I saw this on rogueclassicism. Hegmataneh is Ecbatana.
Alexander at Hegmataneh
I don't know what to make of this but I thought it interesting enough to post. But besides not being mentioned in any sources, which of course doesn't necessarily mean anything, a problem I see with this story is that I don't recall that it took a year to capture Ecbatana. But I would have to check on that.
Edit:
Here's the original link:
Excavations prove Iran's Hegmataneh legend
Alexander floods Ecbatana?
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- marcus
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Haha!
Aha - you put it as "floods", I put it as "besieged", but we both saw the same article!
But I'm glad I'm not the only one who doesn't remember Alexander taking a year to take Ecbatana!
ATB

But I'm glad I'm not the only one who doesn't remember Alexander taking a year to take Ecbatana!
ATB
Sorry Marcus, in my haste I did not see that you had already posted this. 
Yes, I thought the taking of Ecbatana was rather quick. But I will have to check.
But I would like to read these accounts that were mentioned:
"...it is also backed up by accounts attributed to an Assyrian king"
But I wouldn't know where to look for them, or if they're even in English.

Yes, I thought the taking of Ecbatana was rather quick. But I will have to check.
But I would like to read these accounts that were mentioned:
"...it is also backed up by accounts attributed to an Assyrian king"
But I wouldn't know where to look for them, or if they're even in English.
I think this is a confusion of Alexander's entry into Cyropolis, I think, via a dry water course and an earlier Assyrian ruse whereby the river was dammed as it exited the city causing it to flood and undermine the walls, cut to atrocity - cant recall the town will have to look it up but don't think it was Ecbatana.
agesilaos wrote:I think this is a confusion of Alexander's entry into Cyropolis, I think, via a dry water course and an earlier Assyrian ruse whereby the river was dammed as it exited the city causing it to flood and undermine the walls, cut to atrocity...
I would suspect you guys are right, that some story has become confused with another over time.derek wrote:Maybe an Assyrian king besieged Ecbatana in a previous century, and that's why the story's become confused and attributed to Alexander.
Intially I was somewhat excited about this. I was hoping that some new information about Alexander had come to light.