~History~
Philip
II ~ King of Macedonia
359-336 B.C.
Ancient Macedonia
prospered on the fringe of classical civilization epitomized by
the Greek city-states. The Greek king of Macedon, Philip II, was
determined to bring his kingdom into the mainstream of a unified
Hellenistic civilization. He employed great thinkers at his court,
such as Aristotle, to tutor his young son, Alexander (later known
as "the Great") and Ptolemy I, king of Egypt. Alexander,
especially, would later go on to conquer and, in many ways, establish
the Western World. Philip always led his own troops into battle
(unusual for the time), and while conquering Thrace for its enormous
gold mines, lost an eye to an arrow during a battle.
The Macedonian
phalanx, Philip's "secret weapon" consisted of a 16
man by 16 man square of armored foot soldiers who brandished 14-foot-long
spears. The first 5 ranks leveled their spears to attack the front,
while the next rank would rest their spears skyward on the shoulders
of their comrades. This formation was deployed with infinite variety
depending on terrain and opposing forces.
Philip's loss
of an eye, according to Plutarch, a famous historian, was foretold
by the oracle of Apollo at Delphi. Philip used a peephole to spy
on his wife Olympias who was carousing with the god Arnmon. The
oracle warned that Philip's eye which viewed this visitation would
be lost to him. After this event, Philip turned to other wives
(6 in all) chiefly for political alliance to pave the way for
his son, Alexander, to conquer Europe, Asia and Northern Africa.
Philip was
a fierce competitor and presided over the Olympic Games in 346
B.C. at Delphi, sacred place of Apollo. Philip himself was victorious
in the chariot race at these games and the event is commemorated
in his gold coinage, featuring Apollo (obv.) and a charioteer
(rev.). Philip's bronze coinage depicts Apollo (obv.) and a nude
boy on a galloping horse (rev.), testifying to the power these
images held for him.
Philip's life
of conquest was cut short by an assassin's blade, when he was
murdered in 336 B.C. at a wedding feast. He had been planning
on a Persian invasion and this culture is generally believed responsible
for his death. Other versions blame Olympias and friends of Alexander's,
who wanted Philip out of the way for Alexander's benefit. Still
another story has Philip and Alexander involved in a bitter argument
during a drunken feast, where Philip came close to attacking his
son. Whoever the instigator(s), Alexander was the beneficiary,
and, at the age of 20, he ascended to the Macedonian throne and
began his lifelong conquest of the known world.
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