What’s to argue with? I am no expert in what constitutes “grown-up” but, that phrase aside, the rest is surely beyond gainsaying.This behavior pattern had been visible even at the start of his kingship, in 336, when he had refused to marry and produce an heir in the two years before the start of the campaign. He was good at fighting, and clearly enjoyed it more than anything else, but he used it to evade responsibility. This was a failure to grow up. Antipater, coming fresh to him, might have been the man, if Alexander would listen. But neither got the chance.
The absence of an incontestable heir – as far as that term ever applied to the Macedonian monarchy – left a power vacuum that was not ever filled. In a situation where the nebulous (in terms of its real powers) assembly of the Macedones was now split amongst three courts – at Pella, Cyinda and Babylon – it was the spark that found the ethanol leak.
When Philip was murdered there was a such a candidate for Antipater to promote and Parmenio to come to terms with. Were there to be an eleven or twelve year old under Antipater’s care the machinations that began in Babylon will have been that much more difficult to mount.
The administrative problems of the empire were longstanding. Under the Acahemenids these satrapies were managed by relations to or “friends” of the Great King. Their power and position derived from the relationship they had with the King. Alexander sought to mollify Iranian unrest by retaining or promoting those who he imagined would return the trust. In some instances this worked well: these “grandees” sought to continue their positions under the new “King” and hence Babylon was surrendered and Susa for example. All this obscured the resentment of the former ruling class and the outstanding examples are well known to us. Alexander needed – whilst he was alive – more people like Antigonus who had done him such sterling service in greater Phrygia. Unfortunately, he murdered the other – Parmenio – and the others were required for further conquests of peoples far away who were yet to submit.
That he was about to set off for months on end – with the best forces at his disposal – to subdue the Arabs and others whilst Thrace, Armenia and Cappadocia were either in revolt or yet to be subjugated (not to mention a more that hesitant Antipater sitting pat in Pella) would indicate that his attitude had altered not one whit. A free people beckoned and the day to day cleaning up and running of empire would be left to the satraps. One could quite feasibly suggest that another round of satrapal insubordination was, on the whole, much more likely than not. Instead, he died leaving no direct heir and a cabal of ambitious and ruthless marshals, tired of world tours of duty and whose gaze settled fixedly on the empire already gained.
Combine all ingredients and bring to the boil.
The comparison is not that simple. Whilst the attitude may well betray the father’s genes, Philip spent (pardon the pun) a generation in reconstructing the Macedonian state. A part of that required what has come to be seen as the first professional army in Europe. Whilst I’d agree with Peter Green that both father and son demonstrated a “robber baron” attitude to financial matters, Philip’s programmes of war, diplomacy and bribery (the last two being rather inseparable) and the inordinate sums of coin it will have demanded were generally targeted to a strategic end.rocktupac wrote: The money problem: Philip was no more careful with his funds than Alexander. Did Philip never grow up either?
“Boring” has little meaning here I’d suggest. There is little point in conquering an empire to fritter it away or have it turmoil because one does not want to act “totally grown-up” or in any manner that might be “boring”. The empire, conquered in short time, presented administrative problems that, at the time of Alexander’s mooted departure to Arabia and points beyond, had yet to be settled. Alexander, before his death, spent about eighteen months in the old Persian centres of empire. This was largely spent dealing with his army problems, preparations for Arabia, the weddings, exercising his grief upon the Cossaeans and consuming serious quantities of alcohol. There is little evidence of any meaningful attempt to organise the affairs of empire before his departure unless one sees the marriages as such.Fiona wrote: It sounds as if Grainger is calling Alexander a failiure because of his failure to do things that he wasn't even trying to do, viz act in a totally grown-up and boring way, always do the sensible, cautious, rational thing...
You might as well call Mick Jagger a failure for never having had a 'steady job'.
Far from it appearing as Mick Jagger being “a failure for never having had a steady job”, it would rather be Mick Jagger recording all those years and never bothering with the copyright to his music or what was done with the money it earned.
A message for a wider distribution there.amyntoros wrote:This doesn't, of course, mean that the remainder of book isn't worth reading - or that there are not many further references to Alexander - and I will definitely tackle it at a later date, especially as I've been told by a fellow Pothosian that I need to expand my horizons somewhat!