Fr. 44.90

Soldier, Priest, and God - A Life of Alexander the Great

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext It might seem improbable that anyone could have much to say that is new about Alexander the Great, but Naiden has done it--and with gusto. This is a new portrait not of the man as military general, wily politician, flawed human, or exotic explorer, but as religious leader. Naiden places religion back exactly where it should be: central to the experience of the many cultures stretched across the ancient world that Alexander visited and conquered. And in so doing, Naiden has brought us closer to Alexander than we perhaps have ever been before. Informationen zum Autor A former New York subway motorman, F. S. Naiden is Professor of History at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and the author of Ancient Supplication. Klappentext Soldier, Priest, and God is the first life of Alexander the Great to explore his religious experience. F. S. Naiden puts Alexander the Great's experience in Egypt and Asia on a par with his Macedonian upbringing and Greek education and explains how the European conqueror became a Muslim saint. Zusammenfassung Whatever we may think of Alexander--whether Great or only lucky, a civilizer or a sociopath--most people do not regard him as a religious leader. And yet religion permeated all aspects of his career. When he used religion astutely, he and his army prospered. In Egypt, he performed the ceremonies needed to be pharaoh, and thus became a god as well as a priest. Babylon surrendered to him partly because he agreed to become a sacred king. When Alexander disregarded religion, he and his army suffered. In Iran, for instance, where he refused to be crowned and even destroyed a shrine, resistance against him mounted. In India, he killed Buddhists, Jains, and Hindus by the hundreds of thousands until his officers, men he regarded as religious companians, rebelled against him and forced him to abandon his campaign of conquest. Although he never fully recovered from this last disappointment, he continued to perform his priestly duties in the rest of his empire. As far as we know, the last time he rose from his bed was to perform a sacrifice. Ancient writers knew little about Near Eastern religions, no doubt due to the difficulty of travel to Babylon, India, and the interior of Egypt. Yet details of these exotic religions can be found in other ancient sources, including Greek, and in the last thirty years, knowledge of Alexander's time in the Near East has increased. Egyptologists and Assyriologists have written the first thorough accounts of Alexander's religious doings in Egypt and Mesopotamia. Recent archaeological work has also allowed scholars to uncover new aspects of Macedonian religious policy. Soldier, Priest, and God, the first religious biography of Alexander, incorporates this recent scholarship to provide a vivid and unique portrait of a remarkable leader. Inhaltsverzeichnis PROPOSED MAP showing the route of the Expedition with an elevation profile INTRODUCTION CHAPTER 1: The Mediterranean Comes of Age CHAPTER 2: A Macedonian Priest-King CHAPTER 3: The S-Curve CHAPTER 4: The Throne of Tyre CHAPTER 5: The Throne of Egypt. CHAPTER 6: The Throne of Babylon. CHAPTER 7: A Vacant Throne CHAPTER 8: Sogdian In-laws CHAPTER 9: Self-Defeat CHAPTER 10: Persian In-laws CHAPTER 11: The Waters of Life CHAPTER 12: Dead Men and a Living King NOTES APPENDICES BIBLIOGRAPHY ...

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