Am sure Agesilaos will want to respond in his own thread, but I have some immediate thoughts.Taphoi wrote: If the scholiast on Pindar is correct, then the nearest New Moon to the Winter Solstice of ~26th December (Julian) in 357BC took place on about 19th December and the Full Moon of the Olympics was on 30th July 356BC (the date of a tabulated Lunar eclipse). Since Samuel also states "we are probably safe in accepting the evidence that the festival culminated with the full moon", Philip's horse may have won the race a week or two earlier (i.e. very close to Alexander's birth on 20th July). Philip probably got news of his Olympic victory by galley, but the news of Alexander's birth may have travelled more slowly overland. There is anyway a close correspondence in the dates and Plutarch's date for Alexander's birth is further vindicated. Furthermore Plutarch knew when the Olympic Games were held and would have been aware if his Olympic victory story was inconsistent with his date for Alexander's birth - obviously it was not, but it is highly inconsistent with Alexander's birthday having been in the Autumn. The fact that the story of the coincidence of the three pieces of news is in both Justin and Plutarch strongly suggests that it came from an early source (most likely Cleitarchus). It would have been difficult for a contemporaneous source to invent such a public event, because many people still living would have known it for a lie. The only misrepresentation in this matter is by Arrian, who even contradicts himself by making Alexander approximately twenty at his accession at the beginning of his work and exactly twenty at his accession in his final pages.
The Sacred Month of the Olympic Games was to allow the attendees to travel to Olympia in safety, and the actual games took place over a period of only five days. I've read that the first day was for opening ceremonies and the second for the boys' events, leaving the third for the beginning of adult competition. If the last day of these particular Olympics was the 30th of July, as you have stated, then the third day of the games would have been the 28th of July and the earliest date that Philip's horse could have won the race. That would mean, if Plutarch is correct, that it took at least eight more days for the news of Alexander's birth to reach Philip than the news of his victory at the Olympics.Taphoi wrote: Since Samuel also states "we are probably safe in accepting the evidence that the festival culminated with the full moon", Philip's horse may have won the race a week or two earlier (i.e. very close to Alexander's birth on 20th July). Philip probably got news of his Olympic victory by galley, but the news of Alexander's birth may have travelled more slowly overland.
If it was a lie, I'm really not sure that many people would have known so, or whether they would have even cared if Cleitarchus wrote a lie or accepted a legend as truth. The lunar calendar meant that the common Greek did not celebrate an annual birthday, despite what is said online to the contrary. That seems to be the privilege of gods whose "birthdays" were celebrated monthly. There is no source evidence that I know of, prior to Alexander, of the average Joe having a birthday party. So if the date of his own birth mattered not to the common man, why would he have cared whether Alexander's was correct or not? Would the same people who were willing to let Alexander "be a god" have been concerned if a little creativity was involved in his birth day?Taphoi wrote: The fact that the story of the coincidence of the three pieces of news is in both Justin and Plutarch strongly suggests that it came from an early source (most likely Cleitarchus). It would have been difficult for a contemporaneous source to invent such a public event, because many people still living would have known it for a lie.
As for "the story of the coincidence of the three pieces of news", I don't quite see how that qualifies as "such a public event". Anyone not in attendance on Philip when the supposed news came would not have been able to verify it as fact. And anyone in attendance, messengers included, are unknown and might not have been alive when Cleitarchus published. But let's suppose that they were, and they read Cleitarchus and said "that's not true". What could they have done about it, if they cared enough to do something? Books were arduously copied by hand and presumably this particular one travelled all over the empire. Cleitarchus could hardly issue a retraction - and that's if he even cared. It's not as if the story was detrimental to Alexander's image. Quite the opposite, in fact. All Cleitarchus needed to say to my mythical objectors is that "this is what I was told" and leave it at that.
Best regards,