Half Epirote is a very substantially different thing to half barbaroi. The Macedonians were quite prepared to acclaim Pyrrhus king. He, though, was not half Iranian.Nicator wrote: Alexander himself was a half-breed and the Macedonians seemed to accept him quite readily.
When an line of argument is difficult, ignore it. The point is - as I've said twice and you sidestep - there was no viable heir not the fact that he died. In contrast to his son, Philip seems to have sired a child every time he sealed a campaign - and he began quite early.Nicator wrote:Evidently, you are distressed over the word 'demean'? Nevertheless, I think it appropriate for your comments on Alexander's 'failure'. He died. It's not a failure. It's an early and untimely ending. Not Alexander's fault.
Persia had not been "in Macedon" since the 470's.Nicator wrote:Macedon was the causeway between Asia and Greece. Over and over throughout recorded history (recent to the time under consideration) we see Persia in Macedon on the way to Greece.
In "Philip's era" the Great King had far too many other matters to concern him than Macedon. The only recorded time that Philip's Macedon struck the King's radar was Philip's activities in the Propontis. Until then the Great King took a studied disinterest in Macedonian affairs preferring to see to his own, more important, backyard and Egypt.Nicator wrote: In Philip's era, Macedon was certainly on the list of things to be concerned over.
You may wish me to explain with substantiated arguments but, as I never posited an inert Persia after the Macedonian invasion, it is not relevant. In a soundbite: what it did; resist.Nicator wrote:I would have you explain just what Persia would have done with the war started on their soil already.
I don't believe I ever "contended" that.Nicator wrote:Is it your contention that if Philip completed the annexation of Asia Minor, Persia would NOT react?
I did not ever contend this and this habit of imputing statements to me that I have not made is rather disingenuousNicator wrote:So, it is your contention that Alexander should never have gone to war with Persia...?
I don't recall ever discussing whether or not Alexander 'had a choice here".Nicator wrote:I ask this because it seems ridiculous to claim that Alexander had some choice here.