1 00:00:10,798 --> 00:00:21,649 On the 11th June 323 BC, Alexander the Great passed away. 2 00:00:21,649 --> 00:00:29,608 Following his death in Babylon, his body became a continuing source of war, intrigue and mystery. 3 00:00:29,609 --> 00:00:35,530 His body and his tomb were lost; yet the legend lives on and historians are still trying to 4 00:00:35,530 --> 00:00:38,550 uncover clues to their whereabouts. 5 00:00:38,549 --> 00:00:41,009 But how did this all come about? 6 00:00:41,009 --> 00:00:45,549 Why did all records of Alexander’s tomb abruptly cease? 7 00:00:45,549 --> 00:00:50,828 In this two-part documentary, we shall unravel the history surrounding Alexander’s tomb 8 00:00:50,829 --> 00:00:53,439 and attempt to answer this question. 9 00:00:53,439 --> 00:00:59,879 This is the story behind Alexander’s body and his tomb. 10 00:00:59,880 --> 00:01:05,448 Almost immediately after Alexander’s death, chaos erupted, as the Macedonians quickly 11 00:01:05,448 --> 00:01:11,250 began arguing over the fate of the empire, leaving his body unattended for many days 12 00:01:11,250 --> 00:01:14,049 in the Babylonian heat. 13 00:01:14,049 --> 00:01:19,129 Legend has it that upon returning to the corpse, to everyone’s amazement, they found it in 14 00:01:19,129 --> 00:01:22,978 pristine condition – untouched by decay. 15 00:01:22,978 --> 00:01:29,390 Perdiccas, the highest-ranking commander in Babylon, then had Alexander’s body embalmed 16 00:01:29,390 --> 00:01:34,849 and placed in a golden coffin. 17 00:01:34,849 --> 00:01:40,209 For the next two years Alexander’s body remained in Babylon, as Perdiccas and his 18 00:01:40,209 --> 00:01:47,319 followers oversaw the construction of a funeral carriage unlike any other the world had seen. 19 00:01:47,319 --> 00:01:54,409 The carriage was designed to resemble a great temple: it had beautiful Ionic columns encircled 20 00:01:54,409 --> 00:01:59,780 by paintings depicting Alexander and his army and was covered with gold. 21 00:01:59,780 --> 00:02:07,370 It was to be pulled by 64 mules, each bearing a golden crown and bell. 22 00:02:07,370 --> 00:02:12,640 Upon its completion, Perdiccas ordered that Alexander’s body to be escorted home to 23 00:02:12,639 --> 00:02:19,359 Aegae in Macedonia – the traditional resting place of the Macedonian Kings. 24 00:02:19,360 --> 00:02:24,800 Yet the plan went horribly wrong. 25 00:02:24,800 --> 00:02:30,969 The governor of Egypt Ptolemy was aware of the great wealth and potential of his domain 26 00:02:30,969 --> 00:02:36,889 and soon grew ambitious, eager to get rid of Perdiccas’ control. 27 00:02:36,889 --> 00:02:42,089 He believed he might achieve this by taking possession of Alexander’s body, as it was 28 00:02:42,090 --> 00:02:49,240 a superhuman talisman representing authority and legitimacy in this new post-Alexander 29 00:02:49,240 --> 00:02:50,600 world. 30 00:02:50,599 --> 00:02:55,159 Whoever controlled the body held great sway. 31 00:02:55,159 --> 00:03:05,710 Ptolemy was not deterred by Perdiccas’ precautions to keep the body, but he needed a daring plan. 32 00:03:05,710 --> 00:03:12,430 In 321 BC, Alexander’s elaborate funeral cart left Babylon for Macedonia. 33 00:03:12,430 --> 00:03:18,260 Yet as the procession was making its way through Syria, Ptolemy made his move, bribing the 34 00:03:18,259 --> 00:03:24,098 escort, seizing the body and diverting it to Egypt, where he had it housed in Memphis 35 00:03:24,098 --> 00:03:29,679 – the traditional Egyptian capital. 36 00:03:29,680 --> 00:03:35,620 Perdiccas was furious, as his authority as regent had been severely tarnished. 37 00:03:35,620 --> 00:03:41,509 It was the opposite for Ptolemy, as Alexander’s soldiers came from far and wide to swell the 38 00:03:41,509 --> 00:03:43,789 ranks of his army. 39 00:03:43,789 --> 00:03:49,449 Perdiccas immediately marched on Egypt with his army – his main aim to regain control 40 00:03:49,449 --> 00:03:53,189 of the body and restore his authority. 41 00:03:53,189 --> 00:03:59,430 In the ensuing war, covered in our documentary which you can see here, Ptolemy emerged victorious 42 00:03:59,430 --> 00:04:01,800 and Perdiccas was murdered. 43 00:04:01,800 --> 00:04:09,290 Alexander’s body was now securely in Ptolemy’s possession. 44 00:04:09,289 --> 00:04:14,769 He quickly began proclaiming the link between himself and Alexander, becoming the first 45 00:04:14,770 --> 00:04:20,220 of the Diadochi to put Alexander’s image on his coinage, and emphasising that he was 46 00:04:20,220 --> 00:04:25,870 a favourite of Alexander in his account on the conquest of Asia. 47 00:04:25,870 --> 00:04:29,590 Ptolemy also cultivated a local legend of Alexander. 48 00:04:29,589 --> 00:04:35,159 Rather than being the son of Philip of Macedon, Egyptian tales soon became widespread that 49 00:04:35,160 --> 00:04:40,300 Alexander was the son of the last Egyptian pharaoh Nectanebo II. 50 00:04:40,300 --> 00:04:47,939 In 343 BC, the Persians had deposed Nectanebo, who had then died in exile. 51 00:04:47,939 --> 00:04:53,370 His pre-made sarcophagus in Memphis had therefore remained empty. 52 00:04:53,370 --> 00:04:58,639 It is likely Ptolemy had first placed Alexander in this empty coffin and it was from here 53 00:04:58,639 --> 00:05:01,908 that this fabulous story took root. 54 00:05:01,908 --> 00:05:07,589 A pharaoh of Egypt could only be legitimate if he was related to his predecessor, so this 55 00:05:07,589 --> 00:05:12,739 tale helped portray Alexander as Nectanebo’s rightful heir. 56 00:05:12,740 --> 00:05:18,210 It also established a connection between the Macedonian and Egyptian dynasties – a connection 57 00:05:18,209 --> 00:05:21,088 that only helped Ptolemy’s cause. 58 00:05:21,088 --> 00:05:26,339 At the same time, Ptolemy began spreading the rumour that he was in fact an illegitimate 59 00:05:26,339 --> 00:05:32,198 son of Philip II and thus the half-brother of Alexander. 60 00:05:32,199 --> 00:05:38,288 Both stories spread rapidly and helped Ptolemy secure his rule in Egypt – thanks in good 61 00:05:38,288 --> 00:05:42,610 measure to his clever use of Alexander’s body. 62 00:05:42,610 --> 00:05:49,379 Following the climactic battle of Ipsus in 301 BC, Ptolemy had Alexander’s body moved 63 00:05:49,379 --> 00:05:56,490 to the centre of his new capital at Alexandria and placed in a new, elaborate tomb. 64 00:05:56,490 --> 00:06:04,199 The city had been founded by Alexander back in 331 BC but had only recently been completed. 65 00:06:04,199 --> 00:06:09,419 Immediately, Ptolemy set about promoting Alexander adulation. 66 00:06:09,418 --> 00:06:15,029 Not only did he have Alexander publicly honoured as the founder of Alexandria, but he also 67 00:06:15,029 --> 00:06:19,429 introduced a state cult of Alexander throughout Egypt. 68 00:06:19,430 --> 00:06:25,400 His statues were erected far and wide while processions and festivals centred around the 69 00:06:25,399 --> 00:06:30,549 great conqueror also appeared. 70 00:06:30,550 --> 00:06:35,530 In 283 BC, Ptolemy I passed away. 71 00:06:35,529 --> 00:06:42,399 For the next 150 years Ptolemy’s descendants would rule Egypt, and the memory of the great 72 00:06:42,399 --> 00:06:48,329 king was crucial for their dynasty. 73 00:06:48,329 --> 00:06:54,438 Almost immediately after his father’s death, Ptolemy II Philadelphus, had him deified and 74 00:06:54,439 --> 00:06:57,379 worshipped alongside Alexander. 75 00:06:57,379 --> 00:07:04,189 The message was clear: in both life and death these two kings were inseparable. 76 00:07:04,189 --> 00:07:11,060 Philadelphus also created a new religious festival in honour of his father: the Ptolemaia. 77 00:07:11,060 --> 00:07:17,550 Hosted every four years this festival attracted many thousands of visitors not only from Egypt, 78 00:07:17,550 --> 00:07:22,680 but all around the Greek World. 79 00:07:22,680 --> 00:07:30,110 Fortunately for us, a description of the Ptolemaia staged in 275-274 BC survives. 80 00:07:30,110 --> 00:07:36,240 Dubbed, ‘the Grand Procession of Ptolemy Philadelphus’, It was an EXTREMELY lavish 81 00:07:36,240 --> 00:07:38,899 parade through the centre of Alexandria. 82 00:07:38,899 --> 00:07:47,449 Soldiers, animals, gems, gold and images of Gods – especially Dionysios - all featured, 83 00:07:47,449 --> 00:07:56,169 emphasising the unbounded wealth, splendour and power of Ptolemaic Egypt. 84 00:07:56,168 --> 00:07:58,889 Alexander was central to the procession. 85 00:07:58,889 --> 00:08:04,449 First, his statue appeared on top of a great float accompanied by another statue of the 86 00:08:04,449 --> 00:08:11,038 now-deified Ptolemy I - both wearing gold diadems of ivy leaves. 87 00:08:11,038 --> 00:08:16,699 Following this came a golden statue of Alexander in a chariot, towed by four elephants and 88 00:08:16,699 --> 00:08:20,028 surrounded by statues of the Gods. 89 00:08:20,028 --> 00:08:25,490 This procession reminded the onlookers not only that Alexandria was the home of Alexander’s 90 00:08:25,490 --> 00:08:31,460 body but also of the inseparable link between it and the Ptolemies. 91 00:08:31,459 --> 00:08:37,199 Desiring to further emphasise this link Ptolemy IV ‘Philopator’, placed Alexander’s 92 00:08:37,200 --> 00:08:43,229 body in a new royal burial complex in c. 215 BC. 93 00:08:43,229 --> 00:08:48,790 It soon became known as the ‘Soma’ or the body – named after its main exhibit. 94 00:08:48,789 --> 00:08:56,059 This new mausoleum was almost certainly visually majestic – perhaps inspired by the famed 95 00:08:56,059 --> 00:08:59,509 tomb of Mausolus at Halicarnassus. 96 00:08:59,509 --> 00:09:05,120 The complex may also have been circular, in its turn possibly inspiring the great tombs 97 00:09:05,120 --> 00:09:09,240 of the Roman emperors Augustus and Hadrian. 98 00:09:09,240 --> 00:09:14,839 Inside the enclosure, Alexander’s body was placed in an underground chamber along with 99 00:09:14,839 --> 00:09:20,740 remains of the Ptolemies, once again emphasising the closest possible link between the Ptolemies 100 00:09:20,740 --> 00:09:22,970 and Alexander. 101 00:09:22,970 --> 00:09:27,680 The Soma soon became an iconic feature of Alexandria. 102 00:09:27,679 --> 00:09:33,179 From far and wide, visitors would journey to Alexander’s city and see his marvellous 103 00:09:33,179 --> 00:09:34,359 tomb. 104 00:09:34,360 --> 00:09:36,960 It was a place of pagan pilgrimage. 105 00:09:36,960 --> 00:09:43,990 Still, no dynasty can last forever and by the beginning of the First Century BC, the 106 00:09:43,990 --> 00:09:48,079 Ptolemaic dynasty had become a shadow of its former power. 107 00:09:48,078 --> 00:09:55,198 So great was its turmoil that in 89 BC King Ptolemy X had done the unthinkable: in desperate 108 00:09:55,198 --> 00:10:01,240 need of money to pay his mercenaries, he melted down Alexander’s golden sarcophagus, replacing 109 00:10:01,240 --> 00:10:03,450 it with one made of glass. 110 00:10:03,450 --> 00:10:09,940 Regardless, Ptolemaic power continued to dwindle and within 70 years, a new power would be 111 00:10:09,940 --> 00:10:11,839 ruling Alexandria. 112 00:10:11,839 --> 00:11:18,160 A power that also had a keen interest in Alexander’s tomb – but for very different reasons: Rome. 113 00:11:18,159 --> 00:11:26,379 The second video on the story behind Alexander’s tomb and his body will we released soon, so 114 00:11:26,379 --> 00:11:30,720 make sure you are subscribed to our channel and pressed the bell button. 115 00:11:30,720 --> 00:11:35,110 We would like to express our gratitude to our Patreon supporters and channel members, 116 00:11:35,110 --> 00:11:38,000 who make the creation of our videos possible. 117 00:11:38,000 --> 00:11:41,860 This is the Kings and Generals channel, and we will catch you on the next one.