Tomb discovery captivates Greece

iol scitehc nov 27 Katerina Peristeri2
EPA A view of the ionic capital covered by a fresco, found under an apse at the Kasta Tumulus, near ancient Amphipolis in Macedonia, Greece.

 

Athens – Greek archaeologist Katerina Peristeri dug in obscurity for years before unearthing a marble tomb from the time of Alexander the Great – a find that has brought her instant fame.

In a land with one of the worlds richest cultural heritages, archaeologists rarely receive much public notice. Yet Peristeri has become the face of the Amphipolis crypt, a 2 300-year-old sepulchre beneath the sandy hills of northern Greece. She has received three Greek awards in the past month alone.

"I'm just a simple archaeologist, doing my duty,"she beamed at one prize ceremony. At another, she joined a choir in a rousing ode to Alexander's homeland.

The tomb may be the last resting place of Alexander's wife Roxanne, his mother Olympias, or one of his generals, according to competing theories. But the speculation is not the only thing fueling Peristeri's popularity.

After six years of economic crisis, political tumult and a humiliating international bailout, Greeks are desperate for heroes and Prime Minister Antonis Samaras's government is eager for some good news.

"It revives Greeks’ hopes that despite their big struggle to survive there is a ' holy grail’ that will reconnect them to a period of glory and power,"said Christos Kechagias, a sociologist who teaches at the University of Athens. "In times of crisis, people have the chance to redefine their identity. "

The popular television programme "Anatropi", normally a political talk-show, has twice devoted its entire two-hour segment to the excavation. In a front-page spread, the Espresso tabloid suggested the identity of the tomb's mysterious resident could be divined with methods taken from the novels of Dan Brown. The answer, it said, lay in a painting by Renaissance master Giovanni Antonio Bazzi depicting Alexander's wedding.

Greek broadcasters have been transfixed by discoveries from the tomb – a pebble mosaic showing the abduction of Persephone; two sculpted "Caryatid" figures; skeletal remains in a limestone grave that are now being analysed for identification.

"It's very unusual to have play-by-play coverage of archaeological work,"said David Rupp, a classical archaeologist and director of the Canadian Institute in Greece. "It's almost become like a reality TV programme."

Samaras has frequently highlighted the tomb in his speeches. With his wife Georgia, he toured the site in August, walking along the marble wall that rings the tomb. He then stood before the tomb's entrance guarded by headless sphinxes to announce a "significant discovery" that makes "all Greeks proud".

HOT PRETZELS

Stories on the Amphipolis tomb sell like hot "koulouri" or pretzels, the Kathimerini newspaper said. "It has unfolded in a thrilling way, never before has an archaeological excavation been unveiled this way,"Culture Minister Constantinos Tassoulas told Greek television.

Not everyone is happy. The opposition has criticised Samaras – whose government handles all announcements related to the tomb – for trying to make political capital from the discovery.

"Amphipolis is not the place for political games,"said Panos Skourletis, spokesman for the opposition Syriza party.

Despina Koutsoumba, an archaeologist who belongs to the small, anti-capitalist Antarsya party, says Samaras is using Amphipolis to hide cutbacks at archaeological and other sites: "They highlight Amphipolis to cover up the national bankruptcy."

A legion of tomb-related cartoons have emerged: one shows Samaras urging archaeologists to identify the deceased in order to make him pay a new property tax; another shows economists digging at Amphipolis in an effort to find elusive growth.

And some say that an excavation is not going to lift the fortunes of a country where over one in four is unemployed and household income has fallen by a third since the crisis began.

"The truth is we would all like this to be something big,"said Garifallia Dedes, 40, a psychologist. "But ultimately it's nothing more than an important discovery that brightens our grey days."

At Amphipolis, there are hopes the discovery will help the region prosper. The museum that attracted about five visitors each weekend now gets up to 2 000, says Anna Panagiotarea, spokeswoman for the excavations. Buses packed with tourists and school groups arrive at the site even though it is not open to visitors.

Thessaloniki channel TV 100 's audience jumps from 3 percent to about 24 percent of viewers when a regular half-hour bulletin on Amphipolis is broadcast, she adds.

"Readers feel uplifted as a nation – this news boosts their confidence,"said Michalis Alexandridis, director of popular northern papers Makedonia and Thessaloniki.

Peristeri, the archaeologist, is glad the tomb "reminds the world of Greece cultural contribution", But she plays down the fuss. "The excavation has not changed my life,"she said through a spokeswoman, declining to be interviewed ahead of a news conference this week.

"This is scientific work I've been doing for 35 years." – Reuters

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Amphipolis was plundered, says excavation leader

The archaeologist leading the dig at the ancient tomb in Amphipolis, northern Greece, said on Saturday that the site had once been open to the public but was later sealed, although this did not protect it from raiders who stole many items.

"It is certain there was damage and plundering in ancient times as it was a large monument that people could visit,"said Katerina Peristeri (photo) at a news conference.

Peristeri refused to be drawn on the possible identity of the skeleton found inside the tomb, which dates to the era of Alexander the Great, despite earlier comments that a top Macedonian general was the most likely occupant.

"I had said some time ago that with a lion on top of such a massive monument, it could be the tomb of a general,"said Peristeri. "When the skeleton was found, an archaeologist could never say if it is a man or a woman. "

The results of tests on the remains are expected in several months. Peristeri said that the skeleton was in "poor condition." She dismissed rumors that Amphipolis could have been the burial place of Alexander the Great.

"I do not respond to conspiracy theories about Alexander the Great being buried there,"she said.

ekathimerini.com

“Wir wissen nicht, wer die Toten”

. The scientific presentation of the research in Tomb began caste of Amphipolis with historical and technical reports, who performed in the Auditorium of the Ministry of culture In the Auditorium of the Ministry of culture, the scientific work of research on the Hill were castesFour months from the beginning of the last period of excavation and a few weeks after the discovery of the dead skeleton, the Ministry of culture organizes the presentation, While the General Secretary of culture Lina Mendoni invited, Athens during the excavation team, Workers and conservators . This is an important debate, as scientists acting together on many issues, primary and secondary their views. Of great interest are estimates of the Director of the excavations of Katerina pigeons, the grave until the last quarter of the 4. p dated. Ch. Century and referred to the face of a Caryatid found damaged, revealed, that this “due to spar autumn.” reserve the right, However, no assessment of the identity of the skeleton, She's kept going in the Museum of Amphipolis, say, that “the anthropological data will show us. “
By the way, the architect of Michael Lefantzis revealed, that Tectonically found the tomb of the box engraved letters on the grounds, While the engineer of Dimitris Englishman described the mechanical follow-up of excavations . (Photos by tectonic patterns) Speech Peristeri At the beginning of the speech of the head of the excavation team Katerina said Peristeri, on the progress of the investigations “, how she started in the year 2012 and after 2014 developed” to speak, warns, that “the hardest piece begins now, After the discovery of the skeleton “. He continued with the words: “On the know Amphipolis, is a valuable archaeological site from the 1950s, with the excavations of the late Dimitris Lazaridis. They then discovered tombs of the iron age and the archaic period. Has been for years (o grave) Laid, not believed, that he to give on other things. We hoped, disconnect the grave, because it was after all these years and the excavations. We dug several straps and we lucked out and increased the contrast of the zone. ” Mrs. Peristeri pointed out, that the destruction of the given a Caryatid on a drop target. According to the chronological presentation of excavation, Mrs Peristeri mentioned in ” Secret “the occupant of the Tomb. “Wir wissen nicht, wer die Toten, the anthropological data will show us,” He said. She has the grave until the last quarter of the 4. dated century. Were also found in the grave, Coins and precious stones from the 2. Century before Christ and 3. Century AD, found in the famous skeleton in the crypt of the Tomb monument, stressed woman Peristeri, that no evidence plundered Tomb. On the question of the identity of the dead man and the older statement, Amphipolis buried asked Macedonian General , She replied: “Such massive monument could be buried with a lion on the top and one been strategist. No reply on conspiracy theories, It was buried M. Alexander. ” He however pointed, that Amphipolis was an area, many military raids get. “We have not yet decided, will deal with the investigation of the skeleton, will not finish the pit still, in three months we will know, what the rest of the Tomb.” “We do not all information “, He added. “We have pottery (painted black) identifies. The skeleton was not integer. We found the skull, Pine, upper and lower limbs, Pieces from the spine and pelvis. This is difficult for us, to help determine, whether a man or a woman is. ” Question asked by zougla.gr about the identity of the deceased or the deceased, replied Ms Peristeri, We exclude anyone. (The pieces of the wings of the Sphinxes) (Mosaic stone) H speech Michael Lefantzi The base of the Leo today, According to Mr Lefantzi is incorrectly installed. “On the question of the implementation of the golden ratio for the construction of”, He said. “. The domes of the housing location carved, to customize just only together” ! Also revealed, that the residents back pieces of the pedestrian zone, the stay at home secretly O said architect: “We identify the key dimensions of the members . € on the dimensions of the system “Later in his speech, He added that: “We are in the documentation stage and mapping of the monument. Later we can read more about the structure and architecture to say. When talking about the grave, We need it as a monument to a wider range of antiques of the region to look at. ” asked Mr Lefantzis tectonic letters on the grounds of the crypt box, the, determine the chronology of the Tomb monument studied engraved. He pointed to the way, the Tomb built cast and said, that uses multiple ramps. Furthermore, a pattern similar to that of the “Elgin”, the transfer of the British Brigade of 1000 Pieces, including Leo, near the city of Amphipolis involved, he described the . According to the facts given by Mr Lefantzis, of the day to make the transfer of Austrian and Bulgarian forces attacked the British procession. Thus were destroyed the barges in the Struma and antiques reaches the ground. Speech Dimitri English Ground then took the architect Dimitris English, the described mechanical further treatment of the excavations and the contribution of the same archaeological research . In accordance with the conclusions of engineering: – The construction of the burial pit were the dome construction. – The current image and pathology of the monument is not (or are still due), the influence of strong earthquakes in the 6. AD JH. – The large original design of the monument along with the inner dam were the most important factors for maintaining the performance of a standing position up to today. – The working hypothesis for stress monument of the flood action (and subsequent plow in) not checked. is the major stress factors of the monument and the main cause of the pathology strongly instructed, of the existing archaeological deposits.
The speakers of the event:

CAT. Peristeri, Director of the excavation and head of Antiquities of Serres, on “Archeological Tomb Tomb caste of Amphipolis (2012-2014).” Me. Lefantzis, Architect, on the subject of: “The relationship of the lion with the tomb of Amphipolis:. Architecture approaches” Rep. English, a civil engineer, about “The role of civil engineering at the revelation of the Tomb monument in Tomb caste: Presentation temporary fixtures work and analysis methods for the design and control of historic cases.”Moderators: O Professor of Classical Archaeology at the University of Athens of Claus Lambrinoudakis and the Director of the Museum of cycladic art, Archaeologist Nikos Stampoulidis.

Tomb from Alexander the great's time could belong to general

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Athens (DPA) – An ancient tomb discovered in northern Greece dating from the time of Alexander the Great could belong to a general, said Greek Culture Ministry officials Saturday.

The tomb, the largest ever uncovered in Greece, measures 500 metres in length and 33 metres in height. Workers unearthing it have revealed twin sphinxes, a pair of Cartylids – or scuplted female figures – an elaborate mosaic floor and the remains of a skeleton.

Katerina Peristeri, the chief archaeologist at the Ancient Amphipolis site, said that the identity of the skeleton is still unknown, but certainly belongs to an important figure, possibly a general.

“You are aware that the most difficult task begins now – and that is carrying out the DNA analysis which will give us the answers we are waiting for,” she told journalists during a press conference.

She said several coins dating to the period of Alexander the Great were also discovered in the tomb.

Officials have said the tomb most likely belongs to a distinguished male public figure or a general, prompting excited speculation that it might house the remains of Alexander the Great, who died in 323 BC and whose final resting place remains a mystery.

Alexander died in Babylon, aged 32. Some experts speculate that he was buried in Alexandria, Egypt.

The kings wife, Roxanne, and their son, Alexander, were exiled to Amphipolis after his death and slain there along with his mother, brother and sister-in-law, leading some experts to believe their remains might be discovered there.

dpa-international.com

Archaeologists Are Examining Amphipolis Tomb Paintings

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AMPHIPOLIS, Greece—the Greek Ministry of Culture announced that painted figures have been found on the door frames of the second chamber of the 2, 300-year-old tomb under excavation in Amphipolis. Pictures of the figures have not yet been released. "We are not hiding anything. New findings are revealed slowly as the restoration process continues,"Culture Minister Kostas Tassoulas told Discovery News. The paintings, which are being examined with lasers, may help archaeologists determine who had been buried in the lavish tomb. In the second phase of the excavation, a team from the University of Thessaloniki will use 3-D tomographic imagery to search the burial mound for additional chambers.

Source: Archaeology Magazine

Everything for the faint painted human figures found in Amphipolis

After the admiration for the Sphinxes, the Caryatids and the mosaic, Amphipolis still borns surprises. All waiting now to see human expressions found in the tomb of the Hill Kasta, as revealed on Saturday the Culture Minister Costas Tasoylas.

PA281597The Minister satisfied this report, but in essence it is a finding important, some hope that could possibly reveal the identity of the dead. The performances were detected in September, then that was meant for a short time alarm in the media that found inscriptions. It was these pieces of marble with faint figures that no one then knew what exactly is and what secret could testify.

Answers will give the x-ray with the thermal imager and laser

In accordance with the apocalyptic story of Mary Adamopoulou today in ' News ', you are going to faint painted figures that with the help of technology we will be able to see more clearly. Detected over five marble fragments that were in the dust covering more then the mosaic with the abduction of Persephone.

Item zwoforoy

The human figures are bright red and yellow color and were transferred immediately to the Museum of Amphipolis to shelter, after any exposure to excessive light could erase these faint signs that will give new information about the monument. Their study so far has led to the conclusion that was placed over the marble uprights – constituted a kind of frieze.

It remains to be seen the sex of figoyrwn within this magnificent funerary monument that dominated women's styles. Here, answers will give the x-ray with the thermal imager and laser. This is technology that has been used in the past and the Citadel.

The question is whether these figures will give us and information about the identity of the dead. Speaking at the "new", the Professor of Classical Archaeology at the University of Athens Georgia kokkorou-alevras said: "It is very difficult… Usually the issues we encounter in Macedonian tombs are either mythological or banquet scenes or hunting scenes, considered among them pictured and the dead as a member of the Macedonian elite». Adds that it remains to be seen if this applies in the case of specific expressions.

iefimerida.gr

Minister Tasoula on Amphipolis

As I have said before it slightly worries me that people are overly associating me with Amphipolis, and I am happy to explain points, but … I will wait until Katerina Peristeri presents the amazing finds on the 29th, and she reveals Act One of the great Saga of Amphipolis.

Todays press release (here) added this information:

Σύμφωνα με τον Υπουργό Πολιτισμού, with the maintenance work uncovered the first suspected human representations in epistylia found in the third space. At the moment has become the first cleaning of epistyles and will follow and laser processing, and other procedures. “If you hurry up, you risk making errors that can be decisive”, the Minister emphasised, who wanted to say in this way that don't hide something, just the revelations made so slowly anyway and is not just a matter of someone new find, αλλά και η ίδια η διαδικασία της συντήρησης θα συνεχίσει να αποκαλύπτει πράγματα. “Αυτή είναι και η γοητεία της αρχαιολογίας”, reported

The description of the first human representations in friezes in the third room, and that they are being treated with lasers, suggests to me that they were painted. Similar painted figures were found inside the tomb of Hecatomnus, and unlike the sculptures these kinds of paintings can fade and vanish quickly if they are not treated correctly.

Also this paragraph suggest that I may have been correct in my assumption that filling the rooms with soil was partly to stop them collapsing:

Ο κύριος Τασούλας, θέλοντας να δείξει τις δυσκολίες που είχε να αντιμετωπίσει η ομάδα σε σχέση με τις στερεωτικές διαδικασίες, said: “The soil inside the Tomb, during the years, played a role fixative for the monument. The removal of soil affect the support, and ypostylwseis had to be done in such a way as to provide exactly the same support on the walls every time, neither more nor less.”

As I keep saying, the team at Amphipolis is one of the best in the world. In times of crisis, and Greece has been going through a horrible period, it is natural to doubt everyone in authority, but please do not doubt that Katerina Peristeri and Michaelis Lefantzis are doing an exceptional job at Amphipolis.
Source: phdiva

Behind Tomb Connected to Alexander the Great, Intrigue Worthy of “Game of Thrones”

Detail of Alexander the Great from a mosaic.

A mysterious royal tomb in Greece may hold a relative or associate of Alexander the Great, portrayed here in a mosaic from Pompeii.

Photograph by Araldo de Luca, Corbis

Heather Pringle

for National Geographic

Published November 21, 2014

Suspense is rising as archaeologists sift for clues to the identity of the person buried with pomp and circumstance in the mysterious Amphipolis tomb in what is now northern Greece. The research team thinks the tomb was built for someone very close to Alexander the Great—his mother, Olympias; one of his wives, Roxane; one of his favorite generals; or possibly his childhood friend and lover, Hephaestion.

Over the past three months, archaeologist Katerina Peristeri and her team have made a series of tantalizing discoveries in the tomb, from columns sculpted masterfully in the shapes of young women to a mosaic floor depicting the abduction of the Greek goddess Persephone. The tomb's costly artwork all dates to the tumultuous time around the death of Alexander the Great, and points to the presence of an important person.

Alexander himself was almost certainly buried in Egypt. But the final resting places—and the rich historical and genetic data they may contain—of many of his family members are unknown. The excavation at Amphipolis is bound to add a new chapter to the history of Alexander the Great and his family, a dynasty as steeped in intrigue, conspiracy, and bloodshed as the fictional Lannisters in the popular television series Game of Thrones. Among Alexander's family, “the king or ruler who ended up dying in his bed was rare,” says Philip Freeman, a biographer of Alexander the Great and a classical historian at Luther College in Decorah, Iowa.

Palace Intrigues

To understand these palace intrigues, one must begin with Alexander's father, Philip II, who ascended the throne of ancient Macedonia in 359 B.C. At the time, Macedonia was a modest mountain realm north of ancient Greece, but Philip had big dreams. He transformed Macedonia's army from a band of ragtag fighters into a disciplined military machine, and he armed it with a deadly new weapon, the sarissa, a long lance designed to keep enemy troops from closing in on his phalanxes.

A natural-born conqueror, Philip led his army to the west, crushing and intimidating the major Greek city-states until all had surrendered to his rule. “Philip II was a traditional warrior king,” says Ian Worthington, author of By the Spear: Philip II, Alexander the Great, and the Rise and Fall of the Macedonian Empire. “He was always in the thick of battle.”

By custom, Macedonia's kings married multiple wives, often for the purposes of sealing political alliances with powerful neighbors. Alexander's mother, Olympias, was a daughter of the king of Molossia, a realm that encompassed part of modern Albania, and she claimed descent from the legendary Greek hero, Achilles. She was one of Philip's many wives, and according to ancient historians, she screamed relentlessly at court to put her son on the Macedonian throne. Some historians even suspect that she poisoned Alexander's older half-brother, impairing his mental faculties.

For a time, her intrigues seemed to succeed. Philip groomed the young Alexander as his heir, providing the boy with a first-class education from a renowned tutor, Aristotle, and encouraging his prowess as a warrior.

But important Macedonian nobles at Philip's court viewed Alexander as half foreign and possibly illegitimate. By the time Alexander reached his late teens, Philip seemed to share these doubts. He took a new Macedonian wife, and during a drinking party, Philip allowed Alexander's legitimacy to be publicly questioned. Then Philip drew his own sword on Alexander, a mortal insult.

Photo of the two sphinxes found at the tomb.

Two guardian sphinxes sit on a marble lintel at the entrance to the tomb at Amphipolis.
Photograph by the Greek Culture Ministry, EPA

Phillip later tried to patch things up, but he had created a dangerous enemy. Exactly what happened next is the subject of debate, although the bare facts are well known. In 336 B.C., Philip threw a lavish public wedding for one of his daughters and invited members of neighboring royal houses to attend this state occasion.

As part of the festivities, Philip planned to stage public games at daybreak in the theater at Aigai, his capital city. He strode into the stadium, wearing a white cloak over his shoulders. On one side was Alexander; on the other was his new son-in-law. Philip waved away his bodyguards, and as he stood at the center of the theater, the large crowd began to roar with approval.

“That was the last thing he ever heard,” says Worthington. An assassin stepped out from the crowd and stabbed Philip to death as the guests watched in disbelief. In the ensuing bedlam, the murderer, a man named Pausanias, bolted from the theater toward a spot where horses were tethered and waiting for him. But just as Pausanias was about to escape, he tripped and fell, and three of Philip's bodyguards speared him to death.

Conspiracy Theory

Did Pausanias act alone? Some ancient texts suggest that he did, assassinating Philip in a jealous rage. Many of the ancient Macedonian nobles were bisexual, and Philip was no exception. He had taken Pausanias as his lover, and when he tired of him, he discarded the young man and even allowed others to sexually abuse Pausanias. So Pausanias may have murdered Philip in an act of revenge.

But several clues point to a conspiracy, says Worthington. Pausanias, for example, fled to a spot where multiple horses were waiting, suggesting that several people had made plans for escaping the crime scene.

“I think Pausanias was manipulated to kill Philip,” says Worthington, who suspects that Olympias and Alexander played key parts in the assassination. Both mother and son had been deeply insulted by Philip. In addition, they may have feared that Philip's young Macedonian wife would produce a Macedonian heir more acceptable to the local nobility. The only way to prevent this would be to eliminate Philip. So Worthington theorizes that Olympias and Alexander poisoned Pausanias's mind and encouraged him to murder Philip.

Other classical historians aren't so sure Alexander was guilty of patricide. Nevertheless, says Luther College Freeman, “if you put Alexander on a couch today and tried to analyze him, you could have a lot of fun.”

Hephaestion and the god Hymen.

Some speculate that Alexander's closest friend and lover, Hephaestion (pictured above in a 16th-century fresco, with his hand on the good Hymen's shoulder) may be buried in the royal tomb at Amphipolis.
Photograph by DeAgostini, Getty Images

The King Is Dead, Long Live the King

With Philip gone, Alexander had to convince the Macedonian court that he deserved to be king. He planned a costly funeral for his father, cremating the body on a massive funeral pyre and constructing an elaborate tomb for Philip on the outskirts of Aigai (the modern Greek town of Vergina), some 100 miles from Amphipolis. As Macedonia's aristocracy looked on, Alexander buried his father “like a Homeric hero,” says Ioannes Graekos, an archaeologist and curator at the Royal Tombs Museum in Vergina.

Inside the tomb, Alexander interred a gold chest containing Philip's skeletal remains, as well as a host of royal treasures, from a gilded crown to a golden scepter, a gold cuirass, and a gold- and ivory-adorned deathbed. Over the doorway, the young king had artists paint a hunting scene showing Alexander and his father closing in on a lion.

Photo of a female figurine in the tomb.

Archaeologists excavate a female figure on a wall leading to the second room of the ancient tomb.
Photograph by the Greek Culture Ministry, AP

“Only royalty can hunt lions, so Alexander was honoring his father, but he was also honoring himself,” says Terence Clark, an archaeologist at the Canadian Museum of History in Gatineau, Quebec, who, along with National Geographic and others, is helping to organize a major new traveling exhibition on the heroes of ancient Greece, including Alexander the Great. “It's a definitive statement that Alexander is now in charge.”

But despite his appearance of confidence, Alexander still feared rivals at court. He ordered the deaths of his cousin Amyntas and of one of Philip's young wards. And his mother, Olympias, took care of enemies among the royal women. According to at least one ancient text, she forced Philip's young Macedonian wife to commit suicide and arranged for the murder of her rival's daughter. Olympias, says Elizabeth Carney, a classical historian at Clemson University in South Carolina and biographer of Alexander's mother, was “a political woman.”

That left just the army. Alexander had to convince Macedonia's generals and soldiers alike that he was a commander like his father. So he embarked on a series of military campaigns, quelling rebels in the Balkan region, crushing the city-state of Thebes, and leading his army to one victory after another. By the time he turned 21, Alexander was firmly in control of Macedonia and Greece, and ready to embark on the conquest of Persia.

Alexander extended his rule to lands as far south as Egypt and as far east as India, creating one of the greatest empires of the ancient world. His closest companion was his lover Hephaestion, a Macedonian general, and when Hephaestion finally succumbed to a mysterious ailment in 324 B.C. on an eastern campaign, Alexander was nearly undone by grief. According to the ancient writer Plutarch, he had Hephaestion's doctor crucified and massacred an entire tribe in the region to provide offerings for Hephaestion's spirit.

Photo of Casta Hill in Amphipolis, Greece.

The tomb at Amphipolis, shown here at the top of Kasta Hill, is the largest ancient tomb ever discovered in Greece.
Photograph by Athanasios Gioumpasis, Getty

Things Fall Apart

By the time of his own death at age 33, Alexander was still in the east, planning the conquest of Arabia. He clearly preferred the thrill of battle to the numbing minutiae of governing. He had taken at least two foreign wives, but had produced no legitimate heir to his massive empire and had given little apparent thought to the matter of succession. Soon after he died of a mysterious fever in Babylon, his generals, nobles, and family members began fighting bitterly over the succession. In the end, his vast empire was divided as spoils of a civil war, and his entire direct line was wiped out.

Alexander's mother met her end at the hands of a ruthless Macedonian noble, Cassander. To clear the path to the Macedonian throne, Cassander took Olympias prisoner during a siege and executed her. Then, like Alexander himself, he set about eliminating other potential plotters. He imprisoned Alexander's most important foreign wife, Roxane, and his posthumous son, Alexander IV, at Amphipolis—and had them both secretly murdered in 311 B.C. With the dirty work done, Cassander ruled the kingdom of Macedonia until his death in 297 B.C.

Most archaeologists today are convinced, based on historical accounts, that Alexander himself was buried somewhere in Egypt, quite possibly in the city that bears his name today, Alexandria. But researchers have yet to find the tombs of Olympias, Roxane, Hephaestion, and many of his generals. Perhaps the archaeological team clearing the mysterious tomb at Amphipolis will yet find the remains of one of them.

11 Leadership Lessons from Alexander the Great

Visionary, Team-Builder, Mentor, he shows us some timeless Leadership-Lessons but also some Glaring Failures...!!

Although the "Great Man" Leadership theory belongs to the scrapheap of history, its allure continues to mystify...Underlying this theory is the assumption that if the right man (yes, it is often assumed to be a man) for the job emerges, he will almost magically take control of a situation and lead a group of people into safety or success. While such leaders are rare, there are times when a singular individual steps out from the crowd and serves as a paragon of leadership.

One such individual was Alexander the Great; one of history's most famous warriors and a legend of almost divine status in his own lifetime. He falls into the elite category of individuals who changed the history of civilisation and shaped the present world as we know it.

From a Leadership perspective, it's not very difficult to say that Alexander was without peer...He could be magnanimous toward defeated enemies and extremely loyal toward his friends. As a general, he led by example, leading from the front...!

Alexander's reign illustrates a number of important leadership lessons which remain applicable to business and political chiefs today:

1. Have a compelling vision – Alexander's actions demonstrate what can be accomplished when a person is totally focused—when he or she has clarity coupled with a ' magnificent obsession '. Through dramatic gestures and great rhetorical skills, Alexander spoke to the collective imagination of his people and won the commitment of his followers..

2. Be unsurpassed in execution – Alexander not only had a compelling vision, he also knew how to make that vision become reality. By maintaining an excellent information system, he was able to interpret his opponents motives and was a master at coordinating all parts of his military machine. No other military leader before him ever used speed and surprise with such dexterity. He knew the true value of the statement "One is either quick or one is dead" !!

3. Create a well-rounded Executive Team – Alexander also knew how to build a committed team around him and operated in a way that allowed his commanders to build on each other's' strengths..

4. Walk the talk – Alexander set the example of excellence with his leadership style; he led his troops quite literally from the front. When his troops went hungry or thirsty, he went hungry and thirsty; when their horses died beneath them and they had to walk, he did the same. This accessibility only changed when he succumbed to the luxury of Persian court life..

5. Encourage "Innovation" – Alexander realised the competitive advantage of strategic innovation. Because of his deft deployment of troops, his support for and reliance on the creativity of his corps of engineers, and his own logistical acumen, his war machine was the most advanced of its time..

6. Foster Group Identification – Alexander created a very astute propaganda machine to keep his people engaged. His oratory skills, based on the simple language of his soldiers, had a hypnotic influence on all who heard him. He made extensive use of powerful cultural symbols which elicited strong emotions. These ' meaning-management ' actions, combined with his talent for leading by example, fostered strong group identification among his troops, and motivated his men to make exceptional efforts..

7. Encourage and Support Followers – Alexander knew how to encourage his people for their excellence in battle in ways that brought out greater excellence. He routinely singled people out for special attention and recalled acts of bravery performed by former and fallen heroes, making it clear that individual contributions would be recognised. He also had the ability to be a ' container ' of the emotions of his people through empathetic listening.

8. Invest in Talent Management – Extremely visionary for his time, Alexander spent an extraordinary amount of resources on training and development. He not only trained his present troops but also looked to the future by developing the next generation.

9. Consolidate Gains – Paradoxically, three of Alexander's most valuable lessons were taught not through his strengths but through his weaknesses. The first of these is the need to consolidate gains. Alexander failed to put the right control systems in place to integrate his empire and thus never really savoured the fruit of his accomplishments. Conquest may be richly rewarding, but a leader who advances without ensuring the stability of his or her gains stands to lose everything..

10. Succession Planning – Another lesson Alexander taught by omission is the need for a viable succession plan. He was so focused on his own role as king and aspiring deity that he could not bring himself to think of the future when he was gone. As a result, political vultures tore his vast empire apart after his death.

11. Create Mechanisms of Organisational Governance – The final lesson that the case of Alexander illustrates (again by omission) is the paramount importance of countervailing powers. Leaders have the responsibility to put proper mechanisms of organisational governance into place, using checks and balances to prevent faulty decision-making and the abuse of power.

Alexander began his reign as an enlightened ruler, encouraging participation by his ' companions ' —Loyal soldiers drawn from the noble families in Macedonia. But like many rulers before him, he became addicted to power. Hubris raised its ugly head. As time passed, Alexander's behaviour became increasingly domineering and grandiose...

He tolerated nothing but applause from his audience, so his immediate circle kept their reservations to themselves. As a result he lost touch with reality, another factor leading to his failure to consolidate his empire...!!

by: Manfred Kets De Vries

Alexander the Great never spoke and wrote West-Bulgarian

Alexander the Great never spoke and wrote West-Bulgarian Dialects like the language you speak and write in F.Y.R.O.M. / Skopje and we see here below. Everybody can read from independent sources that Bulgarians came in the Balkans from Volga Steppe 1.000 years later after Alexander's death. 1.000 years later!!! Ex-Prime minister of F.Y.R.O.M. / Skopje Ljubčo Georgiewski knows this very well and lives now as proud Bulgarian citizen in Sofia/Bulgaria. Stop play the role of historical clowns. Stop steal the culture heritage of all your neighbors if you don't have and need a new one.

Here some independet sources

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgars

Ex-Prime Minister of F.Y.R.O.M. / Skopje Ljubčo Georgiewski explain Greek history of Ancient Macedonia to his countrymen in Skopje.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKlkMw_AU5I

Mutter Teresa is from Albanian Ethnicity

http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mutter_Teresa

Tsar Samuel was a Bulgarian Tsar

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_of_Bulgaria

Cyril and Methodius were byzantine Greek brothers from Thessaloniki

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saints_Cyril_and_Methodius

Ancient Kingdom of Macedonia in Greece

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macedonia_%28ancient_kingdom%29

http://landscapes-of-macedonia-greece.tumblr.com