Adiless and saying, you know, let's get rid of this kid, this simple ten, this boob, and Adiless's secular says that after Alexander becomes king, quote, immediately after Philip's death, Adiless embarked on a course of revolution and agreed to cooperate with the Athenians, against Alexander, and quote, a little earlier deodorous explains what Alexander's response to this

was going to be, and it's a typically Alexandria and decisive and speedy sort of preemptive strike, and in my Robin Waterfield translation deodorous is quote, "Atlas, however, was waiting in the wings to seize the throne, and Alexander decided to do away with him."

Adiless was the brother, uncollectually, a Philip's last wife, Cleopatra, and in fact,

Cleopatra had produced a child for Philip just days before the king's death. Adiless had been sent on a head to Asia as joint commander with Parminian of the expeditionary force. He had won the affection of the soldiers, with his generosity and corgiality, and had become very popular in the army. Alexander had good reasons then deodorous rights to be concerned about the possibility that Adiless might link up with his opponents amongst

the Greeks and claim the throne. So he chose one of his friends, a man called Hekatayas, or Hekatayas, if you prefer, and sent him to Asia with sufficient soldiers, and instructions to bring Adiless back alive preferably, but if this was impossible to murder him at the earliest opportunity. Hekatayas sailed over to Asia, joined Parminian in Atiless, and waited for a chance to carry out his mission. End quote. Well, at some point, if you believe the deodorous story here,

Atiless may be realizes that he's been caught, and tries his best to squirm out of this maybe, that's my interpretation of how one tries to figure out his change of heart and his turning over of the incriminating letters from demasthenes right to Alexander. It's not going to save his neck, but deodorous rights quote. He had in his keeping the letter he'd received from demasthenes, and he sent it off to Alexander, along with expressions of goodwill, in an attempt to have the

charges against him dropped, but Hekatayas, or Hekatayas, but Hekatayas murdered Atiless, as ordered by the king, and then the restiveness and rebelliousness of the Macedonian expeditionary force

In Asia came to an end, though this was not just because of Atiless's murder,...

Parminian was squarely Alexander's man, end quote. So this is the part of the story here where

if I'm making my Alexander film, I want Martin Scorsese directing it. The way, by the way, he was supposed to have done, I heard before Oliver Stone's movie came out, and squelched it. I mean, this is a mafia godfatherish type position to put other family members in. I mean, I have multiple secondary sources, modern historians, who are suggesting that there's no way this Atiless assassination happens without Parminian approving of it. The other general on the scene with the expeditionary

force, but Parminian is the father-in-law to Atiless. Right, Atiless's Mary-Dewis Daughter, if you decide you're going to let your son-in-law be whacked, that's an interesting dynamic. That might have been the part of the deal that was non-negotiable, right? We're taking Atiless.

What do you want for the deal? What do you want to be quiet? What do you want to be happy?

I mean, is one of the historians I was reading said you can always get another son-in-law,

and after Atiless is taken out, some of Parminian's family members do get some plums sort of promotions and positions, so if one is trying to make their own movie and this is part of that gray area, you don't know enough about, you could conjure up all sorts of deals that might be made here to make a non-negotiable problem go away and everybody sort of walk away with pretty good consolation prizes. An Atiless isn't the only one who gets whacked just one amongst an

indeterminateable but certainly significant number of people that are going to be wiped out as part of the succession purges that Alexander initiates an indeterminate number of people will be killed,

though, and they will often be killed on charges that they were somehow involved in Philip's assassination.

I mean it reminds you a little bit of the Soviet Union great purge where everybody was being

executed for having something to do one way or another with the assassination of Sergei Kirov, right? It's a little like that, maybe. But Atiless probably was a legitimate target, several of the historians that I was reading were suggesting that he may be even knew this was coming. The other person that would have known she was a dead queen walking was his niece Cleopatra. She must have known right away that as soon as Alexander takes over and his mother has any

saying it that she's not going to make it. In fact, one of the people buried in that tomb complex with Philip that was found in 1977 is thought to be Cleopatra and her newborn child probably Philip's daughter, some would say son. It's unknown. They found a few pieces of that newborn and did an analysis and it was killed so soon after birth that the old views that used to be out there that there had been a little bit of a time lag between Alexander taking control and Cleopatra

and the newborn being killed seemed to be wrong. She seems to maybe have been killed almost right away that is traditionally blamed on Alexander's mother Olympius, Elizabeth Carny and her wonderful

book Olympius breaks down that whole point. Did she do it? Didn't she do it? If she did do it?

What did they think about it? And it comes to the basic conclusion that it would have been considered all that eyebrow raising and the only weird part might have been that it was one woman in flicking violence on another woman which wasn't so normal before that time period but does become normal. After where she sort of normalizes it and how it was done isn't known. Of course, there are some lurid tales by later historians trying probably to milk the whole female angle but one

later historian has Olympius dragging her rival wife and the newborn over glowing coals. Probably didn't happen that way. Elizabeth Carny thinks what's likely is what had happened at another time period. As I believe we said, out of the six people buried in the Philip Tum compound Olympius might have been responsible for five of their deaths. A later person's going to be a female who hangs herself, Elizabeth Carny thinks maybe the baby was killed, maybe in front of Cleopatra's

eyes and then Cleopatra was allowed to with dignity hang herself who knows but Alexander in one source will reproach his mother for behaving savagely to Cleopatra. Now just two point this out because I didn't want to have it go unnoticed. Alexander's been King of all the five seconds and we already have one of those fork in the road moments where you kind of have to decide what you think happened and that's going to influence

the way you see this Alexander figure. I mean if he ordered the death of his dad's last wife and the

Newborn, he's one kind of guy, right?

it, it's another guy. If he didn't want to kill them at all but his mom got to them first and

killed them. It's another guy. So as he has control or responsibility over some of these outcomes,

right? History may be difficult to determine motives and reasons and exactly what happened but you can say things like, well, all of a sudden they died and everybody talked about it. Okay, that's an outcome. You can get your mind around, your arms around. It really happened and deciding Alexander's involvement is part of trying to come to grips with where he should fall on the biographical spectrum between a butcher on one end and a philosopher King on the other.

We do understand, of course, that all of this needs to be assessed through a translation lens, what's that line that the past is like another country. They do things differently there.

And what is considered okay and right and maybe even commendable in one time period can be

considered evil and horrific in another. There are people who complain that this is cultural relativism and it lets people from the past off the hook but if they didn't know something was wrong, seems pretty difficult sometimes to hold them accountable for that. If you're not sure about that, just try to imagine people a thousand years from now considering some of the things that we do routinely and don't even think about whether or not they're good or bad to do. Imagine being judged

solely on the fact that we did that. You might say we didn't know any better, they might say that's no excuse. So be careful. There is a scenario I can imagine in my mind where the very people Alexander is responsible to, average people in the Kingdom of Macedonia would say, "Oh my God, we face the most existential moment in the history of Macedonia as a state that matters, forget whether some young woman or some newborn has been killed. You screw this up in tens of

thousands of us are going to die. Get tough and be the king." That depends on how you want to view this situation. But in my mind, this is the moment where Alexander completely destroys this idea that he might be a child, a simple tenobube and he does so by essentially in my superhero story of Alexander pulling off the Clark Kent glasses and pulling open his shirt and revealing the S on his chest at this moment and it has to be this moment because if Superman doesn't appear,

everything is going to go to hell in a hand basket and my favorite description of the moment is in Plutarch. And I have a book that I've been enjoying quite a bit. It's not really a book. It's a compilation of sources called Alexander the Great Historical Sources in Translation. And they have a newer version of a Plutarch translation that I don't have. Just passages in it.

But one of the passages is this key one that describes this crisis moment in the Superman film

where Lois Lane is about to fall and off the building and he's got to just, you know, become Superman at this moment to save the day, at least if you're looking at it for a Mac and he'll need a viewpoint. If you're looking at it from like an Athenaean or Thievean viewpoint, this is when he becomes Darth Vader and Plutarch from the Seagler translation says quote. And so at the age of 20, Alexander took over the realm, which was in every quarter,

fraught with bitter jellacies and deadly enmities and dangers. For the barbarian tribes who were his neighbors would not accept their subjugation and yearn for the independent kingdoms of their ancestors. In addition, although Philip had defeated Greece in armed conflict, he had not had sufficient time to completely subdue and tame her. All he had done, in fact, was bring change and confusion. And then, with people unused to the new circumstances,

leave behind a misstate of restlessness and turmoil, and quote. Now, this is where Plutarch sets up the moment. He has these, I mean, who knows if it happened this way? He has these hard-bitten Macadonian generals,

the guys who are his dad's generals, who helped conquer all these people in the first place,

caution that he needs to be careful. There's a lot of moving parks, lot going on. You know, maybe we need to be constantly atory over here, give a little over there. It's a strategy one could see Philip being okay with. What do we say about his sort of tactics? He was a kind of by any means necessary guy, right? He didn't care. There was no chest pounding if he could get something with money, for example. Alexander's not going to be that way. For Alexander, the way you

do things is part of what matters. And Plutarch has him essentially waving off the advice. Remember

20-year-old kid been king for five seconds, waving off the advice of the professionals and saying he's not going to do it that way. And Plutarch says, quote, "The Macadonians were fearful of this predicament and felt Alexander should completely abandon the Greek situation and apply no further

Pressure there.

had defected and use conciliation to check unrest at its first appearance. Alexander, however,

started from a position diametrically opposed to this. He said out to establish security and safeguards for his realm with action and a heroic spirit, assuming that all would descend upon him

if he were to waver in his resolve." And, quote. Now remember, this is the first historical moment

that we know of that Alexander was really in charge of that he has agency and this is where we get a chance to see him start to unveil some of the things that he's going to be known for right if there's superpowers as we said. One of them is in Alexander's case, Speed. Disorienting speed, speed that continually wrong puts the people that he's up against and speed at the tactical battlefield level, but also with the giant strategic level. If Alexander's your opponent on the other side of the

war game table and you wonder what his tendencies are, he's going to move on you and he's going to be where you don't expect him before you even think it's capable of getting that far and you'll see it here

because the first thing he does is get the army together and start marching south from Macedonia.

He's pacified things back at home right if this is a triage sort of deal. The first step is quelling any sort of problems in your rear. Make sure everything settled back in the capital and then head on down south and as you arrive at each of these locations, bring them back into the

fold peacefully. Hopefully, if not well, that's what the armies for. The first group of people he

encounters are the the salions who have a long-term relationship, especially after this period with the Macedonians, they're almost partners in empire, not fair to call them cousins of the Macedonians, but they sometimes seem like that if you will and that's going to be something Alexander can exploit with the sort of a good cop bad cop kind of attitude, you know, talks about we descend from the same people, you know, we've had a good relationship with each other and we've mutually beneficial

and while he says that he's managed to outflank the force of the salions that were blocking a position that was intended to create a military disadvantage for Alexander and when you can make all those good cases about a shared ancestry and all those sorts of things while you're outflanking

the opponent, he's got at least two reasons why it's a good idea to just say, you know what,

you make a good case, we're back in and then Alexander heads down south and we'll show up outside thieves, for example, before the Thibons are ready to have in there, like a bunch of other cities, the Thibons have expelled their Macedonian garrisons, they're sort of rethinking that earlier deal made with Alexander's dad and when he shows up with the army in battle array, with their armor on outside thieves, the sources say, this is the equivalent of coming into the

negotiations with thieves and just once again, there's a little mafia style to this whole thing, he sort of an understated murderous intimidation sort of an error, but you know, done in a classy sort of way where you walk into the negotiations and you just place the handgun on the negotiating table, look up, don't acknowledge its existence at all and just start talking Turkey about the deal, everybody knows the gun is there, everybody knows what it symbolizes,

but nobody has to be as cautious to draw attention to it, the Thibons get the message and they

give in the Athenian send a delegation to say, oh, yeah, never mind the money that Demosthenes was

providing to the Thibons to resist you, you know, we acknowledge you as the head of the organization again, and in sort of a quick chain of events Alexander will move on to current, they actually also the seed of this organization is dad created and everybody who was in the original organization, the exception of Sparta, which wasn't in the original organization, will pledge that Alexander basically takes his dad's place, the original deal of going back and paying the Persians back

for what the Persians did to the Greeks 150 years previously is still on, everybody's in, you know, business is usual, it's during this time period when Alexander has two stories that fit into the timeline of his life that are traditionally a part of the Alexander canon, the first one is that while he's down here, he goes up to the Oracle Adele feed to talk to the priestess and get a a prophecy, so he goes up there only to find out that it's winter and the Oracle shuts down

for winter, so it's closed and he's not the kind of guy that's used to taking no for an answer,

The sources have him, you know, going back into the inner sanctum finding the...

you know, roughing her up might be too strong a word, but you know, shaking her and letting her know,

you know, you don't get off that easy and she's supposed to have remarked while he's shaking her

or what have you my son, you are invincible and that's all Alexander wanted to hear anyway and he left saying that basically that was the prophecy he was after and the other story that happens while he's down here while he's in Corinth specifically is this alleged encounter with the famous

cynic philosopher Diogenes, the guy who was always in search of a good man who believed in sort

of the virtues of poverty and would sleep in a barrel naked, not the kind of guy you would expect an up-and-commer in the geopolitical glitter-rottie like Alexander to be, you know, fascinated with, but again, this is maybe part, if we were going to do it this way, I'm looking into to try and figure out who this guy might have been inside. If this is the kind of person he admires and the story is that he comes upon Diogenes with a few of his men and he's just watching him laying in the

son expecting to be noticed and not being noticed and finally getting a little antsy, he breaks

the ice by saying to this philosopher that he admires, is there anything I can do for you to which

Diogenes replies, yes, you can move a little, you're blocking the light. Alexander's man

were not thrilled with this answer and got agitated to which Alexander responded, maybe tellingly that he was good with it, if he were not Alexander, he would be Diogenes, interesting line for a guy to make, one of the switch places with the dude with no clothes living in the barrel. It's an interesting connection to the man when we start to try to find little clues as to what he might have thought who he might have been. I'm reminded of a story that Mick Jagger, who went to

the London School of Economics, had told an interviewer once, you know, he imagines occasionally what his life might have been like, had he gone into economics instead of rock and roll,

maybe it's a common thing to think about, and maybe Alexander was thinking, listen,

it wasn't for this, you know, global geopolitical conqueror sort of thing. I've kind of been born into, you know, maybe it would have been a cynical philosopher like Diogenes, naked in the son, not a care in the world, you know, a little beat-naked-style piece, man, kind of alternative. No responsibility is sort of way of looking at the world, but that's not to be for Alexander. He had a lot of things to do, and the next thing on the list is to take his army back up to Macedonia and prepare

to go north. This is going to be triage task number three, right? Triage task number one is subtle things at home. Triage task number two is, you know, re-establish this league of the Greeks that your father put together for this invasion of Persia. Triage list element number three is how the various tribes to the north and northwest of Macedonia, so they don't get up at you while you take the army far away from home. And while it may not seem like a big deal,

right, Alexander taking this greatest army in the world, probably up north to deal with a bunch

of tribal peoples, we should know that this is probably the first time Alexander's going to

have ever commanded the army as the king in combat. So for a guy who's going to make his historical bones being known as a person who belongs on a top 10 list and a lot of people have him at number one of greatest military commanders of all time noting the first time he does that as the king might be at proposed. So we're doing it. Of course he's supposed to have commanded the army when his dad was gone and he was the regent. He was also for sure commanding a wing at Karinea

under his dad in earlier battles, but this is the first time he's acting as the guy who's going to be the conqueror. This is conqueror battle number one, I guess you could say, and this is where some histories kick in because it seems like a likely place to start the story. If your main focus of the story is the military stuff and that brings me to a source that we're going to be able to use now that's really going to flesh out what we've had up until this time. From this point on

we get Aryan, the Roman era writer, another Greek like Plutarch writing in the Roman Empire, Aryan is amongst a very small group of ancient historians that have come down to we in the modern world. The deals with Alexander's life and times and because of that as we said in part one of this discussion, the rarity of the info out there means that what you have left is sort of exalted in the importance and Aryan is a perfect example of that. His outsize influence probably has a lot to

Do with the fact that we sort of have always had and a lot of people before u...

slightly positive default position on how we feel about Alexander, Aryan is not the sort of source

that the people from the Alexander was a butcher school of re-fandom like very much because

well he's very upfront about who he uses as his sources and they're not the kind of people that are going to give you all the bad stuff they just aren't. I do love the little things that we can sort of maybe glean and full disclosure I'm not qualified to glean some of this stuff but I sure read a bunch of people who are and I was reading some of the introductions to some of my Aryans and other books and they're diagramming a bunch of this sort of material for me but Aryan

feels the need at the beginning of his history to justify writing it because the market is already saturated apparently with Alexander's stuff which tells you some things first of all tells you that there's still a huge demand for it 400 years later Alexander's a star this is where the era where he gets the you know the title the Great the Greeks didn't think of him as Great

necessarily but the Romans they like that stuff man conquering an empire building and plays well

and the emperor always loves that stuff a lot of emperors like Alexander and it's easy to see why

but that's partly what makes Aryan so useful to us is he's focused on the military stuff which the sources we've been using up till now really aren't. He gives us a different side of things we get a chance to see why in a military sense Alexander's supposed to be so good give us some specifics Aryan does he is a good person to be doing this for us because he has a military background himself commanded troops in battle he's a man of some distinction during his era and let's be honest

the way technology in the ancient world in military affairs worked a commander like Aryan in the Roman imperial period would be subjected to most of the same physics of the ancient battlefield limitations and constraints that a guy like Alexander would have been in other words they would have understood each other's warfare pretty well and we don't have the sources that Aryan 400 years later was able to get his hands on to get his information from but he sort of acts as a sort of a spiritual

channeler bringing back information from a time period that we've lost access to. Aryan says the two people he used for most of his information was a guy named

erastabilist son of erastabilist I think today we just call him erastabilist junior

there's another guy named talimi son of law thus both of these men wrote histories of Alexander and both of them seem to have done so I was reading later in life so quite a bit of time after the events because they both lived to be pretty old I guess talimi for sure there wildly different sources though in terms of quality erastabilist I'd look upon just stuff up because he's a harder guy to figure out how close he was to Alexander I've read everything from the idea

that he was a botanist which seems pretty likely to an interior designer to an architect to a military engineer all kinds of things certainly Alexander gave him orders and said go refer me to the tomb of Cyrus the great stuff like that but again how well he will Alexander tough to know one of my translations of Aryan the historian writing about erastabilist said he's known to be part of a group of people around Alexander called the flatterers and another

thing that I read about him compared into sort of like a accordier like a like a person around the king or the queen and you know you think about like someone around princess Diana who was her tailor or something and and those people go one of two ways after the sovereign's day either they chase the you know gossipy national inquire bookmark and spill all the beans or they become this figure that's reviewed by people for sort of keeping the faith and and not turning on their

former uh you know master and that sort of thing and it seems like erastabilist is in that camp and historians who point out that he's a reliably positive source even when compared with other

accounts of certain events and he always gives the most positive spin there was a specific

account of him downplaying Alexander's alcohol use at one point and all they could think of was someone who had the job of being like the you know sort of the media representative or the publicity agent for the king and you know he's found dead drunken and alley by the ancient version of the local media and he has to basically say what do you mean drunken I mean it's jet lag he's tired that kind of thing so erastabilist gonna be a reliably positive source telling me is a much more

complicated figure although you you're gonna get a good portrayal of Alexander from him as well

He's one of a bunch of people that sort of bask in the reflected glory of Ale...

and who made up eventually a very large entourage of people around you know the king

I feel like I'm talking about Elvis when I say that but it is interesting that you know powerful

charismatic people whether geopolitical or entertainment or what have you tend to create these entourage is around them but Tala me would be an original member like an OG member of the Alexandria and entourage because he was around when Alexander was in school being two-dured by Aristotle right it was a small classroom of people and Tala me was one of them Tala me they have started the rumor that he and Alexander were illegitimately related so you don't know how early they

knew each other but middle school at least basically we would say interestingly enough another one

of Aryan sources for later in the Alexandria story another guy who was in that small classroom of Aristotle so as we had said in part one a rather distinguished class of people Tala me's career like a lot of the entourage sort of parallels Alexander and his Alexander gets bigger Tala me does he becomes his bodyguard at one point he'll become his general and then sort of like one of his great marshals after a while and the marshals the military sort of super generals of

Alexander the great I would compare to any great group of marshals anywhere in history obviously Napoleon is the gold standard but I put Alexander up against that and all of the major marshals

Tala me included ripped up the empire after Alexander's demise and Tala me maybe this is a sign

of something he took probably the best part he took Egypt made himself king eventually made himself Pharaoh started a multi-generational dynasty of rulers in that place that didn't end until one of his descendants Cleopatra yes the Hollywood Cleopatra who had the affair with Julius Caesar who was

you know mark Antony's girlfriend that that one that's how long it lasted and near the end of

Tala me's long life he either wrote his own version of something that passes for a memoir or dictated it to somebody or somebody else got it out of him because it's a primary source that you run into in the history not just with the area but in my copy of Strabo the geographer he

references it to so clearly an important source and who wouldn't want it right I mean of all the

peoples who whose memoirs you could get your hands on wouldn't Tala me be right there at the top I mean obviously Alexander trumps that you'd like to have his you'd like to have his dad's or his moms or maybe some of the generals and other leaders he fought but otherwise you know Tala me's right there at the top of the list for any number of reasons one he's an eyewitness to a ton of this stuff so all of a sudden you have an eyewitness account even if it's through an intermediary

like Aryan you know when people sometimes ask me how do we know anything about history especially how do we know anything about ancient history these are the little bread crumbs of knowledge that go back to an original source of someone who was there once upon a time a long time ago right now it's not perfect historians think Tala me emphasized and exalted and exaggerated his own contributions and denigrated the contributions of other generals that he sort of competed with

and certainly he's got his own political reasons during his lifetime for writing this stuff but Tala me also knew Alexander knew him very very well so this all helps also it's a double edge sword because he knows Alexander because he basks in his reflected glory all that stuff he's not likely to give you the the dirt the bad stuff but the good stuff he gives you makes a huge difference right away right in this thrash in campaign that Alexander starts you can see it because whereas

Plutarch one of the sources we've been using devotes a couple of sentences to this whole campaign and deodorous sickulous and other source we've been using gives you just a couple more sentences then Plutarch area and dives into this for pages I mean a quick comparison to someone like

Plutarch shows you why area is so important from the dried and translation and I love Plutarch

you know that but what he says about this expedition shall we call it this murderous expedition to the north Alexander is gonna be involved in Plutarch says this quote he reduced the barbarians to tranquility and put it into all fear of war from them by a rapid expedition into their territory as far as the river Danube where he gave sermus king of the triballians an entire overthrow and quote you might not know how much that leaves unsaid unless you had airing to compare

him to where we're gonna get a ripper or an account that involves battles and adrenaline and

Let's remember Arians trying to tell a good story here he is a great literary...

right you could spend a lifetime as a classicist disassembling everything involved in the guy way

above my pay grade but how he's trying to imitate his heroes and a fawn how he's writing in a certain

archaic style how his stoicism gets involved in the whole thing as I said way above my pay grade but you don't have to be an expert to appreciate his writing he didn't expect you to and he's already working with a story that's hard to screw up in terms of its entertainment value he's trying to compete with other offerings during his time period that are trying to tell a ripper or a yarn so when you get into Aryan you start to feel the story a little bit

it doesn't sound like a chronological entry it sounds like a movie

and one of the real useful elements for we non-experts with Aryan is you can follow along now

in Alexander's life like a dot to dot timeline that takes you from place to place you can sort of figure out where he is from now on at any given time now he'll go to far-flung places sometimes

and all of a sudden his cell service won't be working anymore and you can't track him for a little bit

but then he'll come back and do it and so from about this point in the story you kind of a pretty good idea where Alexander is in the spring of 335 BC BCE Alexander's in the strategically vital northern city of amphipolis preparing to launch a strike northward he's got several different targets it looks like including the people that put a spear through his father's leg and left him limping for the rest of his life the trivialions but this is thrashing country and we have to sort of reorient our minds

to what the ancient peoples like Alexander's Macedonians would have known about the territory around at them we're all familiar with the old historical idea of there being maps sort of in the age of discovery where you didn't know what laid beyond a certain point but dragons and monsters in the age to represent the unknown well think about how less known things were in the 330's BCE right

Herodotus who wrote his famous histories they're not exactly sure when but it's about 130 let's say

130 years before Alexander's time period Herodotus who went everywhere and who talked to everyone about what lay beyond the horizon when he couldn't get there he didn't know what lays beyond the Danube and the Danube is sort of Alexander's goal here a lot of historians think he was trying to conquer to the Danube which is about a hundred or so miles it sounds like from beyond his current they're not really borders but let's call it area of influence or domination even but in Herodotus

is time he didn't know what lays beyond the Danube and he wonders if there's any people there at all he thinks it may be depopulated he only knows of one tribe there and he mentions them and then he talks about the custom and they sound like a step-tribe a central Asian you know horse archer people which that area actually had anyway so chalk another one up to Herodotus probably being right about something he did talk to iterations and ask them what lay beyond the Danube and he says they told him

you can't live there because it's absolutely infested with dangerous bees which Herodotus did not believe he said but when you think about the fact that it was infested with horse archer peoples and tons of swarms of these horse archers maybe the iteration was speaking in sort of metaphorical terms right swarms of dangerous human beings on horseback with endless arrows right Herodotus doesn't believe the B story because he thinks they'd freeze then he thinks frost and cold is probably the

reason that passed the Danube there are no more human habitations as he says Herodotus does know a bit about the iterations though and in my Andrea El Purvis translation of Herodotus's histories this is what he says quote the iterations are the largest nation in all the world at least after the Indians if they could all be united under one ruler and think the same way they would in my opinion

be the most invincible and strongest of all nations but that is impossible it will never happen

since their weakness is that they're incapable of uniting an agreeing end quote the way I've heard it sometimes phrase is that the iterations would have conquered the world but they enjoyed fighting each other too much the books that you can find on the the thrations have compiled all sorts of adjectives and things from the ancient sources that describe them and of course they get the typical bigotry and prejudice that also called barbarians get from the you know sophisticated sniffy

writers in the places like Athens and whatnot but let's be honest if you actually are head hunting they're going to make some noise about how that's not a very civilized behavior although they do

With themselves when they want to the thrations are supposed to have red hair...

from a very limited number of sources so take that with a grain of salt they're supposed to be

high-spirited drunken not too smart head hunters tattooed most dangerous I think it was

through kittedies that said most dangerous he said like all barbarians when things are going their way on the battlefield they are famous warriors that were used and in high demand as mercenaries for centuries I think it was xenophon that said they were best used for executions and massacres and things like that and actually during the pelipy pinesian were did massacre a whole town

no one knows how many thrations there were but some people have estimated up to a million

as a population and it's interesting to try to figure out what we even mean when we say thration because um I looked the other day and saw that currently there's thought to be some 200 or so thration tribes I have a book from 25 years ago that thought they're only 40 back then so it shows you how many tribes are being classified as thration but what are these people you know 150 years ago they were called at racial or an ethnic group maybe

ethno cultural would be a more modern term because some of these people maybe aren't related by DNA at all but are using the same sort of pottery or tools or fighting styles or weaving styles

the thrations are one of the great big cultural groups north of Greece and by the way if you look

at a modern map of Greece and you look at every territory that touches it in the northern sort of circle all those areas during this time period are occupied by hundreds and hundreds of tribes which makes it extremely difficult to forge relationships with and peaceful coexistence because it's like dealing with all these different governments I mean modern Alexander historian the great Voldemort Heckle I was talking about the lyrians which are in modern day Albania one of these

people that Alexander's gonna strike out against on this Balkan campaign he says because they comprised strong tribal units I'm quoting here with individual rulers they were unpredictable by the very

fact of their disunity and quote so as some historians would point out maybe you have to

punch them in the mouth here to make sure that they respect you or as many modern day historians think Alexander's trying to expand his borders to clear logical end points and guess what the Danube is such a clear logical end point that it's the border between Bulgaria and Romania now but that entire area is theeration in this time period to the west and north of the the thirations in this time period you have the great ethno cultural group that is the kelts

and they're moving down during this period next couple hundred years they're gonna go even farther south and then to the west of them as we said in modern day Albania are all these tribes that would be classified as a lyrian and then there are some tribes that are you know in the same way that gravitational pull can affect people that are actually a blend of the cultural influences and one

of them is the one that Alexander's gonna strike first he's going after the trabali the people who

speared his father as we said but their cultural influence they don't really fit easily anywhere usually they'll be classified as theeration but I was reading history that says you know you can actually see them as a blend of all the influences from the area Celtic theeration of lyrian and skithian but Alexander moving northward here is moving into kind of if not undiscovered country then

little known country traders I always try to remember go everywhere you know they get their

their nook and their crannies and they take stuff into the undiscovered room they're the great Lewis and Clark types in the ancient world but it sounds like other than his dad's campaigns into these areas he's not going to know a lot of things and he's going to probably have phraseian guides from the friendly thracians the way that you know Americans were using native American guides to help guide them into places like deep Apache country and part of the reason

you need guides like this is because when you're fighting the indigenous people in their territory who are close to the land their style of fighting is often exquisitely adapted to the conditions now modern technology has somewhat diminished the advantage that this gives but the Apache will still benefiting from it you know in relatively recent history the thracians have an entire troop type in the ancient world that is named after the way they fight and the way they fight is the

way they fight because of the geography and the terrain well exander's known for using failinxes of really closely densely packed drilled troops right who fight in formation he's going up into country where there are streams and forests and mountains and broken country all kinds of terrain that makes it as one historian was pointing out this is some of the toughest fighting country in Europe

If you're apart is in the 20th century you know this is wonderful territory f...

go look at the Balkan mountains on google earth now it's bad enough looking now imagine what it

looked like 2000 years ago and you're going up to fight the people who fight in such an interesting

effective style that every major power for a couple hundred years is going to have troops in their army called peltests a peltest is traditionally an intermediary infantry style between the two extremes right one extreme being like Alexander's troops who fight shoulder to shoulder drilled information and are kind of useless by themselves you take a guy with a 17 18 19 foot long pike and you take him away from his brethren armed the same way then you try to have him fight some tribesmen

armed with you know a cutting weapon on the stick that's not going to go well so they tend to stay in formation as a rule and the other extreme are these skirmishers these people who act like sharpshooters who duck and move and dodge and you know use a little dip in the

land for coverage who have no intention of coming to blows with anyone who are armed with a sling or a

bow and arrow or a javelin the peltest is capable of doing both they can skirmish or they can charge in a warrior kind of sense now tonight not as good as either one of the specialists not as good at skirmishing generally as a skirmisher not as good at you know melee in general as these close-order troops in discipline and drill but the fact that they can do both makes them very difficult sometimes to deal with the Greeks associated this style of fighting specifically with

the thrashians but you can run into it all over the world not just in this period either in the Napoleonic era go look at all the different light infantry's that the country's use and if countries have access to sort of tribal the regulars in the colonial period in Africa for example they would

call them native irregularers if if you had access to those people you use them if you didn't you

try to create your own generally from people who lived as close to the land as possible like the pressians really didn't have access in that period any sort of tribal irregularers so they hired like their foresters and their hunters to be the yagers to perform the same sort of light infantry role but if you're going into the country where the native peoples live and you're going to fight the native peoples there's really no direct substitution then the native sort of light infantry

in this period the native pelthas themselves and when the Greeks first encountered them they had

big trouble with them because they didn't have a good troop type to counter them with eventually they learned what every society in this situation learns eventually which is if you can't beat them hire them put them on the payroll hire a lot of thoracian pelthas Alexander had troops in his army that are famous one of his most famous units are his a grainy in javelin men and they are themselves people who fight this way especially necessary because if you're going to fight people

who fight as pelthas in that kind of country you're going to need pelthas of your own and Alexander has them we are told by a b-bosworth that he probably goes north here into this campaign with less than 15,000 men which is a small number that's not a large force at all is if you're in the middle ages if this is Norman and Saxon times at Hastings this is a sizable force but 15,000 in this time period with these people is a picked force and Alexander's taking some of his best Macedonian units

with him he's also taking a ton of light troops because he knows where he's fighting he has his father's army as we said earlier and his father's army is a combined arms army one that has whatever troop type you need at any given moment Aryan says Alexander proceeds from amphipolis with this force northward he has organized this is very typical of Alexander also he has organized a fleet which is going to move up along the

coast to the Danube River and then we'll move up the Danube and the fleet's job is to meet him at the destination with supplies so as we said earlier this is not some willy-nilly endeavor this is something that would take the Persian Empire during this period I imagine two years of

planning to pull off and Alexander first moves through its duration territory pacified by his father

and then we are told by Aryan after a nine or a ten-day march he comes to a pass in what was called the hemas mountains he misses a minor Greek deity that the Thracians considered sort of their god who guarded them and these Balkan mountains being called the hemas mountains back then

You might as well have called them the Thracian mountains and when Alexander ...

by Aryan in a narrow sort of pass at some of the very heights in this range so some of the heights

are like five thousand feet he runs into some of the locals waiting for him sort of on the heights

and they brought lots and lots of wagons with them from my land mark Aryan the campaigns of Alexander translated by Pamela Munch Aryan says quote in the spring he Alexander marched on Thrace against the Trebali and the Illurians he had learned that they were contemplating revolt and he'd also considered it unwise when embarking on a campaign far from home to leave neighbouring

tribes behind without first humbling their spirits setting out for man fippilus he invaded the

region of Thrace inhabited by the so-called free-thracians keeping Philippi and Mount Orbalus on his left 10 days after crossing the river Nesta see a said do have reached Mount Heamus and there at the narrow path leading up the mountain he was met by many armed tribesmen is the way one of my other translations has it

towns people is another one and free-thracians standing ready to bar his way they had occupied

the height of Heamus at the very point where the army had to march past the tribesmen had brought a number of wagons together to form a barricade from which they could defend themselves if they were pressed hard they also planned to send the wagons down against the ascending Macedonian failangs at the steepest part of the mountain thinking that the more tightly packed the failangs the more forcibly the wagons as they hurled down would disperse it and quote

so Peter Green the great ancient historian writing around 1970 says that this is the first time

you get to see Alexander's genius demonstrated like what's he gonna do about this and green in his famous Alexander of Macedon biography writes quote one of the qualities which most clearly distinguishes Alexander from the common run of competent field commanders is his almost uncanny ability to divine enemy tactics in advance some of this may have been due to his first class intelligence service but at times it looks

more like sheer brilliant psychological intuition anyone else he writes would have assumed very reasonably on the face of it that the thirations intended to use their wagons as a stock aide and fight behind them Alexander however knew that their favorite battle maneuver was a wild broad sword charge and instantly deduced what they planned to do as soon as he and his men were into the narrow section of the gorge these wagons would be sent rolling down the slope

shattering the Macedonian failangs and before its demoralized ranks could close again the thirations would charge through the broken spear line slashing and stabbing at close quarters where the unwieldy serissa the long pike was worse than useless and quote well what was that line the kittedies said right there at their most blood thirsty when things are going their way that's when I'd be most scared of them too when you coming through your broken ranks

slitting the throats of people and falling upon you know your terrified Macedonians with their barbarian you know intensity in frenzy I mean barbarians are scary tribal peoples to settled society

peoples always seem kind of scary probably wearing war paint the tattoos the red hair the green eyes

maybe drunken maybe wild all the good barbarian stereotypes in play here but what Alexander tells us troops to do here you know as Peter Green says uh dividing what they're going to do forces us to think very long and hard about you know what I mentioned earlier the physics of ancient warfare what people do and what they're capable of doing and this is where having Aryan as a military commander himself operating in an era where the physics of ancient warfare

aren't that different from Alexander's time is key because he's going to tell us Alexander

does something that I wouldn't believe possible but if it were fiction Aryan would have known it was fiction because he would know people can't do this this is in practical this is impossible this is unlikely and he would say this in a way that made us understand it Aryan says that Alexander's answer to this tactical dilemma he runs into is to tell his men that when the wagons come tumbling down the hill

if you can get out of the way just break formation and hide you know get get undercover avoid the

Wagons and and they're more like light carts I think so we should think of th...

but there may have been hundreds of them the next thing Alexander says is if you're caught in the

path of these things he wants them to lie down or it sounds more like he wants them to almost

create if you ever had a bike when you were a kid and you created a jump ramp a sort of a ramp so that these carts would then hit the shields of troops lying down in front the troops behind them would be a little bit more of an angle the troops behind them if you've ever seen them the tortoise formation the testudo that the Roman legionaries would do in the imperial times a version of that if you will but to lie down and create these ramps so that the carts would hit the

first row of shields and just so to get airborne and not really hurt anybody this sounds crazy

now green says that Alexander did some specific training before going up here into threes winter training for his troops and other things so it's possible if he knew that this time of the intelligence service if he knew that something like this might happen maybe this is a practice maneuver but it forces us to think a little bit more about what ancient armies were capable of because according to Aryan the Thracians did indeed launch the wagons downhill

Alexander's troops did indeed lie down with their shields over them and no one was hurt

and remember Aryan's trying to write an Alexander history specifically to cut through all

the romance and the myth making and the crap from his time period so it doesn't want to deliberately

lie this is a very interesting thing though if you're a fan of ancient warfare trying to figure out how it worked that something like this was possible from my Aryan from the arborid decilicord translation this by the way is where Alexander has to try to consider how to handle this threat that the Thracians posed quote Alexander had now to consider how to cross the ridge with least loss for cross it he must as there was no way around his orders were that those sections of the heavy

infantry which had room enough were to break formation when the carts came tearing down the slope and so let them through any sections on the other hand which were caught in the narrow paths

were to form in the closest possible order such men as were able lying prone on the ground with

shields locked together above their bodies so as to give the heavy wagons as they creed down the hill a chance to bounce over the top of them without doing any harm Alexander accordingly gave his orders and the result was what he expected those that had room left a space between their ranks and as for the rest the carts passed harmlessly over their locked shields there were no casualties end quote now think of how disheartening this moment must be i keep trying to think about it like

cinematically what's it look like when all those carts rumbled down the steep mountain and they start you know falling amongst themselves and they try to do a giant jumble and they smashed down you know into this narrow area and people are ducking and dodging trying to imagine what would have happened to Alexander not had them you know do the lay down shield thing but when the thracians see that this doesn't work it's like a double problem for them because their strategy of attacking

with them didn't work and now they've lost these things they were going to hide behind if the failings and the rest of Alexander's troops came up to get them so now they're sort of naked up there I mean they do have the height advantage but that's it and now just like maybe their disheartened area and says straight up Alexander's troops look at this and their morale jumps and we all understand right that morale is probably the preeminent aspect of warfare I mean Napoleon gave

ratios for how important it was and it matters even today of course but when you're on the

relatively speaking tiny battlefields which involved you know if you were looking at it from a giant balloon I mean these look like just crowds of people where you can see things I mean there there must have been I would think a kind of almost sporting event type ability to sense the shift in momentum sometimes when it comes like what you're watching a football game and all of a sudden the momentum visibly shifts the crowd knows it the players on both teams know

it I get the feeling maybe it's like this and Aryan says that when the wagon thing doesn't work the momentum shifts and Alexander's now going to come and get these relations and from my Pamela Munch translation in the landmark area which of course is called the Anabassus originally Aryan says quote finding themselves unheard by the wagons they had most dreaded the Macedonians now took courage raised a shout and charged the trations Alexander ordered the archers to move from

Their post on the right wing to the front of the phalanx with a ground was be...

at the trations wherever they attacked he himself collected the igema the shield bearers and the

agranians to form his left wing with himself in command the archers shooting at the trations who

salied forth from the ranks succeeded in driving them back the phalanx now joined battle and had no difficulty dislodging the barbarians who were lightly or poorly armed the trations no longer attempted to engage Alexander who was advancing from the left but threw away their weapons and fled as best they could down the mountain nearly 1500 of them perished few of those who fled were taken alive on account of the speed and the knowledge of the country though all the women

who had accompanied them were captured with their young children and all the property they were carrying end quote this is a fantastic translation by the way of Aryan by Pamela Munch here in the landmark area it captures all of the flare you get a real sense of being able to see what Alexander

is trying to do here he's clearly setting up some sort of left hook where you're going to smash

these people after sort of pinning them from the front which is sort of the classic Macedonian hammer and anvil sort of tactic anyway but it sounds like before the hook can even land the trations have had enough and they they run down the mountainside leaving their women and children behind them I do like the little part of Aryan throws in about how you can't really catch them in their own climate once again they're like a patchies can't find them once they get

into the hills they're gone disappear invisible but their women in children aren't they get sent back to Macedonia's booty probably to become slaves and starting the tally that the Alexander as the butcher sort of school will start to compile of people whose lives are negatively influenced

and pain inflicted maybe needlessly because of the goals of Alexander and at this point in the

story the goals of Alexander are pretty defensible from an ancient geopolitical standpoint I mean he's just sort of rounding out his territory and making sure that these people don't swoop

down on his people I mean you can always talk about the same sorts of defense needs that we still

talk about today there's a sort of an evergreen quality to those sorts of threats and up until this point one would see Alexander's actions as being thoroughly supported by all and if the shoe had been on the other foot-authorations would do it to them but it should be noted these people who just suffered 1500 dead to the Macedonians were not the people that Alexander wanted to inflict pain and suffering on they were just people standing in the way and once he brushes these people aside

he heads for the Treballey now he's in Treballey country and it's hard for me personally to not create some sort of mental analogy between this and sort of the Native American experience in North America but it's so flawed to use that one because the power relationships are so different to mean to me we've been talking about things like the Apache this people who are a guerrilla people hard to find hide in their own native habitat but there were Native American tribes that were big and

strong and like you know powerful nations in their own right like the Kamanchi for example and that Alexander going against the Treballey here is not like going against Apache guerrilla's or whatnot it's like going up against the Kamanchi people who as I said defeated his father a generation ago the difference here though is is that Alexander's not fighting them with some sort of garrison force or some sort of outpost in the way that the American West situation was

this would be akin to taking like grants army from the civil war and lining up on one side of the

battlefield and fighting the Kamanchi on the other that sort of thing never happened but of course

the Treballey and all the tribal peoples of Europe have all sorts of advantages that the Kamanchi didn't have like not being wiped out by disease you know ahead of time and you know not having to face guns and horrible technological one-sided situations it's going to be bad enough leave me the the Treballey fighting the Macedonians is one-sided enough from a military technology standpoint but it's not you know machine guns against tribesmen at the same time you get this sort of

sense that it seems to be a little like all those encounters with these settled societies and their armies come into the tribal territory and push the tribes to the edge in this case the edge is the Danube and that's where the king of the Treballey senses you know women and children of

His tribe for hopefully safety and sanctuary it sounds like there's a very bi...

because it's not only the Treballey that will take refuge there but Aryan says the surrounding

peoples are the equivalent of war refugees fleeing the fighting heading to this island the king himself and his entourage were told join them meanwhile the warriors have moved straight toward Alexander and they've somehow gotten behind him Aryan says this will not be the only time in Alexander's career where the enemy somehow gets behind him which normally would be a big

deal but in no case in Alexander's life is it ever a big deal he turns around

and he goes and gets them and he encounters them while they're making a camp they're in a territory near a river with woods the different translations translated differently sometimes

a Glen is the name they use sometimes a wood but it sounds like it's broken country regardless not

the kind of territory Alexander can just sort of charge them in both sides fight each other they form up but the Treballey warriors are in this wood and Alexander can't deal with that but as we said before Alexander has his father's army it's a combined arms army he has whatever troop type he may need to get the job done whatever he encounters in this case Aryan says he sends in the skirmishers and the marksmen and the slingers and the archers to go shoot at the Treballey in

whatever this terrain is that's keeping Alexander off him it sounds sort of wooded but what happens is

the Treballey are in a position where they have to just sit there and suck up the arrows and

well that'll make you crazy and after you it's like being under attack by gunfire or artillery fire or whatever and not being able to respond after a while you just decide I don't care what the risks are I'm getting shot up here or you lose your mind you get angry you just see them there you know close by and you think you can you know charge out and get one of them but they do manage to get their Treballey to come out of the woods to go get these skirmishers that are just

the Treballey used to use was galling them and when they do that's when Alexander falls on them the cavalry from both sides Aryan says he's also got cavalry in the center followed up by an extra dense version of the failanks this is nothing that the Treballey can handle this is you know grants army at Gettysburg falling on the command she of course it wouldn't have been

granted Gettysburg he was at Vicksburg it would have been meat but in any case and Aryan says

that as long as they were involved in the skirmishing the Treballey held their arm but as soon as Alexander's army hit them full tilt in good terrain right good terrain meaning they pulled them out of the woods into a place where the failanks can't can form up in dense formation you can't handle that very few armies in the world could much less a tribal force used to fighting in different circumstances they they beat now Alexander's dad before as we said but this would not have

been the circumstance they would have chosen to fight in there's a line from this part of Aryan's commentary that also has prompted all sorts of speculation about those of us trying to figure out what the heck ancient battle looked like because one of the variables what are the elements in the physics of the ancient battlefield that has all sorts of unanswered questions about it are horses what they would and wouldn't do how they functioned there's a whole school of thought among some

military historians at the Macedonians were the first people in this period to use true shock cavalry

again that's up in the air but there's a line in especially clear in Pamlemensha's translation of Aryan where she talks about how even the horses themselves are it makes it sound like she's using she didn't use the exact word it makes it sound like pushing so in the middle ages there's a whole school of thought too the horses were used sometimes to push to sort of shove the formation jossolate if you will into disorder and she'll mention something to this effect when she says quote

so long as the two sides assailed each other from a distance the trabali held their own but when the tightly arrayed phalanx attacked them with force and Alexander's cavalry thrusting the enemy this way and that no longer with jadlands but with the horses themselves assailed them from every side the trabali were routed and fled through the Glen to the river three thousand died while fleeing only a few were taken alive as the woods beside the river were dense and the gathering darkness

robbed the Macedonian pursuit of its precision eleven Macedonian horsemen died according to tala me and about forty foot soldiers and quote interesting that Aryan says this information comes from tala me a direct breadcrumb connection all the way back to a guy who was probably an eyewitness

There a long time ago once upon a time I love that since a shiver down my spi...

a roman era historian sort of informationally and storytelling wise spirits should

lead transmitting that stuff like a channeler to us now if the casualties sound suspiciously one sided to you I don't blame you we should recall and I'm going to make this disclaimer for the rest of the program you can't believe ancient warfare numbers at all you can't believe the army strength you can't believe the casualties you can't believe the casually ratios none of

it some would say you you never can in warfare others would make the argument I think I fall into this

camp that there comes a time period and it's relatively recently where you can kind of start to trust those numbers let's call it part of a record keeping revolution but certainly I would say

somewhere in the twentieth century they become more believable but certainly in the ancient world

you can't believe them at all but if you think that this is wrong just because they are so one sided I would have said that by the way a long time ago myself but I read a book I wish I could remember the title or the historian but it was one of those books where they give you information that you already know but they put it in a sort of a context you know tip it slightly if you will that allows the light bulb to all of a sudden go on and you kind of smack yourself in the head

and you go of course this historian said that those sorts of one sided casually ratios aren't just

true they're common throughout military history this isn't an ancient history thing it's an

unequal side spacing off against each other thing when you have more equal forces you tend to have more equally distributed casualties but when one side outclasses the other the ratios are often horribly one sided case in point by the way go look up at the casually ratios for something like the Gulf War right the one this is a in a recent conflict coalition deaths caused by Iraqi military action is something like 150 people Iraqi deaths are still not known to this day the site I

looked at range did from and this is military casualties a KIA actually 20,000 to 50,000 take the low one 20,000 if you have 20,000 on one side if you saw an ancient report from a historian like Aryan who said that one side the iterations lost 20,000 men Alexander lost 147 you would say you'd laugh all the dash and yet there we go so that historian turned a light on for us that just

made me go well when one side outclasses the other and Alexander certainly outclassed the

Trevali those numbers may be you know closer than we think a 3000 deaths on the Trevali side is not unbelievable the ancient source Aryan did not give us even an attempted army strength so we know is that Alexander took a picked sort of smaller than normal force don't know how many Trevali were there after Alexander defeats them we were told he's about a three day march from the

Danube he heads right for it the Danube is the second longest river in Europe but as far as

these people are concerned it's the longest river it's the longest river they know about the Volga which is the longest river in Europe is deeper into what with the iterations say it's deep into B country swarms of bees out there can't live out there they don't even know the Volga exists and what they do know about the Danube is that it's this big dividing line between civilized people on one side and very very very scary uncivilized people in air quotes

on the other running the length by the way and the tribes are just ever more you know one more nasty than the next up and down the river and as far as the Greeks and the Macedonian world is concerned they don't know too far up the river I mean they don't know that there are Germans you know farther along the Danube the Romans are going to know that they'll still make the Danube their border between you know where the civilized people are and where the very scary scary people are on

the other side Alexander's dad did not cross the Danube right there that kind of makes Alexander want to do it he heads up towards this island that we told you the Treballi King the King's entourage the women the children other war refugees from the area have sort of taken refuge on this island in the Danube and the Danube has a bunch of these islands by the way and some are huge I looked them up one of them's like more than 30 miles long so you get this idea of what amounts

to nature's kind of creation of a sort of a moat around this island that protects it and if you've got to people on the island think about what they're fighting for you have your wives you have your children you have all of your movable wealth you have your neighbors I mean you're going to fight

Tooth and nail the current on the river is we are told fast this is not the s...

exists today right this is you know think of all the canals and all the things that have been built

by man up and down the stretch of this river over history this is pre all that this is one of the great rivers of the world in a period where it is wild and untamed Alexander has to figure out a way to get across it if he wants to deal with these people on an island in the middle of it well as I was going to say fate would have it but it's really just wonderful planning there is a fleet there ready to be used by Alexander he set this up either he ordered it or he paid for it to

leave the city of Byzantium area and says and meet him here might have had supplies might have

had troops but maybe the most important thing that it has is it has seaborn capacity right he can

use the ships to go after that island now to be honest it makes it sound like there's not that many

of them but he tries anyway and he's defeated Aryan says by the swiftness of the current the sides of this island seem to be very steep and rocky and difficult to land and you can only imagine thousands of people on this island fighting for everything trying to repel Alexander doggedly it's a combination that makes the prize well maybe not worth what it's going to take to get the prize right not worth the cost meanwhile a completely new and different threat is manifesting on the far

side of the Danube tribal peoples from the you know barbarian in air quotes areas are massing on the far side of the Danube and basically offering a challenge to Alexander the people

who are doing this are seemingly one of the innumerable tribes from ancient history where you go

whatever became of them I've seen the name pronounced several different ways I'm not even consistent the way I do it myself Gete Gete Gete Gete if the same root word for other peoples like the mass a Gete or the mass a Gete I've chosen to go with Gete myself but you know individual results may vary on the pronunciation front and while many of us around the world may think this is just one of the

many innumerable tribes we've never heard of that seemingly filled ancient history there are

Romanian peoples today who considered these groups of people to be their ancestors so there is a connection in the region to these Gete people the jury is out and knowing the circumstances probably this is a divisive topic but whether or not the Gete should be classified as iteration or not as an open question areas says that they believe in immortality which would make them I guess different for most theeration tribes but that's one of the interesting points about them they are numerous

area and puts the numbers that we you know of course can't believe because they're ancient history numbers but he says there's like 4,000 horsemen and 8 to 10,000 infantry a significant force especially up against Alexander smaller than normal picked force there's a number of reasons why they could be there they could be supporting their next door neighbors the Treballie right helping them out a little bit they could be showing up as a way to say you don't get to go any farther where we have our military

forces here that's as far as you go I don't cross the river I was reading one historian had a great line who was explaining we said this earlier shows two I think we said it about the Mongols but there's something that can happen in ancient history that doesn't happen now which is all of a sudden an armed army an armed force of people can show up in your lands that you don't even know exists and all of a sudden you can have a war with somebody you didn't even know about that's

when the Mongols show up you have to go war with this people you didn't know they existed and this

story was saying that in a time period where that was not uncommon simply getting everybody together armed and showing up at the edge of your land was a prudent precaution they don't know who this Alexander is and they're going to send a message which is we're ready so stay there if this move by the gate he was meant to be a challenge that would deter Alexander it had the opposite effect historian AB Bosworth says it was a mistake but it's at this moment in time that area

introduces a concept to the Alexandria and story that's going to run through it as one historian I was reading says it's a it's a light motif that runs through the entire Alexander legend but is it real we're gonna put on our suspicion caps to begin with and ask ourselves you know whether we believe any of it but if we do believe some of it what do we do with it and how interesting is it that something that might be part of Alexander's psychological makeup

Might have made it through you know the spiritual historical storytelling

channeler that is area in to us now it could be possibly knows something about this man

who lived 2324 hundred years ago at this moment that Alexander is dealing with the

Treballey on this island and these tribal peoples are now massing on the far bank we are told that Alexander gets hit with a sort of longing the Greek word that's used by Aryan is pothos and it like so many of these philosophical Greek ideas you can use 12 15 different English words to try to describe what it means and still not hit the bullseye with it all of my translations of Aryan have a footnote or an

asteroid right by the first time that this is mentioned to try to explain it in the Martin

Hammond translation he describes it and translates the word pothos to a yen Alexander gets a yen in the arbreed to sell in court translation he says that the idea of landing on the far

bank of the Danube quote suddenly seemed attractive and to quote to Alexander and Pamela Mench

says that a longing seized him to pass beyond the Danube longing so I looked it up tried to understand it as best I could normally it's like a sexual thing like like the way some teenage boy for example would feel about some unattainable girl and that sort of aching and and yearning but in the way it's used for Alexander Peter Green says it's not used that way for any other person in history in 1970 he tried to explain this pothos thing that appears for the

first time in the writings when these Gitae tribes been to peer on the far bank of the Danube and Peter Green in Alexander of Macedonia writes quote meanwhile a vast horde of Gitae no mad some 4,000 horsemen in between two and three times that number on foot had appeared on the far side of the

Danube yet it was now despite their presence that Alexander found himself seized by a quote and

quote irresistible urge to cross the river if blocked by the difficulty means taking that island in the middle of the Danube from the Trabali try the impossible the Greek word for this urge is pothos it recurs throughout Alexander's life as a quote longing for things not yet within reach for the unknown far distant unattained Green continues and it is so used of no other person in the ancient world. Pothos in this sense is an individual characteristic peculiar to Alexander

end quote in my Aubrey Dicellon court translation the note for pothos when it appears in this part of the story has another sort of description and it says quote this is the first occurrence in Aryan of the word pothos longing yearning which he and other Alexander historians use to describe the desired a penetrate into the unknown and investigate the mysterious victor erinburg in Alexander and the Greeks argues that the word was used by Alexander himself the present passage

however he regards as an exception end quote wouldn't that be interesting if this is a word Alexander used himself about his own longings and yearnings to continually go farther and where those longings and yearnings and some other young male his age might have referred to some unattainable young lady he couldn't marry or whatnot in this case it's about that you know

river and what's beyond it that his dad never managed to cross and it's weird because there's

three sort of psychological aspects to Alexander's life that are often talked about and I sat down and I drew a circle for each one and an event diagram like way with three of them they sort of overlap one of them is ambition which I'm fully qualified in understanding because we can all understand that the other is pothos which I'm not qualified to understand and the third is something called erite which I'm also not qualified to understand but when you do a little work just to

learn the basics you realize okay these three things are overlapping with each other and sort of energizing each other the ambition let's take that out for a second just look look at pothos and erite

pothos this desire to always go farther it to explore a strange new world to seek out new life

and new civilizations to boldly go where no man has gone before and yes a few of you will know there's one degree of separation between captain Kirk and Alexander the Great cause William Schatner played Alexander in a TV movie it was horrifying what might be better is to have Alexander the Great come back and play James Kirk but if you're making your Alexander movie and the star that you

Cast in the Alexander role turns to you and gives you that famous comedic act...

and says to the director you hey what's my motivation here you know what's up what's how Alexander doing this for well he's got this pothos to continue to explore strange new worlds and he's got this need to be excellent this erite this erite thing is is seen a sort of a

researches lately among some people but in the writings that I was reading basically if we're

going to simplify and encapsulate it it's trying to figure out what your purpose is what you were born to do if this was a Christian version of this you would say what did the good lord you know make you and set out your purpose and give you the qualities to succeed you know find out what you're good at and then do it excellently right become the best at doing it if you're a gardener be the best gardener ever right if you if you're born to dance be the best dancer ever right

figure out what you're supposed to do and then just be the best at it but if you boil down what it is Alexander's born to do and what he's good at it can become a little troubling not if you think about it in the sort of the zoom out since greatest conqueror in history that sounds like

something you get an award for but when you look at what that means in the Alexanderian sense right

got the fact to read down to the lowest common denominator what is Alexander really good at there is a story and I maybe I invented it that's a good way to be able to tell this story without

having to find out where I first read it I think it was in military history magazine I tried to

search for it I could not find it so take it with a grain of salt and it may be a press relations thing to begin with but there was a story involving British field marshal Bernard Montgomery and he was meeting with some boy I guess it may be a press relations thing young seven eight year old boy whatever it was and long story short the boy had said to the field marshal at one point you two in America looks like a very civilized typical you know British officer unlike the

American type much more you know sort of reserved a gentile quality maybe tomb which might maybe belies the true character nature the guy but the kid says the field marshal you know what his dad does tell them all about his father and then the says the field marshal and what is it you do and the field marshal replied something to the effect of I kill people when I think the boy said something like you kill people do you kill a lot of people oh yes lots and

lots of people and the reason it sticks with you is because it's so off brand at least the way in American would see the brand now if ivory handled pistol wearing American general George Patton had said that it's fully on brand it's contrived almost if Patton says it right whereas in Montgomery it's a little shocking but I remember it stuck in my head because the truth of the matter is as we said if we boil this down to the lowest common denominator that's

what this guy does and everything else that he's given credit for flows from there right what do you do I conquer nations well how does that work boom boom boom factor down well I have the best

army utilize the best way and I know exactly how to make people run away on the battlefield

and then how to kill as many of them as I can while they're running and that has great geopolitical impact importance and effects I kill people and I believe I was born to do it and my philosophical beliefs handed down to me if not by the early ad which has been called the Bible of the ancient Greeks then by Aristotle himself who talked about things like

Aratea it would have been bread into him his Homeric values and it had filled up the second's

court would have bread it into him I mean this guy is going to believe in being excellent at what you're born to do and what this guy is born to do clearly because many of you will have him ranked as the best to ever do it is to kill people and then reap the many geopolitical and historical benefits that comes from that and if this is kind of Alexander's superpower if you will like other superpowers it's sort of value neutral depends on how you use it right whether

it's good or evil which I think leads to so many of the questions about Alexander I mean this is

all part of maybe a search to answer the all elusive question of why why is Alexander doing this what is my motivation as we said and maybe inventing poathas and aratea and all this sort of stuff is an attempt to explain something that's very hard to understand otherwise and really influences the guy because I mean the ability to be a super killer you know battlefield general sense is something that's the kind of superpower you might want to have on your side at one

time or another doesn't have to be some global conqueror that enslaves people and rolls over you know villages and towns and destroys the livelihoods of lots of people it can be the thing that prevents that you can be on the other side some small little nation out there about to be

Trampled by some giant power and all of a sudden you have somebody with Alexa...

general ship qualities as their superpower right and they have a philosophy of what with the marine

commercial or the army commercials from when I was growing up you be all you can be

sort of an aratea idea right like to have that guy on your side if you're about to be swallowed up by some giant nation state right so it just depends and every one understands that which is why so much of a focus is on the question of why right if Alexander's all of a sudden about to unleash a superpower on somebody why is he doing it what's the reason? because if he's about to do what he's

about to do to these geeky tribesmen on the opposite side of the den you because he has a yen or a longing for the unattainable or he has an adolescent like crush on the idea of getting across

a river is dad never crossed that's a pretty flimsy reason to kill a lot of people and take

their stuff especially in their territory AB Bosworth will call it terroristic on the other hand

there are some military reasons for doing what he's about to do and those who would defend the

action even today would point out that what happens afterwards proves this fact conclusively but what we're told Alexander does is something that the geeky tribesmen on the opposite side of the den you probably thought impossible he transports thousands of men and horses across the river in a single night and seemingly without the geek he even noticing that it's happening according to area and Alexander uses the boats that he brought from Byzantium that's probably how the horses

get across but he also has his people scour the river river bank and we're told that there are dugout type canoes all around that the locals use and those are all scoured and then Alexander tells his troops to take the tents that they sleep under fill them with straw and use them to float across the river which seems terrifying and deadly to me yet I have seen in many of you have

two probably the reliefs showing a Syrian troops doing this exact same thing hundreds of years

before this time period and again Aryan knows what he's talking about in military affairs he would have said something maybe instead what Aryan says happens is that Alexander in the course of a single evening utilizing all these methods manages to get 1500 cavalry and 4,000 infantry across this mightiest of rivers and to do so apparently without alerting any of the thousands of geeky tribesmen that are on the lookout for him that he's doing it we're told by Aryan

that Alexander lands in a spit of land that's sort of concealed by a grain field ready to be harvested so imagine you know the weed or whatever it is taller than a man able to conceal the army

Aryan says Alexander forms his troops up basically information including cavalry but the main group

being the phalanx shoulder to shoulder and Alexander orders that his troops hold their 1718 19 foot long pikes whatever it is diagonally you know at an angle so that as they march they are sizing and knocking down the harvest hunger in military affairs is an age old weapon isn't it and extra effective against tribal peoples operating so close to the edge of starvation right one bad thing happens to the harvest and you could be screwed Alexander marching through your harvest is

as bad as it gets and Aryan makes it sound like the first moment that the geeky notice that Alexander has crossed is when his army emerges from the grain field like some horrific version of field of dreams right but instead of baseball players it's the nastiest army of the age emerge

from this grain field and basically come at you I mean that's shock and awe ancient history style right

and those of us who like ancient medieval history there are so many psychological aspects that are interesting and and these psychological aspects still exist in modern warfare don't get me wrong but they're so enhanced when everyone is so close together right it's why you have so many of the same aspects in like the Iliad or that level of warfare that one might have seen in caveman warfare or animal kingdom typing counters where you have these animals that have evolved to make themselves

look bigger upon themselves out or make some scary noise or whatever as a way to sort of psychologically scare their opponents right intimidate their parts it's why even in the Napoleonic era you have this head gear that makes you look taller why would you want that it's more intimidating you have that kind of head gear in this era also war paint you have animal skins and animal heads the people where battle cries are ever present and it makes sense when you think about the fact that

Ancient warfare in this period is like taking a football stadium or soccer arena

and taking that crowd dividing it in half and then putting it on opposite sides of a football

field or two or three so they're not hurting each other currently but they can see each other

and they can scream in chant and yell things like football fans might the ancient authors talk about battle cries that are specifically associated with certain cities or certain people's right they have their own and they pass it down through generations it's like a football team having you know chance that they've done since their grandfather's day or whatever they're known for and some of the ancient authors actually try to phonetically in their text

you know sounded out for you so you could sort of imagine what it was like to hear the the thracians or the the German tribe has been of a certain tribe do their famous you know war chant whatever it might be but a lot of this is intended to intimidate and when you understand you know as the Greeks used to say foe boss the god of fear is ever present on the battlefield a lot of people here are just barely holding it together psychologically

and you know that this is true because things happen in the ancient era that you don't often see in the more modern era to the same degree I mean there are units that just run before anybody touches them xenophon in the original antibiotics which um hearing this such a huge fan of a xenophon was a general who fought with Greek troops in a Persian civil war he talks about you know when the enemy first approaches and you see the giant dust clouds and the innumerable number of people

and a giant unit is coming towards them and all of a sudden you know seas their spears

from a distance and turns around and runs never even comes into contact it's sort of the dirty

little secret of ancient medieval warfare right a lot of units just didn't wait around

and that's because the psychological state of people in this sorts of situation is um fragile and part of that is the Yin and Yang of the situation the Yin which sort of compels you to move forward right doing your duty fighting for your homeland not wanting to be punished by your superior is all those things that make you capable of going you know toe to toe against the enemy but then there's the Yang side of things certain realities reality number one is if the unit

decides to run and you don't trust these bastards on either side of you not to run but if they run the people that get it in the back first are the bravest who stay the longest right so you're

sort of have a psychological encouragement to neither be the first one to run or the last one to run

but what can happen is you can be psychologically knocked off balance and I would think that this

would be a tool in the toolbox of a legendary commander and you see it with other commanders too

Hannibal did this to the Romans constantly in the Punic Wars right where you all them and then you follow up by shocking them there's a term in warfare and war games for example a unit that faces a psychological moment like this can be said to be shaken that's the term the unit is shaken and when Alexander bursts through the corn fields area and makes it sound like the GT are shaken and then before they get a chance to pull it together Alexander attacks so maybe this entire

way you approach the GT is intended to gain a psychological edge on them it seems to have the desired effect as Aryan says they have the same sort of deflation seeing that the river didn't protect them here that the thrashians earlier had when they saw that all the wagons they threw down the mountainside did nothing to Alexander's forces right the morale shift would we say the momentum shift like a football game happens and Aryan says the GT don't last long from my

to sell in court translation uh Aryan says quote the very first cavalry charge was too much for the GT the crossing of the Danube greatest of rivers so easily accomplished by Alexander in a single night without even a bridge was an act of daring which had shaken them profoundly and added to this there was the violence of the attack itself and the fearful sight of the phalanx advancing upon them in a solid mass they turned and fled to their town which was about four miles from the river

but as soon as they saw that Alexander with his mounted troops ahead was pressing on along the riverbank to avoid ambush or encirclement they abandoned the town which had few defenses and taking with them as many women and children as their horses could carry continued their flight into uninhabited country as far from the river as they could go Alexander took the town together with anything of value which the GT had left behind and quote Alexander historian

A.B. Bosworth who's always been pretty good at putting himself in the position of Alexander's

victims called it a gratuitous act of terrorism on a helpless people but after Alexander does that all of a sudden the wind goes out of everyone's sails nearby the king of the Tribali on that island

Sends people to negotiate with Alexander and a bunch of surrounding represent...

tribes due to so you know one could make an argument here that this demonstration of strength

and how good his army was and how devastating the results would be you know if you

master them saved a bunch of future encounters maybe let's be honest though the main lesson that these northern people learn from this encounter with Alexander is that he's not a boob he's not a simple tin he's not a child all those things the Demosthenes had said about him not true you can't blame these tribes for testing the 20-year-old though after all the Tribali would fight against his father the greatest military man of the age if they'll test that guy

they'll certainly test his 20-year-old son who would the vagaries of monarchy might be an idiot might be a simple tin might be a boob turns out he's not and the northern people's in this part of this territory will remain nice and friendly throughout Alexander's reign and actually and this was probably not optional it was probably part of the deal they'll contribute a lot of troops to the army the hill take over to fight with the nation from Alexander's standpoint i'm sure

that the Tribali and voice coming to settle up with him was the most important part of this

time period because after all that's why he launched the campaign in that area to begin with but

from our stand point thousands of years later the most interesting on voice that show up to Alexander during this time period are Celtic now as a Celtoholic as many of you are trying to figure out who what Celt is or isn't during this period well it'll occupy the rest of my life trying to nail this down but it's like all these giant confederations of tribes we spoke about this earlier in lyrians the rations Celtic whatever they may be ethno cultural linguistic i mean all these

confederations are made up of lots and lots of other tribes and then they're broken down into clans and the connection they have with each other is hard to determine sometimes but people identified as Celtic about a half century before this time period defeated a very young it must be said Roman army in the field and again dirty little secret as we mentioned earlier a lot of that

Roman army supposedly fled before ever actually clashing spears with the enemy in front of them

right saw them got close to them said nope and left so those people identified as Celtic

sacked Rome and that sacking famously left sort of a psychological scar that Rome never got over

area and writing when he's writing knows of Celt's very well but in Alexander's time period encounters were rare in the 330s especially amongst people like him he'd probably never seen anyone like this before an area and probably working from tell me as a regional source describe sort of their reaction to it and it's the same sort of reaction you might have if your James T. Kirk you know seeking out new worlds and new life and new civilizations I mean these

Celts look to Alexander the same way Romulans would look to Kirk and that's kind of the way Alexander sort of reacts area and gives you probably coming from tell me a sort of a report you

might send back to headquarters about this new group of people you just discovering the first

thing that the Macedonians notice about these guys right away is their huge physically men of enormous stature Pamela Mench translates Aryan saying but there's other versions of them but it's clear that the Macedonians who probably were seen as kind of tall compared to your average Southern Greek they notice these guys size and they're also sort of haughty is maybe the way to put it out you actually have a comment from Alexander after his encounter with them and the

funny part about it is Alexander and historian Voldemort Hechkel in his book in the path of conquest resistance to Alexander to great points out that this whole encounter as transmitted by Aryan shows how arrogant the young 20-year-old king is but the criticism on the part of the Macedonians about these Celtic people is that they themselves are arrogant in my Martin Hammond translation of Aryan he describes the moment ambassadors start arriving to Alexander after he defeats the

Ghee tea and says quote ambassador is now arrived to see Alexander from the independent tribes bordering the Danube including on-voys from serumist the king of the Tribalians and on-voys came also from the Celts who lived by the Ionian Gulf these Celts were big in body and had a big opinion of themselves all the on-voys profess to have come in the desire for friendship with Alexander and with all he exchanged reciprocal assurances he did ask the Celts what they feared

most in the world hoping that his own great name had reached as far as the Celts and yet further

That they would say that they feared him more than anything else their answer...

disappointment living as they did in inaccessible country far away from Alexander and seeing that

his ambition lay elsewhere they replied that their greatest fear was of the sky falling on them

their embassy to Alexander was prompted by admiration for him but with no element of fear or self-interest even so he declared friendship with the Celts to simply remarking that the Celts were a pretentious lot and quote the Celn core translates Alexander's words into that they thought too much of themselves Pamela Munch has him saying in a more colloquial term big talkers these Celts and one wonders whether he actually said that it's wonderful to think about telling me maybe being in the

room is Alexander comments after the Celts just walk out big talkers these Celts but his Voldemort heckle says the entire affair just shows how arrogant Alexander is this is his first campaign ever

and he expects these people a long way from him these Romulans that he's never seen before to know

all about him and be scared of him already no not gonna happen in fact while they'll be good during

Alexander's reign it'll only be about a half-century after this time we're going to go on a rampage in southern Greece they'll actually sack the very tomb that Alexander's father is buried in some historians think that this entire Celtic diplomatic mission may be more of a sort of dual purpose affair I mean in the same way ambassadors can play sort of a dual role there's sort of part diplomat but they're also part intelligence agents right they gather data about

no foreign leaders and the situation in the country and the foreign capitals and the mood and the climate and the army and how they fight and all this kind of stuff and it would make sense wouldn't it that if you were thinking you might someday have to fight this guy that you'd get a little intelligence on what you're potentially dealing with here guy comes up from the south 20 years old defeats you know three different groups of locals in the short period of time easily

might want to know about a guy like that in any case Alexander deals with all these envoys these diplomats these ambassadors these submissions are catalog these peace deals these friendship arrangements whatever it might be Alexander is managed to sort of pacify Macedonian if not borders as we said then territory under its sort of control all the way to the Danube Alexander Aryan says now takes his troops to the south and west of where they are here near the modern Romanian and Bulgarian

border to an area that is controlled by the king of the agranians who is an ally of the Macedonians he's

going to rest the troops have gone like 500 miles remember marching on foot basically through

terrible country on bad roads fought several battles I mean after a while you know things need maintenance right the footwear needs to be mandated whatever it is the army could use arrest and then according to Aryan a crisis breaks out on the borders between Macedonia and ilyria so modern day eastern Albania kind of now the news is that three major groupings of ilyrians the age-old arch enemy of the Macedonians and let's not avoid the elephant in the living room

married into the royal family I mean Alexander's got a half-sister who's half-a-lirian well they're on the war path again gonna invade Macedonia or something like that in rebellion

Aryan says you never know if that's to cover something or not but three major groupings of a

people so dangerous that they killed Alexander's uncle the king of Macedonia at that time on the battlefield with 4,000 Macedonian soldiers left dead for the ravens so obviously the lyrian threat is real put me in the camp of people that thinks that this wasn't some unplanned encounter with the lyrians though because we had was it plutocracy said to couldn't leave the tracians in his rear and take his army and go to Asia far away from home because they're too

dangerous well magnify any threat the tracians were to the Macedonians my 10 when you're talking about the lyrians the lyrians really are the boogie men of the nightmares of Macedonian little children you could understand why some of these lyrian rulers could be mad though the guy who sort of leading the whole thing well you know Alexander's dad defeated him in battle may have killed him so you know there's some grudges Aryan says that Alexander's host the king of the agranians the guy who provides

Alexander's you know maybe his favorite unit certainly one of his favorite un...

Ranger commander Gurka special forces unit the agranian javlin men um he says don't worry

I'm gonna take one of these people off your plate. I'll go ravages the territory of this one major tribal

grouping and they'll have to deal with me so you'll just have the other two to deal with now Ian Worthington and by the spear says that Alexander ordered him to do this which may be the case no matter what happens though uh Alexander's three headed hydro problem just became a two headed one and with customary speed he races towards the fortress that he finds out the major ring leader here a guy named cleatus uh that he's taken refuge in and Alexander heads over to this with his smaller

than normal army right it's still this picked force and he heads into country that I struggle to describe it's difficult to know how to differentiate one area with really poor military terrain from another area where if anything it's worse terrain when do we have a bad terrain scale where

if you score a one it's bad terrain if you score a two it's worse terrain if you score a seven

it's trace where we just were you know in the heemest mountains in modern day bogeria a nine is where Alexander's heading here into alliria modern day albania to use a phrase I use all to often uliria's like trace only more so and in a way what we get a chance to see here is the true measure about Alexander the Great is a great military commander because to be honest when you have the greatest military of the age you want the giant cinematic battles that everybody who's an

Oz about and no one more than yours truly right we're all in trance by the Great Field battles with

tens of thousands of guys on each side these incredible history determining afternoons right

but those things in comparison to the day to day you know grunt work of fighting are rare in

a even a conqueror's life the Great Field battles the day to day stuff that you have to into

first of all the day to day stuff probably wipes out a lot of people snuffs out there a conqueror in career early on they might have been great but they died in some unnamed you know Germanic forest perhaps when their legion was ambushed by a bunch of barbarians in the deep dark middle of nowhere happens all the time that could have happened to Alexander too and in a way going in and fighting in a place where the terrain negates all of the great advantages that you

bring to the table right if you if your army is so much better than some of the armies you fight later and you get them out in the open it's like the US in the Vietnam war it's exactly what the

US always wanted the Vietnam war they want a world war to style battle come on out here in fight

the terrain made it very difficult to do that and a lot of the locals thought that there were other ways to go about winning a war then confronting the best army of the age head on you have a similar sort of dynamic at work here because Alexander's walking into territory where it is absolutely covered by forest in mountains it's completely impossible to operate the way Alexander's going to be operating in the wide open plains in places like Asia later or even in a place like

Thrace where once you got past the hemost mountains it seemed like there was some open country to deploy in they're going to be paths here the area and says where you can't get four guys to walk side by side you have a sheer cliff on one side and a tumble into a river down a you know steep slope on the other um that's going to negate some of the best things you bring to the table you may have a combined arms army but the army is designed to do sort of a hammer and

anvil deal right line up those deep blocks of shoulder to shoulder lined up guys with 18 whatever footpikes and they pin and hold the enemy in front of him right engage them in them while that enemies busy send the cavalry around the flanks try to hit them in the flanks and rear and roll them up and I mean it's a great tactic but it doesn't work in the forest but doesn't work in the mountains where Alexander's heading so watching him conduct operations with all of his

best most dominating tools taken out of his toolbox is a chance to see the guy in an equalizer

situation and certain things are going to become clear the first thing is that even though these

Macedonian kings are expected to behave like figures out of you know the Ilia...

charge and all that I mean his dad lost an eye right he was a crippled man from fighting

Alexander if anything even graded on the Macedonian curve is going to be more aggressive and famously seek out battle even more he's probably already killed people back when he was commanding one wing of the army at places like the Battle of Kerenia and whatnot but Aryan is going to inject the adrenaline into his account now that we told you earlier is part of what makes him special ready right it's a movie account at some points and Alexander

is the star and he is often in situations where normally you wouldn't want your king getting anywhere near those kinds of encounters that could so easily go wrong

Alexander's going to almost come off it's a movie trope right you have to go to like a

1950s John Wayne movie where you know they head up into the country where the natives live and

you can hear drums in the hills all around in this sense of menace and being swallowed up by the country and then when night falls it's terrifying I mean it has that kind of a feel to it and remember there's a difference in the way militaries operated in this period compared to say Napoleon's time onward although there are examples of differences I mean one of the things the Mongols did was operate this way but nowadays if you're going to invade a country you're

going to invade along many roads on a wide front so that as you move it's like ink spilling and just sort of absorbing the areas as the army moves forward in this area it's an army

sort of marching like a little entity encased all by itself they'll have flankers and people out

you know on cavalry scouting and maybe scouring for food and all those kinds of things get a few

informers but by and large it's this little group of human beings relatively speaking just marching into a territory and if you could zoom out with the drone shot you would just see it swallowed up by forest everywhere it literally like American patrols you know in Vietnam once they got to far away from bases it's just the jungle swallows you will this isn't a jungle in southeast Asia it's the European ancient equivalent and Alexander's marching into it and he knows that there's at

least two armies out there trying to converge to destroy him and his mission is to get to one of them and destroy it before it can link up with the other that's a very Napoleonic problem by the way

Alexander moves with his trademark speed gets to the fortified city where one of these ring leaders

a king named Clitus is holed up before his ally shows up with the other army which of course was the goal but he sort of inadvertently traps himself while doing so and as we've already said once and as we'll say again there's something about Alexander's career where he will do this and you think to yourself will for such a great commander to continually put yourself in these situations you want to say as a demerit but that's like saying that Muhammad Ali because he breaks the rules of pulling

straight back from an opponent right you don't do that no one teaches that yeah but because of his superior reflexes he gets out of trouble with it all the time I mean when Alexander's able to emerge unscathed from these situations you're not supposed to put yourself in it makes it difficult to know how to grade it it's a mistake but it must take that somehow didn't hurt him in this case he arrives at this city with this king that he wants to get his hands on and the entire area is

dominated it sounds like in an almost 360 degree maybe bowl like fashion or almost 360 degree fashion by either really high hills or low mountains that look down on the city and they are heavily wooded and if they aren't already infested with tons of allirian warriors as soon as Alexander shows up they quickly are and he has to try to figure out what to do now he knows another army's on the way so he does what Alexander's pretty darn good at and he attacks there is a quick short sharp

encounter we're told and then the people inside the city that he was fighting go back inside the city locked themselves up and Alexander's troops area and says find the grizzly remains of the sacrifice that had taken place before his little clash three boys three girls three black rams all slaughtered sacrifice seems to have been interrupted in progress maybe but what Alexander's got to deal with now is he's on this plane he's still got an undefeated enemy in front of him and the hills have eyes

we're in this mode where you're in scary enemy country I mean it brings up a certain question

We've mentioned that Alexander probably has about 15,000 or so men with him r...

frightened if you're surrounded by 15,000 of your own guys maybe because Alexander finds out

the very next day after he's already started to implement a plan of walling the city off right we're just going to wall it off Julia sees you did that at Elisia I mean it's a typical sort of thing to try to do but they've hardly started before the army that the King Clydes guys been waiting for shows up which ruins all of Alexander's plans and traps him even worse now he really is surrounded

in native country and he can't hardly move and this is an era remember a game we'd mentioned how

armies move differently but they're also supply differently Alexander has no line of supply going back to some base they're sort of on their own whatever they can carry and of course you know

scrape up so Alexander sends out a foraging mission they take all the pack animals he sends out a

particular commander they go out there to try to find food and they get surrounded in their area the hills around where they go gets surrounded by the natives and they're told that when night fall happens they're in grave danger so Alexander has to put a crack force together including our wonderful the Granny and Javlin men the archers he likes a little few elite guys and they go with Alexander leading see he's involved firsthand in this and they have a rescue mission to go get

them out of this area where they've been foraging before the natives can wipe them out but Alexander's

problem now is he's stuck he can't assault the city without being assaulted from the surrounding

heights from the people on the other side of him he can't go after the people on the surrounding heights without the city selling fourth and getting him Adrian Goldsworthy in his book Philip and Alexander sort of lays out the situation pointing out that trying to disengage from an enemy during contact with is one of the most difficult things in all military maneuvers and Goldsworthy rights quote the situation was dangerous Alexander did not have enough men to attack the city

and simultaneously fight off Glaugius who's the other really reincarnator and could not stay for long worry was because finding food and forage would only leave detachments open to ambush yet escape would not be easy for there was only a narrow route broken by patches of woodland and enclosed by higher ground held by Glaugius on one side and the river on the other

Aryan claimed that at times the track was barely wide enough for four men to march abreast

and then he continues by saying withdrawing the face of the enemy is rarely an easy thing to do especially in mountainous terrain against highly mobile bands of warriors accustomed to the country and inclined to see retreat as a sign of cowardice and quote this is where Aryan's story becomes adrenaline fueled because he gives us sort of a movie like a count of Alexander being here there in everywhere and rescuing troops in trouble and trying to get this entire affair of

his army extricated from a problem that maybe you could get some demerits for having gotten in in

the first place but what he does is masterful and he starts off by using the same sort of psychology

that we mentioned when he was dealing with the gaiti coming through the corn fields well that's what they called it in the ancient rains of wheat fields whatever you want to say and the emergence all of a sudden of the troops they are providing the awe followed by the shock Ian Worthington basically lays it out and so when we said earlier you wonder if something like this is a tool in Alexandria's toolbox well that question gets answered Worthington says quote to gain the upper hand

over his foes Alexander turned to psychological pressure something for which he would become famous he decided to put on what appeared to be military maneuvers arranging his entire failanks into a single block 150 ranks deep with cavalry squadrons of 200 or so on either side of it the men were ordered to march back and forth with their services those are their pikes up lower it is if for a charge and then pointing to the right and left before forming into their

standard wedge formation all of these moves Worthington rights were carried out in total silence except for the sharp commands to the men to change the directions and angle of their weapons thinking that Alexander was simply drilling his troops glocky as in his men began to move forward more to get a better look at the rigorous and disciplined training of the Macedonian infantry than anything else in doing so Worthington rights they played into Alexander's hands

the king waited till they were close enough and then gave a pre-arranged signal at once the men

Turned to face the enemy and shattered the silence as they clashed their swor...

and at the top of their voices roared out their battle cry all alala alala alai I don't know how to pronounce the battle cry over and over again the tribesmen the tellantii practically jumped out of their skins and in panic turned tail and fled

and to quote that's what we were talking about earlier the fact that so many people can be

spooked into running or turning tail because the momentum when some people run for the rest of the people who run as contagious right foe boss the god of fear and Alexander and all the great commanders right understand this and that was simply a display of military drill that so intimidated the tribesmen a Adrian Goldsworthy says who couldn't have fought this way and wouldn't have wanted to in a way that made them back off of Alexander and give him room to

sort of if you will make a run for it with his troops it's interesting to note that the level of drill here assuming all of this is true although I can see it happening with the Romans for example so I don't know why couldn't have happened with Alexander the level of drill freaked out deal earrings I mean it's a little like Alexander and I'm reminded of the animal kingdom again

where you just can see you know warfare when you know we haven't started fighting yet but I can

look at you and there's an intimidation thing it's Mike Tyson on one side of the ring and the other guy on the other side I haven't started punching you yet but I'm already working on you psychologically he's got his troops drilling in front of him as a way to say look at what I can do here do you really want a piece of this and it freaks them out and then when he yells at him it's like okay you're getting a piece of it whether you want it or not and the crowd backs off you know

I always describe crowds of people like herds of horses and when the first horses spook the whole

crowd kind of spooks it's worth taking a second and just acknowledging here what Aryan says the capabilities of Alexander's forces were in terms of movement and drill because this is an often debated subject in ancient a medieval war for right how much drill was normal what were the

capabilities like some people think you know sometimes they're right that these military forces in

the ancient world are little more than mobs of people but then you see the Romans or Alexander here at the Chinese and all of a sudden it's as regimented as anything you'd see later what Aryan talks about here is Alexander's forces being able to do things like moving in a zigzag manner at high speed forming wedges out of I mean it's it's exactly the sort of thing you would see on a parade ground

with people graduating from you know a military boot camp today and you're not always going to

get a lot of insight into how these people moved and were drilled so this is an interesting clue that will allow us to understand later when Alexander's forces are doing things exactly how they're moving for example now how long these formations stay in good shape once they're fighting the enemies and other one of those things people argue about the truth of the matter is though a lot of this is just for show as we said for the psychological impact because Alexander knows darn well he's

not in the kind of terrain where being able to form up like this makes much of a difference he's going to be in something closer to like an individual knife fight amongst the rocks in the hills rather than something where you can deploy this whole fan lengths and fight the way you want to

but for a second he's got a little respect he's scared the natives away a little bit so he

turns with the forces he has and they sort of run in the next vibe you get from arena he is sort of the greatest cape right we're going to get away with the natives nipping it is heels the whole way right show any sign of weakness slow down they're going to get you done all of a sudden in front of them is a hill right so you can feel the adrenaline right and the hill is occupied by the enemy so Alexander put the strength force to get that they're

going to go up and take this hill but the enemy desserts the hill they don't want to have anything to do with Alexander this is a sign by the way of the kind of terrain we're talking about in a lyria because to escape the hill they run uphill right there's apparently either beer hills or mountains on both sides of this hill so they escape the hill by on both sides going up but apparently the hills now available Alexander gets the hill and now they have to cross some

river Alexander tells his forces to cross the river when you get to the other sides start forming up immediately so that if they cross the river on our heels they'll face a fully formed army when they get there but somebody has to be the rear garden protect the rest of the

Army so they can get across and form up normally you'd leave that probably to...

not this time Alexander's out there with his like a grainy in javlin men and his 2000

archer in the same guys and his little guard and they're going to hold the river basically and it is

well there's no other way to put it exciting death defying and my brain instantly tries to follow the bread crumbs back to that moment and ask how close is this to anything that really happened once upon a time because when you read your area and you sure want it to be true and from the Pamela mench translation in the wonderful landmark area and she has area and translated saying this quote when the enemy troops saw Alexander's forces crossing the river they rushed down the mountains to

attack the columns rear as it withdrew as they drew near Alexander and the men with him salied out

and the failanks raised its war cry as though to move back through the river and attack the enemy troops with all of Alexander's forces charging them gave way and flood at which point

Alexander led the Ukrainians and archers on the double to the river he was the first to get across

and when he saw the enemy attacking his rear guard he had the siege engines set up on the bank and ordered that they fire every possible kind of missile at the farthest range he also ordered the archers to fire a volley from the middle of the river for they too had started across the men with glockiest did not dare to come within range of this barrage and so the Macedonians crossed the river safely none of them died in the retreat and court so Alexander masterfully gets

himself out of the trap that he himself fell into how do you grade that well before you answer as they used to say in the TV sales pitch videos hold on there's more don't grade quite yet because how do we provide a little extra credit to this assignment when we realize that Alexander then goes back

and kills everybody let me elaborate apparently the elirians figure that they've won here they've

driven Alexander off he says you know that this big bad 20 year old with this killer army is running away and they nipped a details and good returns to you and stay out right but Alexander's apparently staying in contact with them enough to get intelligence back that they're not being very careful they think he's gone they're not putting out guards they're not safely fortifying their camps they're vulnerable in other words and so he sends his forces back he's preparing a

full on attack but when he gets close by once again leading it himself he sees that they're completely unready for anything so he just goes after them here's the way my translation from Aubrey Decellen court puts it erians says quote the moment was ripe for attack so without waiting for the entire force to concentrate he Alexander sent into action the Ukrainians and the archers who made a surprise assault on a narrow front a formation likely to fall with greatest

effect upon the enemy at his weakest point some they killed in their beds others they took without difficulty as they tried to escape many were caught and killed on the spot many more as they fled in panic and disorder not a few were captured alive the pursuit was pressed as far as the mountains in they were talking about the tribe that they were fighting territory he says none escaped

except at the cost of throwing away their weapons. Clitus's first move was to the town later he

set fire to it and made his way to the talancians where he sought refuge with glockias and quote so Alexander and his strike force his Ukrainians and his 2000 archers and his little little elite group go in there at night they're supposed to be like a reconnaissance in force but when they get there everything is so perfectly ripe they don't wait for the rest of the army they fall on these guys kill him in their beds drive them out his foe runs into his fortified city that

Alexander had been camped out in front of decides that he has no hope lights the entire city on fire flees to his allies so how do you grade a guy that gets himself in a position like that and then turns it around into that kind of a victory what's more when you look at what's going on here Alexander leading essentially a group of commandos in at night to go destroy an enemy army by hand I mean it's just so different than what you think about him being known for as a general as we said these

Great field battles of thousands of people in broad daylight and Harry is bas...

a force ten from navarone sort of leader albeit a very large force from navarone but nonetheless

it's not the kind of general ship I mean this is a guy who's like knife fighting amongst the rocks

it's a weird sort of thing you can't imagine Napoleon doing that right and yet it puts you in a weird position right if your knife fighting amongst the rocks you could easily get killed which is exactly the rumor that is going around Greece right around this time Alexander is no time to enjoy this victory as no time to follow up on it if that was his plan and no one knows what his plan was he has no time to rest and refit in army that was tired when it got to a lairia

because he gets a 911 call from down south near a degrees that all Greece is in rebellion and it's getting worse by the day it's like a fire it spreads it intensifies and if he doesn't get down their fast there will be no stopping it the worry is that the alliance of kerenia that is fathered defeated could be reforged and just like it was back then the city of thieves is ground zero for it all there is Persian money at work here and was it Cicero that said

the sinews of war are endless money well anyone who knows this period knows that when you look at the accumulated Persian empire it seems like they are the equivalent of the dragon smog from

the hobbits sitting on a giant pile of gold that no matter how much they spend never seems to

get any smaller and they'd had a leadership crisis over the last little bit the leadership crisis is settled they have a new king on the throne they've examined the situation here realized that Alexander is not a simple tune a child or a boob and they'd better start spending some money or they're gonna be facing him you know in person they already have a 10,000 man force of macadonians in their territory causing trouble so all of a sudden the spigots are open

money is being distributed and somehow our old friend in Athens demostomies is the conduit he's the money laundering he's the arms trader here and there are sorts of accusations by the way from some of the ancients most of the stuff I read from the modern secondary sources and historians say almost certainly not true but that demostomies is taking these enormous sums of money truly arms dealer type money even today and keeping it but ancient sources like deodorous sickulous say he's

paying for weapons and the weapons are being sent to the themeans to support what's going on in themes which is talked about by a couple of different sources and yet the sources begin to diverge

with this story this is an important story it is one of the most significant blights on

Alexander's career coming up here and so people who want to paint Alexander in a positive light have to figure out ways to well spin some of this story deodorous sickulous is not one of those people as we told you before he spends all of two sentences on all the stuff we just covered right the thracians the treballie the kelts the elirians all that stuff that's two sentences he's going to go into depth and what's about to happen here in thebs area and does the same thing but area and sources

guys like tolemy have every incentive here to try to absolve Alexander from some responsibility which is tough to do when you're the king my favorite account of what happens in thieves

to spark this whole rebellion comes from a conquest and empire by a bbosworth basically it

involves some of the people that fill up Alexander's dad throughout of the eaves because they were anti him right anti-fillip elements throw them out of the eaves get to hell out your vanished they come back when Alexander's gone and they are part of a rumor spreading that Alexander is dead

now there's a lot to this Alexander is dead thing you have to kind of unpack to know from a legal

standpoint because some of this stuff is all going to be argued in legalese over what the contract was where we had disagreement where you're going to follow me and if Alexander is actually dead there's an argument to be made that any deal that all these places like thieves and Athens and everywhere any deal they made with Alexander's null and void right if you're dead and you have no air you know there is no deal we're not rebelling against you the deal was off the minute you died

and that's what I heard happened and when you are like Alexander doing the equivalent of having knife fights amongst the rocks up in the area it's not that hard to make a case that you might be dead when you don't have continual supply lines like we talked about bearing constant messages back and forth so you're in touch with you know the army in the field it's easy to just say we haven't heard anything for a long time they're probably gone some of these rumors are suggests that the

army itself was lost can you imagine if Alexander and the army was lost how hard it would be to keep a bunch of people who only recently were subjected to Macedonian rule how hard it would be to keep

Them down here's the way AB Bosworth describes what happens and to understand...

cadmia this is the sort of the we would call it a garrison it's in the Acropolis I guess of

thieves and it's where the garrison that Philip put in there of Macedonian troops is sort of

headquartered and when this rebellion is going to start the thieves are going to sort of put that under siege and AB Bosworth says quote as the campaign in the north continued and no word of its progress reached the south the rumor circulated that he Alexander had been killed in the Athenian assembly demosthenes produced an eyewitness of his death and speculation was right over the whole of southern Greece at thieves there was an insurrection a group of exiles wishing to repeat

the glorious revolution of 379 entered the city by night murdered two members of the Macedonian

garrison who were surprised outside the cadmia and pressed for revolution in the assembly the

thiebons rose to the appeal and laid siege to the cadmia they abolished the oligarchic government imposed by Philip it was as a democracy that they passed legislation to resist Alexander the sovereign assembly ratifying a formal it means proclamation by the leaders of the revolt who met in council these actions Bosworth writes had challenged every aspect of the common piece an existing constitution had been subverted by exiles and the city was openly at war with

Macedon and quote the thiebons can put about 7,000 really good troops in the field that's nowhere near enough to take on the Macedonians of course but the Greeks usually fight outsiders by forming alliances between city states or leagues and in this case the thiebons put out an 911 call asking for help they take the money to most of these gives them and they are all their slaves and they press into service anybody who's in their city just happened to

be traveling from elsewhere I mean imagine you're going to sell you know medical supplies and some foreign country and then while you're there working the country you're in gets into a war with its neighbors and they hand you a weapon and say sorry we have to have everybody who's capable of carrying arms we need you so the thiebons are desperate and they expect help and help us on the way but then the help that is on the way stops and this becomes a pattern the

arcadey and league for example raises an army sends it to the ifsmith which is what divides the south of Greece and the rest of Greece and they just sit there the most of these is able to get the Athenians to say yeah we're with the thiebons but they don't do anything more than that everybody's kind of waiting I mean what's going to happen here's Alexander dead and if he's not what's going to

happen to thieves and besides the signs are terrible remember this is a people that believe in what

their oracles tell them if you can ever make sense of the opaque magic eight ball style answers that these oracles often give but the signs have not looked good for months deodorous circuluses that a giant spiders web appeared outside a very important shrine and it was iridescent and rainbow they're seeing blood on the water in certain important places certain other shrines are having issues and the statues and thieves begin to sweat in my robin waterfield translation of deodorous

he explains what all this is and remember deodorous believes it and he says quote in the first place

a fine spider's web appeared in the sanctuary of demeter which was not just as big as uh then he describes a very big thing but was also surrounded by an iridescent sheen like a rainbow in the sky when they consulted the delfic oracle about it they received the following reply now the oracle says this sign is intended by the gods for all men but especially for the beotians in their neighbors the beotians being the demons in their neighbors so that the demons then take this

question to a local shrine because you know if it's for the beotians in their neighbors why not consult our own shrine a deodorous says quote and the national oracle of thieves gave them this reply the woven web is bad for one but good for another this sign says deodorous appeared about three months before Alexander came to thieves and then at the time of his arrival the statues in the agora visibly dripped sweat and were covered with great gouts of it and quote he then says

that there were reports of a sound very like a bellow he says coming from certain important marshes

a blood colored ripple was running down the surface of the water in another location at delphi he says there was blood on the roof of a temple that involved the thiebins deodorous says the message that was being sent is clear quote the professional interpreters of

Signs said that the meaning of the web was that the gods were departing from ...

many huge meant that there would be a storm of various troubles that the sweating statues

meant overwhelming disaster and that the appearance of blood in several places meant that a great

slaughter would take place in the city since the gods were clearly predicting catastrophe for the city the advice of the experts was that the thiebins should not commit themselves to deciding the war on the battlefield but should rely on negotiation as an alternative safer way to settle matters and quote the thiebins response seems to be something along the lines of screw that we're fighting now as we said earlier the accounts of airy and a deodorous start to differ quite a bit here

i mean deodorous sounds like he's writing about the american revolution from the american side and airy and sounds like he's writing it from the british side and yet the story of the american revolution that they're writing about in that story the american revolution is crushed by the british and it's hundreds of years later and airy ends basically trying to explain all this freedom and

independent stuff that was being thrown around thieves and he basically treats it like a kind of a

delusion or that the people are preyed upon by these you know slick guys using the cute you know old words right by using freedom and liberty as a way to sort of arouse the people into a fever that would lead to terrible things and by the way this is from my martin ham and translation and airy and is explained the story from the start here he says quote meanwhile some of the thiebins exiles who had been expelled from the city made a covert return to thieves at night

invited back by a group in the city with revolutionary intent these exiles captured and killed

amintas and timileus two officers of the garrison occupying the cadmia who were outside their base quite unsuspecting of any enemy action they then came before the assembly and incited the thiebins to revolt from Alexander making play with the final slogans of freedom and independence and urging that now it last was the time to be rid of the heavy hand of Macedonian rule and quote airy and then kind of provides an out here for the common people that maybe they didn't

believe all this liberty stuff necessarily but the revolutionaries were telling them that Alexander was dead and that seemed to be the better argument from their point of view airy and says quote what told more with the general people was their assertion that Alexander had died in eliria there was indeed a strong and widespread rumor to this effect since he had been away long and no word had come from him so that his tends to happen at such times in ignorance of the

facts people assumed what they wanted to believe and quote so dismissive of the people treating things like freedom and independence slogans that politicians would use to sort of move the dull

masses but i've always found it a fascinating sort of way to approach it remember airy and

lives at a time when he's subject to an emperor and he likes it but he kind of makes it sound like these revolutionaries as he calls them are leading the people by the nose here and they've got to keep these lies as a gym Jones aspect to this in the way airy and does it got to keep these lies alive unfortunately for them Alexander is on the way to show that they are lies and he's coming at a truly Alexandria in pace as we pointed out this is one of his great qualities a Peter Green says the

pace of Alexander's advance here outpaces the news of his arrival deodorous sickulous just says all of the sudden Alexander's army just appeared outside the gates of thieves in wording to breaks it down more than that though Alexander turns his army south from allurea and marches it remember it's tired already 250 miles in 13 days with one day off to rest remember most of these guys are on foot crazily enough i read in a couple of different sources because it's shocking

the army seemed to make the same 18 to 20 miles per day rate whether they're on flat easy ground or going through crazy mountain passes the revolutionaries as airy and would call them in the city find out that Alexander is on the way when he's like three or four hours march distant and of course the people that are buying the revolutionaries you know jive airy and would say

look to them is it what what about this and so they say that's not Alexander he could never be here

that fast that's antipeter is general that was in Macedonia this isn't the full Macedonian army and that's not Alexander but Alexander had sent a message to antipeter basically saying uh get the rest of the army together that's not with me on this northern strike force and meet me outside the walls the

Thieves he tells the other cities around thieves that have been sort of bulli...

hey you know something bad might happen to the bully you don't like you want to be there meet me

there too and by the time the thieves see an army basically appearing nearby them it's 30,000 foot

and 3,000 horse ah with siege weapons Alexander and the army just sort of camp out in front of thieves for a couple of days the sources say and negotiations start the sources make it sound like Alexander tries to be cool here mainly because he doesn't want this problem at all certainly doesn't want to damage his armies planning on going over and attacking the Persians and all this is just upsetting his timeline he wants it to go away all he asks for is you know a couple of ring

leaders to be turned over really cool terms the thieves are having none of it deodorous sort of writing

from the position of the american revolutionaries in the revolutionary war that got crushed

that it's a give me liberty you're give me death moment and if not they they're pumping themselves up he says by reminding themselves how bad ask they used to be not they still are actually

but there's only like 7,000 of them and Alexander can't believe that 7,000 of them are ready to face

30,000 Macedonian infantry and 3,000 Macedonian horse that is so experienced veteran and nasty that they're going to go take over the biggest empire in the world I mean just seems ludicrous an Aryan portraying it from the you know upper class British side of things after we destroyed this colonial several hundred years ago tries to have some sort of sympathy with the people suggesting that they're just deluded again by these revolutionaries it's he points out

who have everything to lose because no matter what happens they're not going to farewell so why not you know take the whole city down with them and Alexander's hip to that because he actually says it one point in the you know with the negotiations between the two he's sending heralds out they're sending heralds out and they're yelling to each other the terms he actually says hey anybody in

the city that doesn't want to go along with that right but how do you like to be on the losing end of a

60 40 vote on do we you know take on Alexander or not he's basically says to the 40 percent

that we're on the losing end or whatever it was hey if you didn't agree with that you can come over and you'll be spared just come out of the city and instead you know he gets attacked by a light infantry in cavalry sort of quick strike force that kills a couple of Macedonians not necessarily in the order I just portrayed it this is all kind of happening at once these are the negotiations to try to figure out whether this battle really has to happen but then the thieves do something

that in hindsight but they must have known it in a way too looks like taunting the lion here and when Alexander basically says portraying himself by the way Peter Green says sort of the lawful representative of the league of current right he's not a butcher or a conqueror he's coming here to enforce the rules we all agreed on I'm not some you know bad guy so that's that's he's sort of portraying himself that way Peter Green says though that the response of the

the thieves here in the face of potential obliteration puts the lie to Alexander's framing of himself here and Green writes quote the the events of course knew this as well as anyone and their next move deliberately blew Alexander's polite fiction sky high in the most public possible manner by doing so they sealed their own fate from the highest tower of thieves they're herald made a counter-demand and a counter-offer they would he announced be willing to negotiate with Alexander

if the Macedonian first surrendered antipider and folotus and quote let me stop you there it's

like asking for two of their top guys yeah and won't you give us your two top guys and we all won't go after you Green continues quote after this little pleasantry he went on to proclaim now quoting the herald that anyone who wished to join the great king of Persia and thieves in freeing the Greeks and destroying the tyrant of Greece should come over to them Green says quote the venomous conciseness of this indictment was calculated to flick Alexander on the jaw and the reference

to a Persian on taunt which might just conceivably be true could hardly help striking home if the thief's main object was to provoke the king into discarding his holier than thou mask they succeeded all too well the word tyrant stung Alexander no one likes hearing unwelcome home truths about themselves least of all the general whose men are within earshot and he flew into one of his famous rages and quote Alexander is famous for his rages and this is really the first time we bring it up

because it's the first time it really comes into play at the same time there are power politics reasons

For doing what he's about to do also so it is tough to know where one leaves ...

blue-tark the ancient also Greek but in the Roman era historian blue-tark mentions this early on and Baltimore heckle in his book in the path of conquest pointed out when he says quote

for the first of many times Alexander meant to use the terror of destruction and annihilation

to make an example of those who dared to defy him thinking that now quoting blue-tark the Greeks would be shocked by a disaster such proportions and thus frightened into an action end quote so maybe when it comes to the anger versus the power politics move maybe a little of column A little column B now I can't help but think about this divide for a minute because if Alexander doing this purely for geopolitical reasons power politics reasons will shoot

that's just part for the course right how many leaders and generals and conquerors and history do things for that reason but if this guy is really doing a lot of what he's doing because he loses it sometimes you know regrets it later we should didn't happen but of course you can't really turn back time if some of what happens in this story is based on this guy getting pissed off and not being able to control himself think about what a personality trait that

is and how it's sort of intersects with some key moments in history here like this one

deodorous says Alexander shows up he's gonna be cool he wants to make a deal just wants to get on with this because remember the last time he showed up with an army outside of thieves that even just sort of rolled over right away and maybe he had this idea that they could do it again

green basically says Alexander was gonna let him get off the hook with the we thought you were dead

thing right so how cool can you be and the thiefens in the waterfield translation deodorous says Alexander thought the thiefens treated him with contempt in the low classical translation it says that Alexander figured out essentially that the thiefens despised him and so he decided to destroy the city utterly and then deodorous says he made that call and said you know anybody wanted to surrender could and the thiefens essentially flipped him off which made him go crazy

and that's when he decided deodorous says to destroy the city even worse than he decided to destroy the city before and to teach the rest of Greece a lesson so sort of a side benefit there so there's a actual order that you know okay you pissed me off finally enough and it's on

and Plutarch makes it sound sort of more mechanical too you know are you gonna give me what I want?

no okay we're attacking airy and though remember what I said if you're trying to explain away something that is a famous blight on Alexander the Great's reputation you got to jump through some hoops now here and if your main sources tell me who was probably there and who had people he hated commanding other parts of the army and it's your account we're going from and you also want to try to absolve Alexander as much as you can from responsibility because well

it reflects on you he was your friend there's a whole lot of things involved here well airy and has Alexander the complete opposite of a rage machine Alexander is the absolute soul of you know sort of rationality he's reluctant to do anything both he and deodorous say that he just sort of camps out in front of thieves for a little while and can you imagine you know you could do a whole movie on what it must have been like inside the city in terms of the percolating

arguments between people remember all these Greek cities are divided into different factions

and these revolutioners they come in and now they have Alexander outside their gates and you know it's it's only like two or three weeks since the the so-called revolution right actually as I do the math here it's probably closer to a month but you get the point I mean people must be boiling over someone a surrender and Alexander says you can surrender someone a fight on especially the guys who are going to get executed no matter what I mean

it's always dangerous at all real historians will tell you it's crazy dangerous to play with

analogies here but the way the translations all phrase it from the primary sources is this is a freedom thing even if what the demons think of as freedom doesn't match what we think of as freedom at all and we should also point out that you know before we side to hold heartedly with the demons here as people who like freedom ourselves the neighbors of thieves who were often at the receiving end of thieves bullying and whatnot they might say why are you

Siding with the bad guys here and when they side with Alexander they're final...

to punch the bully in the nose maybe but in this case the rhetoric of thieves in the translations

appeals to us because it sounds like well if you're an American especially but the funny thing

about the Americans against the British is once upon a time you know the British are having their own revolutions I mean people all over the world can understand this idea of being in a sort of a war to preserve or regain one's freedom and independence and maybe having it be a war against all odds and that's the way that the even sort of see this thing and so when Alexander says just give me those two guys and we'll call it good that also means and we'll go back to the way things were

when I was running the show and you didn't have your freedom that's the real deal he's asking for and a lot of us can understand being unwilling to take a deal like that the difference here though when it starts getting really dark and you can just feel it is the thieves first of all arming your slaves and arming the merchants and the people who are just visiting the city with weapons gives you a

sense of the level of the danger but it's also the taking of your wives and your children and all

of the old people and running them into the sanctuaries and religious temples hoping that if something bad happens and you know the odds are probably 80 20 I mean you can puff yourself up all you want you can say that the defenses and being on the defensive of the city here is a force multiplier and it is but this is an army that was just about is just about to go overseas and take on

the biggest empire in the world their veterans they well never lost under Alexander rarely lost

under his father this doesn't look good so you hope when you take your vulnerable parts the population to the temples that they'll be safe there and it's a pretty good chance they won't and you know that off the top of my head I find it hard to think of anything more likely to create a sense of crushing pressure and desperation on the part of everyone in this story I mean the mother looking down at their child in one of these temples thinking about what the next 24 hours might

look like the soldier on the front line thinking about his family back in these temples and knowing what happens in the sacking of cities in the ancient world normally thinking about that happening to the I can't think of anything more likely to make me fight with unbelievable ferocity than that and it still blows my mind that when the febans apparently had to get out of jail free card here and none of this had to happen they didn't use it right they were offered the chance to get out of

this with just handing over a couple of ringleaders you know a couple of these revolutionary thugs

who came into the city maybe area would say and and hoodwinked the people and they turned it down all they had to do was give up their freedom and none of this has to happen and if this turns out the way it's likely to turn out they're not going to have any freedom anyway that's the real irony of the whole deal and this is what they chose and they thought they were going to have help but interestingly enough the other Greek states who also you know want their own freedom autonomy

liberty and all that sort of stuff whatever it means to them they think that maybe the demons are getting what they deserve here because after all nobody told you to be that thick

neck about it right you couldn't negotiate it that's what the oracles would and signs were

all saying and the prophecies but you had to go be all thick neck about it had to take that give me liberty or give me death thing a little bit too literally well I can't help you this time and the thief is knowing this go through with this anyway it's a very interesting situation the adores looks at it as positively heroic areas as Alexander marches his army around to the side of one of thieves as walls at a certain point

the cities you have to imagine the cities surrounded by nice stout wall all the way around but on one part of it it butts right up to that area where Alexander's Macedonian garrison is trapped and has been under siege since this little revolution began right the demons built a couple of palisades out there to sort of wall it off from any sort of help but it's right up against the wall those palisades I had to look it up to get a real good idea

what they mean when they say that is that and there's can be variations or imagine those sorts of walls that you've seen that are essentially a bunch of tree trunks sharpened at the top and then placed in the ground one right next to another so there's no gaps between them and there's a couple

Of those a couple of lines of them with space for troops to fight in between ...

if you think about it this way the weak spot in the defenses because instead of the stout regular

wall of thieves they have this you know double sort of temporary wall and that's where Alexander

takes his troops over to that side because if he can punch through their he's also right by you know we're all his other soldiers are trapped in the garrison can link up with his forces and then it's all over the thieves know this too so that's where they place their troops and this whole battle is going to be fought over these barricades to barricade battle if you will it's good for the thieves it nullifies some of what the Macedonians do best sort of is a great equalizer didn't

we say force multiplier earlier but there's still a lot numbered four or five to one and while their regular soldiers there's seven thousand infantry and cavalry are very good you can't count in the slaves to do well against the Macedonians where you're traveling salesman or your guy just vacationing in thieves or divisive his mother or whatever it is that you've just

armed this is a bit of a last stand sort of deal it reminds you've all the great last stands in history

from thermopoli to the alamo and all those kinds of things with a small chance of success deodorous makes it even a little bit more of a close run thing deodorous and plutark both have Alexander sort of preparing his forces for the assault and then when he's ready when the artillery is assembled launching it essentially pretty straightforward area on the other hand as we've already alluded to using tolamy as a source and tolamy having every reason to absolve Alexander for as much

of this responsibility as possible says that the fighting started when one of Alexander's subordinates named Perticus attacked with his forces without orders and unauthorized assault the leader of the unauthorized assault just happens to be the arch enemy of tolamy so I mean think about how elegant this is he gets to write his history gets to lawd and sort of defend his boss and friend and the person he owes his legitimacy to while at the same time turning around and shifting the blame for all

these terrible things Alexander's critics say about you know how he handled all this even stuff and blame it all on his worst enemy it's a two-for-one deal it's wonderful but we have to notice it doesn't mean it didn't happen a derying goals were the in his Philip and Alexander he talks about how when you station troops so close together maybe with that barricade in between him but think about the things they're said to one another it's not uncommon for troops to sort of

in an unauthorized way just lose it in assault when that happens though no matter what the reason Alexander's force to throw in more troops to protect the flank so that Perticus and his forces don't get cut off and surrounded that sucks in eventually the rest of Alexander's army and the area

in account is one where Alexander never even really launched the assault on thieves he just got dragged

into it plausible deniability for whatever happens next it's all Perticus's fault Perticus though in the deodorous version is like the hero the guy who leads sort of a commando assault when Alexander somewhere in the midst of the fighting seas an unguarded gate or door but before that happens things break out over the palisade and deodorous says everybody starts throwing everything they they can over the sort of the divide it's easier for me to envision this kind of a battle than a more open

ancient battle because you can see this sometimes in riots and go look at riot footage where you have a barricade essentially of shields or a wall and there and the fight breaks up the fighting and turns it into something that is pretty predictable so these large groups of people sort of throwing things over the barricade and pushing and shoving no specific word on whether the artillery was used to punch a hole in one of these palisades but somehow a hole is punched and no one says of course

how wide it is but Perticus and his forces stream through and are able to get to the second

palisade remember there's one an open space and then another but he and his troops get trapped there

and stopped and the fighting is going on Alexander sends the agranians and the archers and his famous quick strike force into the breach tells them to fan out they start apparently trapping a thiebin unit again hard to imagine the sizes of the forces we're talking about here but I love the way in airy and he specifically says over by the sunken road near the temple of Heracles as though it's still there you can go see it that's right where they got all trapped and the archers are

sort of keeping them at bay and then at a certain point Aryan says the thiebin who are kept at bay

Run away the light troops chase them and then at almost like a prearranged si...

who are running away with a shout turnaround information the you can almost see it's like a

a movie where the archers and everybody who are chasing them and so confident all of a sudden

they're at the point of the spears and Aryan says about 70 archers were killed along with their leader the rest of them run back towards Alexander supposedly for the protection of the heavier troops and while the thiebin who just killed those archers and just turned around and yelled and had this temporary victory while they're chasing now the people that used to be chasing them they get all strong out they lose formation and then they run into Alexander in the close order

troops the adores has an account that is much more last-standish with the thiebin's doing so well

they almost win he says they take on Alexander's first forces and they wear them down he says

that the Macedonians have the numbers and the depth of the formation but the thiebin's because they

go to the gym are in better shape and that the two sort of balance each other out for a while

and then after the thiebin's deodoris says send the first unit back to go rest and refit Alexander throws in the reserves which normally would do the trick according to deodoris you don't you know when the reserves come in that's normally what it's over but not this time the thiebin's fighting for all that they had you know for freedom for their families back in the temples everything they're holding their own now against the reserves and sort of deodoris has

them like yelling slurs at each other and you know you know who's superior now all these kinds of things but in a very like Persians getting around the path of thermopoli and attacking the Spartans in the rear way as we said Alexander specifically may be according to these accounts spies an unguarded gate or door or something in the walls he sends purticus the hero of the deodoris story I guess you could say the villain of the Aryan story uh to go with some troops and

take it that gets him sort of behind the thiebin defenses and both deodoris and Aryan sort of have this moment it's the same moment where everything sort of falls apart and it's when the thiebin's in Aryans account they sort of get uh they panic but in uh deodoris is account they realize that they

have been compromised and that the only way to not be surrounded is to back up into the walls of

the city so his is a more organized effort to continue the fight and just sort of retire to a better defensive position whereas Aryan makes it sound more like uh at a certain point everybody just sort of panics deodoris explains what happens though an Aryan through his own lens talks about the same incidents this is clearly the key moment in the battle and deodoris from the low classical translation and I think originally that was translated by C Bradford Wells deodoris says quote

so the thiebin spirit proved unshakable here but the king meaning Alexander took note of a posture and gate that had been deserted by its guards and hurried purticus with a large detachment of troops to seize it and penetrate into the city he quickly carried out the order and the

Macedonian slip through the gate into the city while the thiebin's having worn down the first assault

wave of Macedonians stoutly face the second and still had high hopes of victory when they knew that a section of the city had been taken however they began immediately to withdraw within its walls but in this operation they're cavalry galloped along with the infantry into the city and trampled upon and killed many of their own men they themselves rode into the city and disorder and encountering a maze of narrow alleys and trenches lost their footing and fell and were killed by their own weapons

at the same time the Macedonian garrison in the cadmia burst out of the citadel engaged the thiebens and attacking them in their confusion made great slaughter among them and quote as deodorous says they are very quickly the Macedonians when they broke through the city walls and got into the city they ran up to where the Macedonian garrison was under siege you know unseaged them for lack of a better word and had them join the fight too so it's all over

except for the killing the last stand if you will is made over by a particular temple which makes you wonder if it was sort of the fallback point maybe the agreed upon place where everybody meets if all you know the worst happens and maybe there's a lot of invulids and vulnerable population members hold up their who knows bring the army back there and defend everybody is best you can

Eventually the defenders are surrounded on all sides they will break of area ...

running out of the city at high speed and over the planning getting away and the infantry

trying to save their skins as he says is best they can but at a certain point it's hard to know

when that moment specifically happens but the vibe changes from one of fighting and battle where both sides are equally at risk to sacking and killing and pillaging and looting deodorous talks about all of the thiebin fighters who were still scattered in little pockets all over the city remember this is a big city and they had these narrow little Greek streets with sometimes buildings two three four stories tall on either sides so these are little

bottle neck killing zones where deodorous has soldiers who are so you know wounded from the fighting that they're essentially bleeding out slowly supporting themselves on the half of their broken spears just waiting for some Macedonian to come down this little alley thinking he's looting and enjoying himself and that all the danger is over and then boom you can still take one with you

what Churchill said right and that's how these thiebin's in deodorous is a counter looking at things

but otherwise it's pure murder rape and slaughter this is the way in his book Philip and Alexander historian Adrian Goldsworthy puts it quote the Macedonian sack the city they had done this before

when cities had failed to surrender to Philip and forced him to take them by assault but never before

had they taken a Greek city as large in his famous as thieves storming fortifications goldsworthy rights was dangerous and they had lost 500 dead as well as no doubt many others wounded including purticus the survivors their blood up anger with the enemy still fresh and in the narrow streets and dark houses of the city able to do what they wished judged only by the opinions of their comrades killed raped and plungered it will end quote he then continues later quote murder and rape were

accepted as inevitable when the city was stormed while it is doubtful that Alexander and his officers could have controlled the army fully and entirely prevented such things it is equally unlikely that they even thought to try beyond protecting some households and individuals

who were considered important or otherwise favored this goldsworthy rights was just part of war

and from a pragmatic point of view Philip and Alexander both recognized the power of terror and quote it wasn't just in terms of the atrocities which again if we're using modern terms here made headlines everywhere the Macedonians especially in areas account get off a little easy here because the worst of the atrocities are blamed not on the Macedonians but on the Greeks were fighting with Alexander right the ones he called up and said hey we're going to be

taken on your bully you want to come those guys have an axe to grind long long standing problems

and and wounds and things that they could be angry at the demons about and they're finally

getting a chance to take revenge and they are taking revenge as one historian said though while some of the worst atrocities might have been done by these Greek allies of Alexander's the majority of what was done was done by the Macedonian soldiers it didn't matter it leaves an unbelievably bloody horrific taste in the mouth of a guy like Diodorus who you can just hear you know we would say today he was a patriotic Greek thinking of these ancestors of his from a couple hundred years previously

and it just hurts him to admit that the other Greeks were doing a lot of the terrible things right fellow Greeks shouldn't be fighting fellow Greeks erine is almost happy to blame it on them because it means it's not Alexander's fault Diodorus from a low classical translation says quote all the city was pillaged everywhere boys and girls were dragged into captivity as they wailed pitiously the names of their mothers in some meaning in total households were seized

with all their members and the cities in slave it was complete of the men who remained he writes some wounded and dying grappled with the foe and were slain themselves as they destroyed their enemy others supported only by a shattered spear went to meet their assailants and in the supreme struggle held freedom dearer than life as the slaughter mounted Diodorus said and every corner of the city was piled high with corpses no one could have failed to pity the

plight of the unfortunate's end quote now the part that hurts this guy we would call him a patriotic

Greek today and Greeks should not be doing this to other Greeks but it must h...

that even he asked to admit it and he says that these people who hated the thrashians got into the

city without Alexander and did horrible things he writes quote for even Greeks thespians platyans

and orcaminians and some others hostile to thieves who had joined the king in the campaign meaning Alexander invaded the city along with him and now demonstrated their own hatred amid the calamities of the unfortunate victims so it was that many terrible things befell the city he writes Greeks were mercilessly slain by Greeks relatives were butchered by their own relatives

and even a common dialect induced no pity in the end he writes when night finally intervened

the houses had been plundered and the children and women in aged persons who had fled into the temples were torn from sanctuary and subjected to outrage without limit over 6,000 thiebons perished more than 30,000 were captured and the amount of property plundered was unbelievable

end quote but what to do what to do what to do with all this stuff our Alexander famously holds

a sort of a ad hoc spur of the moment made up of what we have around this kind of legal counsel to sort of represent the league of Corinth in miniature they're going to have a sort of a hearing what do we do here with our slaves in this city in what's left what we didn't kill what's

going to happen to all of this now this isn't another one of these things where

half the time Alexander sounds like a barbarian stomping around doing whatever he wants to do no rules apply on whatever and the other half of the time he sounds like everything is strictly legal all the arguments he makes with other Greek city states could be made by lawyers in this case he's turning it over to someone else and he says to these other Greeks well listen I'm just the representative I'm the hedgehog on of this organization but we're going to vote on what happens

to the thiebons unfortunately it seems that the majority of the people who could be scraped up on the spur of the moment either accidentally or on purpose are all these little city states around thieves that have been victims of its bullying forever and somehow the deal is if they vote the worst possible penalty the land that thieves had will be parceled out amongst them so what should we do to the thiebons and if this was a gladiatorio contest they give it the thumbs down

now Alexander as so many historians have pointed out we'll just basically do what they tell

them to do but as everyone says but if he didn't want to do this it wouldn't have happened so this is cover the thing is is nobody can really believe anything like this will happen I mean if you

want to use a modern term for what febes is in terms of how important a Greek city state it is it

is a city state too big to fail you just can't believe anybody would destroy it I mean Greek city states have been destroyed before but not like this I mean you know if Athens is New York and Sparta was Chicago then thieves is Los Angeles right once upon a time Chicago was bigger than Los Angeles but this time Los Angeles has a clip stick and when you wouldn't want to destroy Los Angeles which I mean you know some of you might but but the whole point being that you can't imagine the waste involved

in taking out something that large and important and meaningful well interesting and if I was reading a it might have been a volumar heckle but it was somebody making a point ahead and thought about really which was that the logical play here for the arguments being made because it's almost like a hearing right the the other theben bully victims would have every right to talk about all the things thebes had done to them right we're gonna pay them back because look at all these things it's only

fair justice but that's not what they do they bring up the fact that the febes sided with the Persians 150 years ago that's the angle they push which happens to be perfectly lined up with Alexander's propaganda angle here for this war we're paying back these Persians for what they did to us 150 years ago and oh yeah the theben's were on their side and did you hear what they said to me Alexander would have probably had somebody say for him when we were all standing there we all

heard it come and join the great king the events in the great king working together again wiping out thebes is like saying these guys were betraying us the rest of Greece to the cause they went against the league of current they violated the rules they're like an enemy in our midst they're

Working with the great king they're taking money all these weapons that kille...

in this encounter representing you the league of current were paid for by the great king's money

oh yeah it wasn't my decision in the way and all these other people from around the region decide

its thumbs down for thebes and the city will end up being so totally destroyed that I read one historian once that said it might as well have been done by an atomic weapon in typical Greek fashion he exempts the temples from destruction that's normal in typically Alexandria and fashion he exempts the descendants of a particular poet that praised the Macedonians in the past but otherwise it's 30,000 people sold into slavery

and a rule put into place that says that after we destroy the city where these people live and scattered them to the winds anyone who takes them in is guilty of a crime A. B. Bosworth sums the whole affair up when he says in conquest an empire quote the Greek world now had a shocking example of the consequences of resistance one of the leading

cities of the Greek world had been destroyed in a single day as though by visitation of the gods

so Escanese lamented in 330 and the litany of shakansaro was to be repeated through the centuries there was a groundswell of sympathy for the victims despite the prohibition Bosworth writes against giving soaker to the refugees they were received into neighboring cities notably Athens and Aquafinium and nearly 20 years later when Cassandra proclaimed the restoration of thebes there was enthusiastic support from as far afield as Italy and Sicily though Bosworth writes

the immediate reaction was panic and quote the Greeks start bowing and scraping in a

totally like fashion not the Spartans but they've never been a part of this league of Corinth but

like the Arcadians who got an army together sent it to the Esmas and waited they vote to execute the people who proposed sending that army up there and the ones who led it yeah well those guys they were way out of line Athens says representatives along with everyone else but at the same time they're preparing for a siege they figure their next mean while they're sending representatives

this is so Athenian like isn't it they're the same ones remember who said that nobody could

find any sanctuary if they assassinated Philip II they said that right at his games and then he was killed five minutes later and they were celebrating it well they're doing it again as soon as Alexander you know is available they send their representative saying oh my goodness thank goodness you've made it safe back from Elyrian from fighting those tribaldies and god we thought you were dead and we're so glad you're not and we thoroughly approve of that punishment that you handed out to

the ebs and Peter Greens said you know Alexander was probably amused by this but he didn't take it seriously he demanded they hand over the most the ciferous anti-macadonian demagogues among them including our friend Demosthenes what do you think's gonna happen to these guys it puts Athens in the most agonizing position you can imagine it's a little like imagining

the Germans in the second world war after France is defeated and the British decide to give in

in their beaten and they're gonna be you know completely destroyed and blood will run in the streets of London and everything unless the deal is that Hitler wants Churchill give me Churchill and those friends of Churchill who've all been saying bad things about me and we'll call it okay Demosthenes is horrified and says it's a little like turning over the sheep dog who's been protecting the flock to the wolves who's been warning you of the dangers of Darth Vader all this

time and now it's Darth Vader son and and I've been right the whole time and sure I've had to trick us into doing the right things sometimes and sure I brought out that guy in bandages who was limping around saying he saw Alexander dead but it was all to do the right thing to preserve our liberty and I realize it's come to this right now and he's in a real boat and he's got adversaries up there who must must have been smiling to themselves at the opportunity to watch him

squirm some of the orators get up and say that if Demosthenes you know was any kind of real patriot he'd willingly and proudly go to his death right he'd be proud to walk up there and die as a sacrifice to his city and it really puts you on sort of a horns of a dilemma situation right you don't want to look like a coward you don't want to look like someone who wouldn't die for a city at the same time I mean my goodness I didn't do all this fighting to have the stupid sheep turn me over

To the wolf it's an interesting sort of thing to wonder about and the way he ...

is in the most Athenian like way someone talks Alexander out of the Athenians are the great

diplomats the great talkers and a particular Athenian diplomat some stories have him getting a lot

of money from Demosthenes to do this is able to go to Alexander and have his demands cut down to just one guy who's only going to be banished and who immediately runs to the king of Persia for sanctuary somehow Demosthenes is slippery enough to get out again almost literally by the skin of his teeth but Alexander as we had said he felt outside the walls of thieves has bigger fish to fry he figures he's made his point with the destruction of thieves the sources say that he feels so bad now about what

happened to thieves that if he ever got a request from a thief and in the future he would grant it but we should also point out that he will not be during his lifetime that that ban on taking in any thief and refugees will be lifted but it's a sign of how the Greeks feel about Alexander forever afterwards that they violated that law regularly and as Peter Greene said what Alexander did to thieves was one of the worst decisions he ever made and the Greeks hated him forever for it

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tree top tall well if I am I'm standing on the shoulders of giants and that's you folks and I appreciate all you do for me and my family thank you I hope you have a wonderful upcoming year stay safe there's an old saying that I told you that story to tell you this one because now you know the first show

we did was about Alexander the context of his life is upbringing the army that he was going to

use the tactics I mean all all the things that set the stage for Alexander and then the story we just finished is about Alexander taking over and his early challenges and let's be honest those early challenges could have finished them very easily a lot of great conquerors in history as I believe we said earlier

kind of never make it past their knife fights amongst the rocks in the area stage they were

little like the sea turtles that get born on the beach and have to run the gauntlet of predators to make it to the safety of the ocean just to have an opportunity at life a lot of the potential great conquerors lose their lives along the way and Alexander 21 22 years old now at this time in the story is just at this moment with grease subdued behind him with the barbarians cowed and all this and the army ready to go and he's drawing men from all these places that he's sort of subdued again

he's at the point now where he's facing his destiny and he's one of these guys at least the traditional

stories always say who can feel the hand of destiny when it's on him Winston Churchill's another

one those guys he wrote that when he was given the prime minister ship which of course the war had been going on a bit now and Britain's already in a low point and when he becomes prime minister he wrote that he had one of those moments where he could just feel the hand of destiny he wrote quote I felt as if I were walking with destiny and that all my past life had been but a preparation for this hour and this trial end quote one wonders now with all of the roadblocks out of the way and

Everything he had to handle to get his house in order one wonders if Alexande...

hand of destiny and they show others as he proceeds to cross his own version of the rubicon if you

will and test himself against the greatest land empire that had ever been the richest the biggest

geographical territory and almost mythically old in terms of the way the Greeks were to see the right but dating back to a tradition that goes to a Syrian Babylonian you know once upon a time all the way to Sumari I mean this is this is the great Middle Eastern inheritor of all that history from that region and here are these upstart people that had to fight to even be considered Greek

led by a guy who even though half of them is that people that's had to fight to be considered

Greek the other half of them straight up apparent you know from which country and sorcery will that's the guy that's gonna lead this and try to carry out his father's plan which has not

come down to us and maybe Alexander didn't even know it I got to believe he did but maybe he didn't

because no one knows what Philip was gonna do right you just fight the Persians and see how it goes take your chances and you know grab what you can or do you have a plan to attack and and take a certain amount of territory what is the limits of this idea right where the natural boundaries that you're trying to establish here well that's where Alexander's psychology once again is gonna come and deploy the man who can feel the hand of destiny on his shoulders who was infused both by the

environment in which he grew up in but also by the teachings of Aristotle on the subject of irritate to try to be the best at whatever you try to do and then he's got this

Icarus in the Sun potential relationship with the idea of ambition and he may already be

entertaining the idea that he might be the son of a god it's all a very interesting mixture of stuff that's going to lead us into some of the greatest battles in all history all that and more in part three of Mania for subjugation I have some sad news to pass along if you hadn't heard it already through one of our other informational channels in September we unexpectedly and tragically lost our artist of 18 some years the fabulous Nicolae he was only in his early 40s

and so it was a complete shock to us and obviously hit us on so many levels right personal business everything you can think of when we lost the fabulous bill Barrett we did an audio program on the hardcore history, a dendom feed where we showcased his work right this deep as an audio guy so the work was audio Nick is a visual guy or was a visual guy and so we did a sub stack post highlighting some of his work and how you know some of the more noted covers came to be and whatnot you

can go over to sub-stack.dendcarlin.com for free of course and check out that story if you like and see you know some of the wonderful things Nick added to our work I we said if I was the Hunter West Thompson character in this relationship Nick was Ralph Stedman and as our became associated with what we did we love him we miss him we're still in shock and we had to pivot quickly and thank goodness we ran into Eric Sayers who has taken on the unenviable task of following

a legend and somebody whose work is very closely associated with us I told Eric I compare it to having your favorite comic book losing its artist and having to now have another artist come and pick up the book from where the last artist left off and it's hard to get used to initially but over time

you look back and you just refer to the first era as associated with that as the Nick lay era

and now a new era begins and you know we think of Nick finally we miss him and we send our love to his family

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