1st Edition

Seleukos Nikator (Routledge Revivals) Constructing a Hellenistic Kingdom

By John D Grainger Copyright 1990
    276 Pages
    by Routledge

    276 Pages
    by Routledge

    Following the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC, one of his commanders, Seleukos Nikator, rose over a period of forty years from being a landless refugee to the most successful of the Successor kings. This biography, first published in 1990, makes use of both historical and archaeological sources to trace the stages of Seleukos’ life as he added province to province, kingdom to kingdom, gradually building an empire which stretched from India to Greece and founding a state which lasted for the next two centuries.

    This strangely neglected figure in ancient history emerges as a modestly proficient general, an excellent strategist, a consummate diplomat, and an inventive and constructive ruler, the diversity of his empire demanding intelligence of a high order to hold it together. Seleukos Nikator will be of interest to students of ancient history and the politics of the Hellenistic world.

    1. Child and Soldier 2. Commander and Betrayer 3. Satrap and Fugitive 4. Admiral and Satrap 5. General and Victor 6. Conqueror and King 7. Victor and Organiser 8. Diplomat and Ruler 9. Diplomacy and Defence 10. Victor and Victim 11. Reconqueror 12. Saviour; Appendix; Abbreviations; notes; Bibliography; Genealogies; Maps; Index

    Biography

    Grainger, John D