Was he or wasn't he, though? That's the most interesting thing to me. Sometimes I think of him rising out of the sea foam on a clam shell (Baz Luhrmann would have done that scene proud...amyntoros wrote:Wouldn't this mean, therefore, that Hephaistion's first appointment was most likely a command in the infantry - he wasn't a member of the Macedonian nobility after all?derek wrote:I know the arguments about Foot Companions and so on, but I think that was more of a battle honour than an indication of pedigree. And that's because I just don't see noblemen being willing to stand in ranks and march everywhere like common infantry. Philip and Alexander rode horses into battle and their entourage would have galloped along behind. The Companion cavalry; the name says it all.![]()
Best regards,

If Demetrios was his grandfather, we can only conjecture that his origins were not originally Macedonian (that and the non-Macedonian spelling of his father and possibly his briother). Possibly Hephaistion's family came up north or went west (from Samos or Magnesia or Samothrace, other places that venerated Hephaistos or where the name Hephaistion was not so darn unusual) during the reign of Archelaus.
Perhaps leaving Athens during the Thirty or the 400, or leaving Samos during the same time taking their money with them. Or they just wanted to move to a place of better opportunity, like many did around 400 B.C. Who knows what his family's station was in Macedon? Hephaistion's biographies are not among the survivors, and I am certain he had at least one.
Taphoi raises a good point, worth thinking about anyway, that when it was said at Guagamela that Hephaistion led the bodyguards, it was the somatophylaxes and not the Companions. I may have read it wrong, but my inpression was that Hephaistion was injured in the scuffle that ensued after the chase for Darius and the horsemen where returning to relieve Parmenion. Of course, I may have comepletely read that wrong.
Lysimachus was one of the somatophylaxes and he was from Thessaly. Was the "nobility" of the Macedonian region fluid and open to new blood? Certainly I think by Philip's time.
Karen, I agree. Philip would be rolling over in his grave. I've seen that quiz before, and the question that I missed was this one.