Search found 1129 matches

by Alexias
Sat Sep 25, 2010 9:00 pm
Forum: Book reviews
Topic: Rereading fire from heaven
Replies: 71
Views: 30485

Re: Rereading fire from heaven

why would Philip bother to try and assuage Pausanias' outrage unless Amyntas was already close to him, which seems not to be the case until his marriage to Kleopatra? Ellis favours this solution and puts the arguments more fully and eloquently than I can working from memory. Would you mind elaborat...
by Alexias
Wed Sep 22, 2010 11:50 pm
Forum: Alexander's contemporaries
Topic: Amyntas
Replies: 58
Views: 25337

Re: Amyntas

For what it's worth, a few thoughts: Alexander and Philip's relationship after Chaeronea appears to have taken a nose dive, and not just because of Philip's marriage to Attalus's neice and the Pixodorus affair. Alexander wasn't given any major command after Chaeronea despite his performance in the b...
by Alexias
Wed Sep 22, 2010 10:11 pm
Forum: Art and Culture
Topic: Images of Alexander
Replies: 18
Views: 8064

Re: Images of Alexander

And here's another one that has been touched up (not by me)!
Alexander2a.jpg
Alexander2a.jpg (159.29 KiB) Viewed 2162 times
by Alexias
Wed Sep 22, 2010 10:06 pm
Forum: Art and Culture
Topic: Images of Alexander
Replies: 18
Views: 8064

Re: Images of Alexander

It certainly has an air of Alexander! Books always seem to use the same images of Alexander, but here are a couple of less familiar ones (courtesy of posts on Yahoo's Alexander's Army) about upcoming exhibitions on Alexander in Amsterdam at the Hermitage Museum and the Allard Pierson Museum. I'm afr...
by Alexias
Sun Sep 19, 2010 8:04 pm
Forum: Book reviews
Topic: Rereading fire from heaven
Replies: 71
Views: 30485

Re: Rereading fire from heaven

How long should the 14-year old Royal Pages have lasted? Nevertheless, it is widely attested that they fought in the battles. The older Pages certainly went into battle, but do we actually have evidence that 14 year olds fought? Might not the first experience for young boys in warfare have been to ...
by Alexias
Sun Sep 19, 2010 3:40 pm
Forum: Book reviews
Topic: Rereading fire from heaven
Replies: 71
Views: 30485

Re: Rereading fire from heaven

But consider what would happen if Bagoas were present when the fleet ran into a fight. The trierarch led the ship in war, just as the pilot navigated it. It was a real role in that circumstance. Alexander could not afford to risk confusion over the command in a battle situation. I would not press t...
by Alexias
Sun Sep 19, 2010 10:59 am
Forum: Book reviews
Topic: Rereading fire from heaven
Replies: 71
Views: 30485

Re: Rereading fire from heaven

It feels a little strange to me to consider Bagoas as having such a high rank and then view him as having publicly danced for the army's entertainment. Can we reconcile this? Or does it mean we must doubt Plutarch's report? Best regards, Mary Renault I believe tries to reconcile these points by sug...
by Alexias
Tue Sep 14, 2010 8:22 pm
Forum: Book reviews
Topic: Rereading fire from heaven
Replies: 71
Views: 30485

Re: Rereading fire from heaven

marcus wrote: Go for it. This isn't a fan site, after all, and the whole point is to have rational discussions about Alexander and his times. True, you might get a lambasting from some, but that shouldn't stop you! :D

ATB
I'll give it some thought!
by Alexias
Mon Sep 13, 2010 10:49 pm
Forum: Book reviews
Topic: Rereading fire from heaven
Replies: 71
Views: 30485

Re: Rereading fire from heaven

Marcus wrote “I think I can honestly say, Dean, that all of Renault's other books are worth reading. The Last of the Wine (Peloponnesian War) is superb, but my personal favourites are The King Must Die and The Bull from the Sea (both about Theseus). I think The Mask of Apollo (in which Alexander fe...
by Alexias
Thu Sep 09, 2010 10:39 pm
Forum: Book reviews
Topic: Rereading fire from heaven
Replies: 71
Views: 30485

Re: Rereading fire from heaven

Oddly enough, I too have been rereading Fire From Heaven. She doesn't say so, but I think Mary Renault may be hinting that Alexander could have accompanied Philip when he presided at the Pythian Games at Delphi (although that might have been in September 346 when Alexander would have been 10). Perha...
by Alexias
Fri Aug 20, 2010 7:13 pm
Forum: Art and Culture
Topic: Images of Alexander
Replies: 18
Views: 8064

Re: Images of Alexander

That's an interesting one - in which gallery of the BM is it? The thing is, it clearly has the anastole in the hairstyle, which suggests that it's heavily influenced by Alexander sculptures, if not meant to be Alexander himself. The only thing is, that I'd be a bit surprised if the Etruscans were m...
by Alexias
Fri Aug 20, 2010 7:02 pm
Forum: Art and Culture
Topic: Images of Alexander
Replies: 18
Views: 8064

Re: Images of Alexander

I always thought this bust of Alcibiades, which is labeled as a Roman copy of a 4th century Greek sculpture, looked remarkably similar to Alexander and the classic 'Alexander pose'. Oh, yes, that certainly looks like Alexander! I don't think the tilt of the head and the parted lips are right for th...
by Alexias
Fri Aug 20, 2010 6:52 pm
Forum: Art and Culture
Topic: Images of Alexander
Replies: 18
Views: 8064

Re: Images of Alexander

the little fellow is wearing an elephant headress and he does look remarkably like Alexander to me. :) He does, doesn't he? Although I supose he could be a Selucid. This is another possible, although less likely, Alexander, also from the British Museum (in the King's Library if anyone wants to go a...
by Alexias
Thu Aug 19, 2010 10:37 pm
Forum: Art and Culture
Topic: Images of Alexander
Replies: 18
Views: 8064

Images of Alexander

Just thought I would share this image. It's an Etruscan terracotta head from the British Museum c300-250 BC. It is not labelled as Alexander, but it certainly looks like it has been influenced by his image, even if it isn't meant to be him. DSCI0997---Copy.jpg The quality of the photo isn't very goo...
by Alexias
Fri Aug 13, 2010 9:47 am
Forum: Book reviews
Topic: Good history book on Philip
Replies: 6
Views: 5798

Re: Good history book on Philip

Philip of Macedon by Nicholas Hammond. Although scholarly, I found it engaging and easy to read although I think a reader might need to know something about the background to start with, so if you are looking for an introduction it might not be the best book.