BEGINNING OF HIS REIGN.
B.C 336
Philip is reconciled to Olympias and
Alexander--Olympias and Alexander returned--The
great wedding--Preparations for the wedding--Costly
presents--Celebration of the wedding--Games
and spectacles--Statues of the gods--Military
procession--Appearance of Philip--The
scene changed--Assassination of Philip--Alexander
proclaimed king--Alexander’s speech--Demosthenes’
Philippics--The Greeks suspected of the
murder--The Persians also--Alexander’s
new position--His designs--Murderers
of Philip punished--Alexander’s first
acts--Parmenio--Cities of Southern
Greece--Map of Macedon and Greece--Athens
and Corinth--Thebes--Sparta--Conquests
of Philip--Alexander marches southward--Pass
of Thermopylae--The Amphictyonic Council--March
through Thessaly--Alexander’s traits
of character--The Thessalians join Alexander--He
sits in the Amphictyonic Council--Thermopylae--Leonidas
and his Spartans--Death of Leonidas--Spartan
valor--Alexander made commander-in-chief--He
returns to Macedon.
Alexander was suddenly called upon
to succeed his father on the Macedonian throne, in
the most unexpected manner, and in the midst of scenes
of the greatest excitement and agitation. The
circumstances were these:
Philip had felt very desirous, before
setting out upon his great expedition into Asia, to
become reconciled to Alexander and Olympias.
He wished for Alexander’s co-operation in his
plans; and then, besides, it would be dangerous to
go away from his own dominions with such a son left
behind, in a state of resentment and hostility.
So Philip sent kind and conciliatory
messages to Olympias and Alexander, who had gone,
it will be recollected, to Epirus, where her friends
resided. The brother of Olympias was King of Epirus.
He had been at first incensed at the indignity which
had been put upon his sister by Philip’s treatment
of her; but Philip now tried to appease his anger,
also, by friendly negotiations and messages. At
last he arranged a marriage between this King of Epirus
and one of his own daughters, and this completed the
reconciliation. Olympias and Alexander returned
to Macedon, and great preparations were made for a
very splendid wedding.
Philip wished to make this wedding
not merely the means of confirming his reconciliation
with his former wife and son, and establishing friendly
relations with the King of Epirus: he also prized
it as an occasion for paying marked and honorable
attention to the princes and great generals of the
other states of Greece. He consequently made his
preparations on a very extended and sumptuous scale,
and sent invitations to the influential and prominent
men far and near.
These great men, on the other hand,
and all the other public authorities in the various
Grecian states, sent compliments, congratulations,
and presents to Philip, each seeming ambitious to
contribute his share to the splendor of the celebration.
They were not wholly disinterested in this, it is
true. As Philip had been made commander-in-chief
of the Grecian armies which were about to undertake
the conquest of Asia, and as, of course, his influence
and power in all that related to that vast enterprise
would be paramount and supreme; and as all were ambitious
to have a large share in the glory of that expedition,
and to participate, as much as possible, in the power
and in the renown which seemed to be at Philip’s
disposal, all were, of course, very anxious to secure
his favor. A short time before, they were contending
against him; but now, since he had established his
ascendency, they all eagerly joined in the work of
magnifying it and making it illustrious.
Nor could Philip justly complain of
the hollowness and falseness of these professions
of friendship. The compliments and favors which
he offered to them were equally hollow and heartless.
He wished to secure their favor as a means
of aiding him up the steep path to fame and power
which he was attempting to climb. They wished
for his, in order that he might, as he ascended himself,
help them up with him. There was, however, the
greatest appearance of cordial and devoted friendship.
Some cities sent him presents of golden crowns, beautifully
wrought, and of high cost. Others dispatched embassies,
expressing their good wishes for him, and their confidence
in the success of his plans. Athens, the city
which was the great seat of literature and science
in Greece sent a poem, in which the history
of the expedition into Persia was given by anticipation.
In this poem Philip was, of course, triumphantly successful
in his enterprise. He conducted his armies in
safety through the most dangerous passes and defiles;
he fought glorious battles, gained magnificent victories,
and possessed himself of all the treasures of Asiatic
wealth and power. It ought to be stated, however,
in justice to the poet, that, in narrating these imaginary
exploits, he had sufficient delicacy to represent
Philip and the Persian monarch by fictitious names.
The wedding was at length celebrated,
in one of the cities of Macedon, with great pomp and
splendor. There were games, and shows, and military
and civic spectacles of all kinds to amuse the thousands
of spectators that assembled to witness them.
In one of these spectacles they had a procession of
statues of the gods. There were twelve of these
statues, sculptured with great art, and they were borne
along on elevated pedestals, with censers, and incense,
and various ceremonies of homage, while vast multitudes
of spectators lined the way. There was a thirteenth
statue, more magnificent than the other twelve, which
represented Philip himself in the character of a god.
This was not, however, so impious
as it would at first view seem, for the gods whom
the ancients worshiped were, in fact, only déifications
of old heroes and kings who had lived in early times,
and had acquired a reputation for supernatural powers
by the fame of their exploits, exaggerated in descending
by tradition in superstitious times. The ignorant
multitude accordingly, in those days, looked up to
a living king with almost the same reverence and homage
which they felt for their deified heroes; and these
deified heroes furnished them with all the ideas they
had of God. Making a monarch a god, therefore,
was no very extravagant flattery.
After the procession of the statues
passed along, there came bodies of troops, with trumpets
sounding and banners flying. The officers rode
on horses elegantly caparisoned, and prancing proudly.
These troops escorted princes, embassadors, generals,
and great officers of state, all gorgeously decked
in their robes, and wearing their badges and insignia.
At length King Philip himself appeared
in the procession. He had arranged to have a
large space left, in the middle of which he was to
walk. This was done in order to make his position
the more conspicuous, and to mark more strongly his
own high distinction above all the other potentates
present on the occasion. Guards preceded and
followed him, though at considerable distance, as has
been already said. He was himself clothed with
white robes, and his head was adorned with a splendid
crown.
The procession was moving toward a
great theater, where certain games and spectacles
were to be exhibited. The statues of the gods
were to be taken into the theater, and placed in conspicuous
positions there, in the view of the assembly, and
then the procession itself was to follow. All
the statues had entered except that of Philip, which
was just at the door, and Philip himself was advancing
in the midst of the space left for him, up the avenue
by which the theater was approached, when an occurrence
took place by which the whole character of the scene,
the destiny of Alexander, and the fate of fifty nations,
was suddenly and totally changed. It was this.
An officer of the guards, who had his position in
the procession near the king, was seen advancing impetuously
toward him, through the space which separated him
from the rest, and, before the spectators had time
even to wonder what he was going to do, he stabbed
him to the heart. Philip fell down in the street
and died.
A scene of indescribable tumult and
confusion ensued. The murderer was immediately
cut to pieces by the other guards. They found,
however, before he was dead, that it was Pausanias,
a man of high standing and influence, a general officer
of the guards. He had had horses provided, and
other assistance ready, to enable him to make his
escape, but he was cut down by the guards before he
could avail himself of them.
An officer of state immediately hastened
to Alexander, and announced to him his father’s
death and his own accession to the throne. An
assembly of the leading counselors and statesmen was
called, in a hasty and tumultuous manner, and Alexander
was proclaimed king with prolonged and general acclamations.
Alexander made a speech in reply. The great assembly
looked upon his youthful form and face as he arose,
and listened with intense interest to hear what he
had to say. He was between nineteen and twenty
years of age; but, though thus really a boy, he spoke
with all the decision and confidence of an energetic
man. He said that he should at once assume his
father’s position, and carry forward his plans.
He hoped to do this so efficiently that every thing
would go directly onward, just as if his father had
continued to live, and that the nation would find
that the only change which had taken place was in
the name of the king.
The motive which induced Pausanias
to murder Philip in this manner was never fully ascertained.
There were various opinions about it. One was,
that it was an act of private revenge, occasioned by
some neglect or injury which Pausanias had received
from Philip. Others thought that the murder was
instigated by a party in the states of Greece, who
were hostile to Philip, and unwilling that he should
command the allied armies that were about to penetrate
into Asia. Demosthenes, the celebrated orator,
was Philip’s great enemy among the Greeks.
Many of his most powerful orations were made for the
purpose of arousing his countrymen to resist his ambitious
plans and to curtail his power. These orations
were called his Philippics, and from this origin has
arisen the practice, which has prevailed ever since
that day, of applying the term philippics to denote,
in general, any strongly denunciatory harangues.
Now Demosthenes, it is said, who was
at this time in Athens, announced the death of Philip
in an Athenian assembly before it was possible that
the news could have been conveyed there. He accounted
for his early possession of the intelligence by saying
it was communicated to him by some of the gods.
Many persons have accordingly supposed that the plan
of assassinating Philip was devised in Greece; that
Demosthenes was a party to it; that Pausanias was the
agent for carrying it into execution; and that Demosthenes
was so confident of the success of the plot, and exulted
so much in this certainty, that he could not resist
the temptation of thus anticipating its announcement.
There were other persons who thought
that the Persians had plotted and accomplished
this murder, having induced Pausanias to execute the
deed by the promise of great rewards. As Pausanias
himself, however, had been instantly killed, there
was no opportunity of gaining any information from
him on the motives of his conduct, even if he would
have been disposed to impart any.
At all events, Alexander found himself
suddenly elevated to one of the most conspicuous positions
in the whole political world. It was not simply
that he succeeded to the throne of Macedon; even this
would have been a lofty position for so young a man;
but Macedon was a very small part of the realm over
which Philip had extended his power. The ascendency
which he had acquired over the whole Grecian empire,
and the vast arrangements he had made for an incursion
into Asia, made Alexander the object of universal
interest and attention. The question was, whether
Alexander should attempt to take his father’s
place in respect to all this general power, and undertake
to sustain and carry on his vast projects, or whether
he should content himself with ruling, in quiet, over
his native country of Macedon.
Most prudent persons would have advised
a young prince, under such circumstances, to have
decided upon the latter course. But Alexander
had no idea of bounding his ambition by any such limits.
He resolved to spring at once completely into his
father’s seat, and not only to possess himself
of the whole of the power which his father had acquired,
but to commence, immediately, the most energetic and
vigorous efforts for a great extension of it.
His first plan was to punish his father’s
murderers. He caused the circumstances of the
case to be investigated, and the persons suspected
of having been connected with Pausanias in the plot
to be tried. Although the designs and motives
of the murderers could never be fully ascertained,
still several persons were found guilty of participating
in it, and were condemned to death and publicly executed.
Alexander next decided not to make
any change in his father’s appointments to the
great offices of state, but to let all the departments
of public affairs go on in the same hands as before.
How sagacious a line of conduct was this! Most
ardent and enthusiastic young men, in the circumstances
in which he was placed, would have been elated and
vain at their elevation, and would have replaced the
old and well-tried servants of the father with personal
favorites of their own age, inexperienced and incompetent,
and as conceited as themselves. Alexander, however,
made no such changes. He continued the old officers
in command, endeavoring to have every thing go on just
as if his father had not died.
There were two officers in particular
who were the ministers on whom Philip had mainly relied.
Their names were Antipater and Parmenio. Antipater
had charge of the civil, and Parmenio of military affairs.
Parmenio was a very distinguished general. He
was at this time nearly sixty years of age. Alexander
had great confidence in his military powers, and felt
a strong personal attachment for him. Parmenio
entered into the young king’s service with great
readiness, and accompanied him through almost the
whole of his career. It seemed strange to see
men of such age, standing, and experience, obeying
the orders of such a boy; but there was something
in the genius, the power, and the enthusiasm of Alexander’s
character which inspired ardor in all around him,
and made every one eager to join his standard and
to aid in the execution of his plans.
Macedon, as will be seen on the following
map, was in the northern part of the country occupied
by the Greeks, and the most powerful states of the
confederacy and all the great and influential cities
were south of it. There was Athens, which was
magnificently built, its splendid citadel crowning
a rocky hill in the center of it. It was the
great seat of literature, philosophy, and the arts,
and was thus a center of attraction for all the civilized
world. There was Corinth, which was distinguished
for the gayety and pleasure which reigned there.
All possible means of luxury and amusement were concentrated
within its walls. The lovers of knowledge and
of art, from all parts of the earth, flocked to Athens,
while those in pursuit of pleasure, dissipation, and
indulgence chose Corinth for their home. Corinth
was beautifully situated on the isthmus, with prospects
of the sea on either hand. It had been a famous
city for a thousand years in Alexander’s day.
There was also Thebes. Thebes
was farther north than Athens and Corinth. It
was situated on an elevated plain, and had, like other
ancient cities, a strong citadel, where there was at
this time a Macedonian garrison, which Philip had
placed there. Thebes was very wealthy and powerful.
It had also been celebrated as the birth-place of
many poets and philosophers, and other eminent men.
Among these was Pindar, a very celebrated poet who
had flourished one or two centuries before the time
of Alexander. His descendants still lived in Thebes,
and Alexander, some time after this, had occasion to
confer upon them a very distinguished honor.
There was Sparta also, called sometimes
Lacedaemon. The inhabitants of this city were
famed for their courage, hardihood, and physical strength,
and for the energy with which they devoted themselves
to the work of war. They were nearly all soldiers,
and all the arrangements of the state and of society,
and all the plans of education, were designed to promote
military ambition and pride among the officers and
fierce and indomitable courage and endurance in the
men.
These cities and many others, with
the states which were attached to them, formed a large,
and flourishing, and very powerful community, extending
over all that part of Greece which lay south of Macedon.
Philip, as has been already said, had established his
own ascendency over all this region, though it had
cost him many perplexing negotiations and some hard-fought
battles to do it. Alexander considered it somewhat
uncertain whether the people of all these states and
cities would be disposed to transfer readily, to so
youthful a prince as he, the high commission which
his father, a very powerful monarch and soldier, had
extorted from them with so much difficulty. What
should he do in the case? Should he give up the
expectation of it? Should he send embassadors
to them, presenting his claims to occupy his father’s
place? Or should he not act at all, but wait
quietly at home in Macedon until they should decide
the question?
Instead of doing either of these things,
Alexander decided on the very bold step of setting
out himself, at the head of an army, to march into
southern Greece, for the purpose of presenting in person,
and, if necessary, of enforcing his claim to the same
post of honor and power which had been conferred upon
his father. Considering all the circumstances
of the case, this was perhaps one of the boldest and
most decided steps of Alexander’s whole career.
Many of his Macedonian advisers counseled him not
to make such an attempt; but Alexander would not listen
to any such cautions. He collected his forces,
and set forth at the head of them.
Between Macedon and the southern states
of Greece was a range of lofty and almost impassable
mountains. These mountains extended through the
whole interior of the country, and the main route leading
into southern Greece passed around to the eastward
of them, where they terminated in cliffs, leaving
a narrow passage between the cliffs and the sea.
This pass was called the Pass of Thermopylae, and it
was considered the key to Greece. There was a
town named Anthela near the pass, on the outward side.
There was in those days a sort of
general congress or assembly of the states of Greece,
which was held from time to time, to decide questions
and disputes in which the different states were continually
getting involved with each other. This assembly
was called the Amphictyonic Council, on account, as
is said, of its having been established by a certain
king named Amphictyon. A meeting of this council
was appointed to receive Alexander. It was to
be held at Thermopylae, or, rather, at Anthela, which
was just without the pass, and was the usual place
at which the council assembled. This was because
the pass was in an intermediate position between the
northern and southern portions of Greece, and thus
equally accessible from either.
In proceeding to the southward, Alexander
had first to pass through Thessaly, which was a very
powerful state immediately south of Macedon.
He met with some show of resistance at first, but not
much. The country was impressed with the boldness
and decision of character manifested in the taking
of such a course by so young a man. Then, too,
Alexander, so far as he became personally known, made
a very favorable impression upon every one. His
manly and athletic form, his frank and open manners,
his spirit, his generosity, and a certain air of confidence,
independence, and conscious superiority, which were
combined, as they always are in the case of true greatness,
with an unaffected and unassuming modesty these
and other traits, which were obvious to all who saw
him, in the person and character of Alexander, made
every one his friend. Common men take pleasure
in yielding to the influence and ascendency of one
whose spirit they see and feel stands on a higher
eminence and wields higher powers than their own.
They like a leader. It is true, they must feel
confident of his superiority; but when this superiority
stands out so clearly and distinctly marked, combined,
too, with all the graces and attractions of youth
and manly beauty, as it was in the case of Alexander,
the minds of men are brought very easily and rapidly
under its sway.
The Thessalians gave Alexander a very
favorable reception. They expressed a cordial
readiness to instate him in the position which his
father had occupied. They joined their forces
to his, and proceeded southward toward the Pass of
Thermopylae.
Here the great council was held.
Alexander took his place in it as a member. Of
course, he must have been an object of universal interest
and attention. The impression which he made here
seems to have been very favorable. After this
assembly separated, Alexander proceeded southward,
accompanied by his own forces, and tended by the various
princes and potentates of Greece, with their attendants
and followers. The feelings of exultation and
pleasure with which the young king defiled through
the Pass of Thermopylae, thus attended, must have
been exciting in the extreme.
The Pass of Thermopylae was a scene
strongly associated with ideas of military glory and
renown. It was here that, about a hundred and
fifty years before, Leonidas, a Spartan general, with
only three hundred soldiers, had attempted to withstand
the pressure of an immense Persian force which was
at that time invading Greece. He was one of the
kings of Sparta, and he had the command, not only of
his three hundred Spartans, but also of all the allied
forces of the Greeks that had been assembled to repel
the Persian invasion. With the help of these
allies he withstood the Persian forces for some time,
and as the pass was so narrow between the cliffs and
the sea, he was enabled to resist them successfully.
At length, however, a strong detachment from the immense
Persian army contrived to find their way over the
mountains and around the pass, so as to establish themselves
in a position from which they could come down upon
the small Greek army in their rear. Leonidas,
perceiving this, ordered all his allies from the other
states of Greece to withdraw, leaving himself and his
three hundred countrymen alone in the defile.
He did not expect to repel his enemies
or to defend the pass. He knew that he must die,
and all his brave followers with him, and that the
torrent of invaders would pour down through the pass
over their bodies. But he considered himself
stationed there to defend the passage, and he would
not desert his post. When the battle came on he
was the first to fall. The soldiers gathered around
him and defended his dead body as long as they could.
At length, overpowered by the immense numbers of their
foes, they were all killed but one man. He made
his escape and returned to Sparta. A monument
was erected on the spot with this inscription:
“Go, traveler, to Sparta, and say that we lie
here, on the spot at which we were stationed to defend
our country.”
Alexander passed through the defile.
He advanced to the great cities south of it to
Athens, to Thebes, and to Corinth. Another great
assembly of all the monarchs and potentates of Greece
was convened in Corinth; and here Alexander attained
the object of his ambition, in having the command
of the great expedition into Asia conferred upon him.
The impression which he made upon those with whom he
came into connection by his personal qualities must
have been favorable in the extreme. That such
a youthful prince should be selected by so powerful
a confederation of nations as their leader in such
an enterprise as they were about to engage in, indicates
a most extraordinary power on his part of acquiring
an ascendency over the minds of men, and of impressing
all with a sense of his commanding superiority.
Alexander returned to Macedon from his expedition
to the southward in triumph, and began at once to
arrange the affairs of his kingdom, so as to be ready
to enter, unembarrassed, upon the great career of conquest
which he imagined was before him.