AE80: Alexander the Great and the Alexander Tradition
November 1, 2006
PART VII: The Developmentof the Legendary Alexander
The so-called “divinity” of Alexander
Did Alexander consider he was a god? [A new one, or one in which the Greeks believed?]
If Alexander did think he was a god, did he want others to believe so too?Why? Did he take steps to promote such a belief?
If he didn’t think he was divine, did others? Who? Why?
What would be the effect of some notion of a divine Alexander on hisFriends and contemporaries?
What light does this throw on our view of Alexander as a person?
— Deified Roman emperors [“divus Augustus”, etc.]— The “divine right of kings” in medieval and later Europe— The supernatural abilities of the legendary Alexander in, e.g., The Alexander Romance
• Why does it matter, anyway?
In bed wook dame Olympyas
And aspyed on vche manner
Gif she might ought yhere
Hou Amon the god shulde come.
Neptenabus his charme hath nome,
And taketh hym hames of dragoun,
From his shuldre to hele adoun;
His heued and his shuldres fram
He digtteth in fourme of a ram.
Ouere hire bed twyes he lepeth,
The thrid tyme and jn he crepeth.
Offe he cast his dragons hame
And with the lefdy playeth his game.
She was tholemood and lay stille;
The fals god dude al his wille.
Also oft so he wolde,
that game she refuse nolde
From the Middle EnglishKyng Alisaunder, 380-96
Alexander is conceivedfrom a ruse played bythe trickster-magicianNeptenabus, adopting the form of a dragonand of Amon
Achilles
Herakles
DionysosZeus Ammon
J.H. Schönfeld (ca. 1630), Alexander Visits the Tomb of Achilles [at Troy]
Achilles
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Alexander depositing his copy of Homer’sIliad in a box taken from the Persian spoils
Quintus Curtius IV.6Alexander drags Betis at Gaza,as Achilles dragged Hector at Troy
Herakles
Herakles fights theNemean lion
Alexander depicted on hiscoinage wearing a lion-skinhead-dress
Tyre
Argead dynasty
Melqart (Arrian II.18)
Dionysos
God of:wine, ectasy, vegetation, virility, theater
(Not a Greek god in origin)
Accompanied by:maenads/bacchantssatyrs
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Dionysos’s wild orgiastic return from India was a stock theme in ancient art
• Especially popular on Roman-era sarcophagi… • … such as this one at the Kelsey Museum, University of Michigan
Note: Maenads Panther Snakes Music Orgiastic dancing Dionysus in a chariot drawn by a centaur
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A seeming progression: from the Greekest of Greek heroes (Achilles) to one of the most non-Greek gods
Associating with an existing god (“Alexander is a new Herakles”) is not the same thing as formal recognition and worship as a god during his lifetime
The distinction between mortals and immortals was perhaps a little fuzzy for the Greeks
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Theater at Aigai, Macedonia
The Philippeion atOlympia
Three key episodes in Alexander’s life:
— Visit to oracle-shrine of Zeus-Ammon at the Siwah oasis
— Attempt to introduce proskynesis at Bactra, 327 BC
— Events of 324/3 BC, the last year of Alexander’s life
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Cartouche showingAlexander’s Pharaonic nameMery-amun[“beloved of Amun”]
Alexander the Great as Pharaoh of Egypt before the god Amun in the Temple of Amun at Luxor
Siwah Oasis (western Egypt)
Coin of Ptolemy I,showing Alexander wearingelephant-scalp headdressand the ram’s horns of Zeus-Ammon
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Proskynesis
[Greek name for the ritualgreeting in Oriental courts]
Events of 324/3 BC
— Alexander sent a decree from Susa to the Greek cities, demanding that they receive back their political exiles
—Cities send envoys to Alexander, acceding to his request and granting him divine honors. [Arrian VII.23] “…the envoys came like theoroi (sacred envoys) to honor a god… and yet Alexander’s end was near” (i.e., he was not immortal)
— “Since Alexander wants to be a god, let him be a god” (epigram by Damis of Sparta)
(Tentative) Conclusion
— Not clear whether Alexander was ever acknowledged as divine during his lifetime
— If he was, and if we believe Arrian, it happened only in the last year of his life
— From this point on, however, the deification of rulers becomes increasingly common. Alexander stands at the head of this tradition.
— An Alexander with powers beyond those of a mere mortal is an integral aspect of the medieval traditions of the Alexander Romance