Haha...good one Amyntoros....for all of Henry's begatting and attempted begatting and the marital "issues"..and the break with Rome...the Virgin Queen remains the best of the lot..too bad Henry VII (not VIII) couldn't have produced a sensible heir. It's all the first Tudor dynast's fault!
to the_accursed:
Regarding producing an heir, its' been one of the basic duties of every king and queen in history. Why do you think Antipater and Parmenion suggested it? Dying before having produced an heir, at least before the "modern age", greatly increased the risk of turmoil and civil war.
I find your singular focus on Alexander's "failure" to be highly subjective. The history of the Argeads, at least that we know, was no sensible and orderly line of succession before Alexander. They were, like many before and after them (again see the War of the Roses) a bloody lot, how many died in bed in the years before Philip?. See Philip's own family squabbles, to put it lightly, speaking of turmoil and civil war. The Macedonians did not cease to be a people because they no longer had an Argead to lead them. To blame the history of the kingdom on Alexander is just silly. No one can say that if, if, Alexander had produced an heir that was acceptable to the Macedonians that that heir would have proved capable at all. Or that heir's children or their children. If Alexander had a responsibility to anyone, it would have been his dynasty to continue that dynasty (How many kings have decided that a new dynasty would be best for their country? Even if it would be? Though Attalus III of Pergamon did bequeath it to Rome to stop turmoil and civil war..so there is that)..not necessarily a good thing for Macedonia itself. That's why i asked why. Henry VIII was obsessed with the continuation of
his line, new as it was. Though his actions are a critical part of history, if taken in isolation, they were destructive and certainly led to much turmoil.
Antipater and Parmenion were old school Macedonians. Their focus, Antipater's anyway, was always Macedonia in a very parochial way. Of course his son did not see the Argeads as needed...seeing as he managed to kill off both of Alexander's sons...heirs, if you will. Though he did marry Alexander's sister and so brought the old line into his..but their sons were very naughty boys. One of them killing her, his own mother. Just as his own father (Cassander) had killed the mother of Alexander and the boy's own cousins, actual Argeads. Yikes! And of course, Antigonus the One-Eyed killed Cleopatra, Alexander's sister as well. and it was the Perdiccas camp that killed Alexander's sister, Cynane/Cynna.
forgot to add: Then there was Olympias herself who killed Arrhidaeus and Adea, both Argeads. Have I left anyone out?
Oh I did! Philip's last child, boy or girl, also killed, allegedly, by Olympias.
And you ignore the fact that has been pointed out to you several times here, that he did produce an heir. On the one hand, perhaps the Macedonians did not like his Asian mother (well, we know that Cassander didn't, I'm not sure about the rank and file Macedonians), but then on the other hand, Alexander was no longer king of just Macedonia..a place he never returned to. So, if Alexander had gotten an heir at such a young age as he was when he left, who is to say that that heir would have suited the needs of the Empire (which is obvious..the Diadochi had other ideas anyway.. and if the mother of this hypothetical heir had been from one of the adversaries' families and not the others...why do you think the other Diadochi would have just been good boys and not try to do exactly what they did do? Loyalty to the Argeads or being King of their own dynasties, Kings of their own little empires?
And again, this all presupposes that the hypothetical heir would have survived childhood. As Marcus pointed out, possibly at least one potential heir did not survive much beyond their birth.