Spitamenes,
spitamenes wrote:Without turning this into a JFK style mystery whodunit thriller, can someone please tell me who the "power~brokers" "behind the scenes" were? I'm not understanding if its supposed to be real people or if its the proverbial "them", .. like the c.i.a.
Hehehe...not thinking of a CIA type of organization here, but rather big money, behind the scenes, international types that had big financial interests perhaps in seeing the campaign through to some logical and realistic conclusion...i.e..the subjugation of the entire Persian empire. It wouldn't take a genius to figure out that merely annexing the realm of Asian Minor would be a fools errand and doomed to ultimate backfiring perhaps within 5 years of its completion. These 'types' are always present in every age and every region to pull the strings and make the moves. You seldom hear of them or know of their existence...but they're always there. Hence, the phrase, 'unknown and unrecorded power-brokers'. I suppose you or others will jump all over the idea of Philip financing his own campaigns and dynastic ambitions. This is apparently factual, but not in any way mutually exclusive. There were lots of investors with interests of their own. Freeing up the money of Asia was one way for everyone to become rich. It would open up the economies of the world like never before. This was the end result. Regardless of whether or not it actually happened that way.
Marcus,
Ha! You always seem intent on dragging me kicking and screaming into an argument.
marcus wrote:But there is no indication that Philip's physical capabilities were impaired by his wounds. After all, he won Chaeronea only two years before his death. And his leading general in Asia at the time of his death was a man who was almost certainly some good few years older than Philip. So if people accepted Parmenion as a general, why would they not accept Philip? I cannot see how anyone would have considered him unfit to command the invasion of Asia. And there is no indication that the invasion was going to be a long and protracted affair.
One cannot argue that Philip was as 'up to the task' physically as his electrifying son. One eyed and hobbled...this was a recipe for disaster in a tight pinch. Repeatedly we hear of Alexander getting off horse and attacking on foot. In this type of warfare, the warlord's physique was paramount to success in close combat. Especially repeatedly where, in many situations, Alexander was immersed in the thick of things and would need to have 'both eyes' for total awareness. And was it Philip that won Chaeronea or was it Alexander's dazzling raid on the Sacred Band? Maybe a little bit of both? And it wouldn't take a genius to comprehend that the invasion of Asia on the scale that was likely being contemplated by this clique of power-brokers could and more than likely 'would' take years to complete. Even with the most agile and gifted of commanders, which Alexander certainly was.
marcus wrote:But my contention is that Philip was not muddying the succession line. Even if Cleopatra's child was a boy (and as Justin is the only source who says that it was, it is highly dubious - and I assume you will now say something about the source material, but the fact is that, had it been a boy, the sources would have said something, more unanimously, and the other sources all say it was a girl), how does that muddy the succession?
It's an unknowable thing as to whether he'd muddied it up. Alexander was likely being pushed to move over along with Olympias. This tension was real and without reservation or doubt. As witnessed by the incident between Attalus and Alexander in the banquet hall and the comments aimed at both Olympias and Alexander in reference to him being dubbed a 'bastard'. If this accusation caught on and Olympias position as a 'former' wife became sacrosanct, then Alexander would certainly have serious trouble trying to legitimately claim the throne down the road. Philip had to go. So, that child, boy or girl, was largely irrelevant by the time Philip got the dagger. If that child was indeed a boy, then the seriousness of the situation would have been all the more imperative to remove Philip AND his child immediately.
marcus wrote:Nicator wrote:
Not sure why you would say my analysis doesn't hold true. What analysis?
Well, I suppose you've just answered that one ...
(Sorry, that was a bit cheap.)
...er, yeah, cheap would be an understatement. But my point was that I wasn't making any analysis...just provoking thought on Philip's removal. But your analysis...hhmmm??
marcus wrote:Nicator wrote:
The perspective I'm angling at here is that since Philip was knocked off, it was a failure. His actions may have put him on the wrong side of the power-brokers behind the scenes. And that may have been his downfall.
There is no way that anyone can conclude that Philip's marriage to Cleopatra was a failure. Cleopatra gave him a useful ally in Attalus, and she gave him a child. That's a success. You cannot call it a failure if, according to your interpretation, someone else didn't like it.
Anyway, who were these power-brokers who were so dissatisfied with Philip's marriage to Cleopatra? Parmenion, who was happy for Attalus to marry his daughter, thus allying himself to Philip's new father-in-law? Hmm, can't be him, then. Maybe Antipater, I suppose, but you'll need to explain why he would have been disgruntled, because it isn't enough to say that he might have been without explaining why. Who else is in the frame?
Philip was left on the ground...dead. What more can I say about whether or not his 'marriage' was a success? It likely sealed his fate. Although, in the interim period between his marriage and his demise, your point is valid and underwhelming. As for the rest of this concerning who these power-brokers were...see above.
marcus wrote:I do indeed use the word "assassinated", but I will happily say "murdered" instead if it makes you feel better. But again you appear to contradict yourself. It can't be "just a murder by a jealous lover", and at the same time be an orchestrated removal of Philip by these "unknown power-brokers", hence an "assassination". It has to be one or the other.
It doesn't make me happy or sad whether you call it murder or assassination. All we can know is that he ended up dead. I haven't contradicted anything. My original contention was that Philip was allowed to be removed. It's another theory extrapolated from the evidence. Whether the Pausanias acted alone with jealous motivation only or had help in contriving the whole carefully orchestrated plot from the setup to the escape horses is impossible to know.