Alexander dies and monarchy becomes the dominant form of ruling in the areas his empire gets split into
Successors (Diadochoi) copy his ruling style - aspire to be likened to him - and Macedon had a king
Empire still needs consolidation
No heir - empire goes to generals and comrades
Confusion and conflict - who leads?
He had made no provision for succession
Half brother Arrhidaeus (Philip III) becomes king (mental disability)
Killed by Olympias (Alexander's mother) in 317 BC
Ruled 323 - 317 BC
Figurehead, reigned but didn't rule -
Perdiccas is regent of the empire
Very important general of Alexander
Provision made for his unborn child if male
(Alexander IV) to be co-regent with Philip III when
he came of age
Killed by Cassander in 310/309 BC - Cassander was
meant to protect him but didn't want a challenger
for power and people had begun to put faith in
Alexander's son
Successors of Alexander
Babylon Settlement 323 BC
Half-brother Arrhidaeus made figurehead king of
Macedon and provision made for male heir
Alexander IV to be co-regent when he came of age
Perdiccas becomes regent of the
empire - de facto master of the empire
3 years until 320 BC
Fights Ptolemy after Ptolemy conquers
beyond his satrapy and hijacks
Alexander's funeral and buries the body
in Egypt
Whoever buries the body is the successor
Ptolemy supported by Antipater and Craterus
Loses a lot of troops - poor
tactics, harsh leadership -
and is assassinated by his
own soldiers
Ptolemy is popular and fair and is
offered regency - he refuses - not
over ambitious or arrogant
Craterus becomes "protector of kings" - nominal, little power
Antipater is viceroy in
Europe, master of Macedon
and Greece
Appointed regent after Perdiccas dies and Ptolemy refuses
Appoints Antigonus to be
royal general in Asia and
wipe out Perdiccas
supporters
Appoints son, Cassander, to be Antigonus 2nd in command to control power
Dies in 319 BC and Polyperchon is made regent
Cassander rebels and allies with Antigonus
Antigonus defeats and kills Eumenes; expels Seleucus from Babylon
Ptolemy takes Seleucus in and
sponsors him to retake Babylonia; both
defeat Antigonus sons' at Gaza
Seleucus retakes Babylon and
Upper Satrapies 311 - 306 BC
Demetrius (son) and Antigonus
beat Ptolemy in Cyprus at Salamis
306 BC - declare themselves kings
Thereafter all
successors
declare kingship -
separate from
Macedonian royal
house
Gains upper hand in Greece and Macedon
Peace of dynasts 311 BC
Cassander, Ptolemy, Lysimarchus and Antigonus come to terms;
Cassander is general of Europe and looks after Alex IV, the kings retain
their respective lands and Antigonus is first in Asia - none keep their terms
Cassander kills Alexander IV and his
mother - no longer a threat as blood relative
to Alexander
Allies with Eumemes (friend of Perdiccas)
and Olympias
Olympias kills Arrhidaeus and his wife
Satrapies distributed - Persian
method - all eventually become
king
Ptolemy (Egypt)
Lysimachus (Thrace)
Antigonus (Phrygia)
Seleucus (Babylonia)
Key features of Hellenistic monarchy
Diadem - headband - used from start to end of Hellenistic age
Symbol of kingship - marked them out as kings
Definitions of monarchy changed
Not based on traditional ideas of
descent and legitimacy (until later) but
the ability to handle an army and affairs
Reciprocal relationship between kings and cities
Freedom and democracy did not die
out - negotiated in different ways
Kings could not just
impose their will -
needed support of cities
Cities also needed things - military
protection, financial benefaction, help with conflicts - conciliatory not dominated
Formal framework of leadership over Greek cities
Title: Basileus
All early Hellenistic kings founded new cities
New centres of royal control
Imprinting a royal identity on
their new landscape of empire
Narrative 306-301 BC and aftermath
Antigonus' and Demetrius' failed invasion of Egypt 306 BC
Demetrius' failed invasion of
Rhodes 305 BC
Antigonus and Demetrius reform Hellenic League 302 BC
Battle of Ipsus 301 BC - Cassander, Lysimarchus
and Seleucus converge on Asia Minor
Antigonus dies, Demetrius flees, victors share Asia Minor
Demetrius retakes Athens and
Macedon in 294 BC but is
captured by Seleucus 285 BC
and dies in captivity 282 BC
Cassander dies 297
BC - sons fight over
succession and
destroy dynasty
Lysimarchus and Pyrrhus take Macedon and divide it
Lysimarchus dies fighting Seleucus 281 BC
Seleucus assassinated in 281 BC by Ptolemy Keraunos, son of Ptolemy I,
succeeded by son Antiochus I
Antiochus takes Macedon and has power over Greece 276 BC
Ptolemy dies 282 BC of
natural causes - dynasty
lasts until 30 BC
Post 276 BC; Attalids rise in late 3rd century in Asia Minor; King/city
relationships remain pivotal; kingdoms are international centres of
power - diverse and multicultural; major powers in Eastern Med
until the rise of Rome in the 2nd century