Alexander the Great, one of the
most famous generals in world history, the King of Macedonia, succeeded in
pushing the boundaries of his Kingdom, beginning in Greece and ending up in
India. Along the way as he conquered region after region, people after people,
he founded a series of cities which he named after himself. These cities would generally serve as places
to settle the many thousands of veteran soldiers that had followed him. Many of these Alexandrias persist today: some
with different names; some retaining versions of their original name. Other Alexandrias are long since passed, and
still others have been lost to history.
According to the great biographer/philosopher Plutarch, Alexander
founded at least 70 cities, although this number probably include pre-existing
settlements renamed and/or repopulated by Alexander. The actual number of cities directly founded
by Alexander regardless is known to be at least twenty, and most of those took
his name. Some of these are:
Alexandroupolis: Founded in 340
BC while Alexander was still a crown prince under his father Philip II, little
else is known about this presumably short-lived settlement other than its
location was likely near the modern Bulgarian city of Sandanski in the extreme
southwest of the country.
Alexandria Troas: Originally
founded in 334 BC, this city on the east Aegean coast did not receive the
Alexandria name until 301 BC after being renamed by Alexander’s successor in
the region, Lysimachus. The suffix
‘Troas’ refers to the Troad, the historical name of the Biga Peninsula in
Turkey at the southwest end of the Sea of Marmara not far from Troy. A
prominent city in its time perhaps as large as 100 000 residents, Alexandria
Troas was re-founded as a major Roman administration centre in 12 BC. Much of
the city’s ruins were plundered for building material. Among the ruins still visible there today are
an old bath/gymnasium complex and an ancient stadium discovered in the 1970s
but not unearthed until 2009.
Alexandria by the Latmus: This is
likely the ancient fortress city of Alinda in the modern-day Aydın Province of
Turkey which dated back many hundreds of years before Alexander. Apparently re-founded as a military settlement
in 333 BC, the city was returned to its previous name sometime before 81
BC. Coins were still being minted here
into the 3rd century AD.
Alexandria ad Issum/Alexandretta:
Now known by its Turkish name, İskenderun (although the modern city may just
preserve the name of the ancient city rather than being a direct continuation),
the city was founded on the Mediterranean coast in 333 BC at the north entrance
to Syria. Alexandretta prospered until
the 3rd century AD, when it was surpassed by neighbouring Antioch.
Alexandria, Egypt: Easily the
most famous of all Alexandrias and one that remains a major metropolis today of
well over 4 million people, Alexandria, Egypt was founded in 331 BC by
Alexander to be the new centre of Hellenism in Egypt. The new city was built on the site of the
pre-existing city of Rhacotis; within a century, it was the largest city in the
world. Despite the various rulers that
have come and gone in the ensuring millennia (the Ptolemies, the Romans, the
Sassanids, the Ottomans, the British, and the current republic of Egypt),
Alexandria has maintained its prominence as the second city of Egypt behind
Cairo.
Alexandria Ariana: The first of
many Alexandrias in the far east of the Macedonian Empire, this Alexandria is
better known today as Herat, the main city of western Afghanistan. Prior to
Alexander’s conquering of the region in 330 BC, this city was very likely
Artacoana, the capital of Aria. Conquered
by the Parthians in 167 AD, the name Heratwas derived over time from Aria.
Alexandria Prophthasia:
Modern-day Farah, Afghanistan.
Prophthasia was the capital of the Drangiana satrap of the Achaemenid
Empire. The ‘Alexandria’ prefix was
added to the city’s name when Alexander came through in October of 330 BC. The name Phra for the city was first recorded
in the 1st century AD.
Alexandria Arachosia: This is
Kandahar, the second-largest city in Afghanistan. Prior to Alexander’s arrival at the end of
330BC, this was likely the Achaemenid city of Kapisakaniš. Arachosiawas another
satrap roughly equivalent to today’s Kandahar and Helmand provinces. The name ‘Kandahar’ itself derives from
‘Alexandria’ (Iskandariya). Despite its
location near the edge of the empire, the city remained culturally Greek for
some time after Alexander’s death.
Today, Kandahar is known primarily as one of the major battlegrounds of
the War in Afghanistan.
Alexandria Caucasiana: Not to be
confused with the Caucasus region on the Europe/Asia border, Caucasus Indicus
was an ancient exonym for the Hindu Kush.
This Alexandria was a 329 BC re-founding of the Achaemenid city of
Kapisa to serve as Alexander’s base in the Hindu Kush (the location is 40 miles
north of modern Kabul). The city would
eventually be traded to the Indian king Chandragupta Maurya in 303 BC by
Alexander’s successors in exchange for 500 elephants.
Alexandria Eschate: ‘Eschate’
translates to ‘farthest’, signifying this city’s position on the Jaxartes (Syr
Darya) river that marked the northern edge of Alexander’s empire (reached in
329 BC) where his troops would do battle against the Scythian tribes to the
north and the Sogdian peoples that surrounded them. Formerly the site of Cyropolis, the
northeasternmost city of the Persian Empire of Cyrus the Great, Alexandria
Eschate lay at the western end of the Fergana Valley, making it a major
location on the Silk Road trading route connecting Europe and Asia. Today, the city is called Khujand, the
second-largest city and northernmost major city of Tajikistan.
Alexandria Oxiana: Moving to the
south across the region of Sogdiana, Alexander re-founded a Persian city on the
Oxus (Amu Darya) river in 329 BC. For
two centuries the city served as an outpost of Greek culture until its sacking
by nomadic tribes in 145 BC lead to its abandonment. Today, it is known under the Uzbek name
Ai-Khanoum (‘lady moon’ or ‘face in the moon’) on the Afghan side of the Oxus
across from Tajikistan. Between 1964 and
1978, Ai-Khanoum was excavated by French archaeologists, uncovering large
amounts of Greek and Indian artefacts, as well as the ruins of a 5.000-seat
theatre, numerous temples, and colonnaded courts. Sadly, decades of warfare have devastated the
archaeological site, and much of the site had been either looted or destroyed.
Alexandria Margiana: This city on
the Murghab River in the middle of the Karakum Desert is most famous as the
major Silk Road port of Merv/Marv and is the site of where the current city of
Mary was developed in 1884 as a Russian military post after Russia’s conquering
of the Emirate of Bukhara. Later it
would become a major centre of Turkmenistan’s cotton and natural gas
industries. Human settlement on this
site dates back to prehistoric times and is mentioned in ancient Persian texts
as Mouru and Margu. Whether or not it
was Alexander himself who re-founded the city in 328/327 BC or his general
Craterus, the city was temporarily renamed for him regardless. A major cultural and religious crossroads,
Merv is reputed to have been the largest city in the world in the mid-12th
century with a population of 200 000, about twice that of modern-day Marv
Alexandria Bucephalus: Founded in
326 BC on the Hydaspes (Jhelum River) and named for Alexander’s beloved horse
Bucephalus. This site was located somewhere
in the Punjab, perhaps near the modern Pakistani city of Jhelum. The large dockyards described indicate that
it was intended as a centre of commerce.
The city was renowned enough to appear eight centuries later as one of
the easternmost places listed on the Tabula Peutingeriana.
Alexandria Nicaea: Located across
the river from Alexandria Bucephalus and founded at the same time, evidently
serving the same function (this is believed to be the modern town of Mong,
which would place the city 21 miles downstream from Jhelum). Nicaea translates to ‘victory’, as the
Hydaspes River was the scene of Alexander’s last great victory in India over
the king of Paurava, Purushottama (Porus), in May 326 BC. Alexander was impressed enough by Porus’
skill and bravery to let Porus rule in his name upon his departure. This was also the battle where Alexander
learned to employ elephants in his army after seeing Porus do so.
Alexandria on the Hyphasis: The
furthest eastern outpost of the Macedonian Empire, this is ultimately where
Alexander would begin his long turn back west after his troops mutinied upon
his attempt to invade the kingdom of Magadha, having been pushed too far from
home for too long to tolerate any further.
The Hyphasis is today’s Beas River in India’s Punjab state.
Alexandria en Indo Potamo
(Alexandria on the Indus): Now heading south along the Indus River, Alexander
founded this settlement in 325 BC at the confluence of the Indus and Chenab
River with 10.000 veterans and natives.
Under its modern name of Uch Sharif, it would become a major centre of
Islamic study and architecture. The
ruins of Alexander’s city are believed to lie underneath Uch’s citadel, much of
which was washed away by a change in the course of the Chenab.
Alexandria Rhambacia: Modern-day
Bela, Pakistan near the mouth of the Indus, founded in the autumn of 325 BC.
Alexandria Carmania: Assuming
this was founded by Alexander and not by the later Seleucids, it would have to
have been founded at the beginning of 324 BC in Carmania (analogous to Iran’s
Kerman Province). Equated possibly with
the modern locale of Golashkerd near the border with Kerman in Hormozgān.
Alexandria Susiana: One of the
last cities founded before Alexander’s 323 BC death upstream in Babylon,
Alexander founded this city on an artificial hill above the Tigris River
estuary in the spring of 324 BC atop the older Persian settlement of
Durine. This city would go on to be
better known under the name Charax Spasinu or simply Charax, an Ancient Greek
reference to its palisaded fort.
Originally a bustling port with its centre located less than 2 km from
the mouth of the river, the location is now 93 miles from the Persian Gulf
thank to the continual deposition of material in the Tigris-Eurphates delta,
not far from modern Basra, Iraq. The
site of the old city has been identified but no excavations have taken place.
Modern Day Alexandropulis:
Alexandroupolis, in Northeastern Greece is right on the crossroads, uniting
Europe and Asia. Being a fisher’s village for centuries, it was liberated from
the Bulgarians on 14th May 1920. After this historic event, it was
renamed Alexnadroupolis, in honour of Alexander the Great, who once had crossed
the city while leading Greek troops to Andrianoupolis.
The Ancient cities of Alexandrias are sourced from:
http://basementgeographer.com/the-many-alexandrias-of-alexander-the-great/
The Ancient cities of Alexandrias are sourced from:
http://basementgeographer.com/the-many-alexandrias-of-alexander-the-great/
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