1 00:00:00,000 --> 00:00:00,940 Alexander the Great (All Parts) 2 00:00:01,060 --> 00:00:09,320 In 334 BC, Alexander, King of Macedonia, began one of the greatest military campaigns in history 3 00:00:09,800 --> 00:00:14,660 - against the superpower of the age - the Persian Empire. 4 00:00:18,079 --> 00:00:23,679 Just 20 years-old, his brilliant and fearless leadership won him battle after battle. 5 00:00:25,480 --> 00:00:30,079 And in an astonishing 10 year campaign that took him to the edge of the known world, 6 00:00:30,579 --> 00:00:33,719 he carved out one of the largest empires ever known. 7 00:00:35,939 --> 00:00:39,899 Few men have had such a massive impact on the course of history. 8 00:00:41,759 --> 00:00:46,979 To the Persians, he was Alexander the Accursed, but to the west, 9 00:00:47,500 --> 00:00:51,980 he was immortalised... as Alexander the Great. 10 00:00:53,079 --> 00:00:55,359 EPIC HISTORY TV 11 00:00:55,359 --> 00:00:57,359 And Invicta 12 00:00:57,359 --> 00:00:59,659 Aleksander the Great Part I 13 00:01:01,880 --> 00:01:03,679 Ancient Greece. 14 00:01:06,019 --> 00:01:15,859 From around 500 BC, this rugged land was the scene of remarkable developments in art, philosophy, and warfare. 15 00:01:20,159 --> 00:01:28,939 Its two greatest city-states were Athens, a naval power, where democracy, art, drama and philosophy flourished; 16 00:01:31,260 --> 00:01:38,080 and Sparta, an austere, militaristic society, famed for its formidable army. 17 00:01:40,480 --> 00:01:45,920 In 480 BC, these two city-states had joined forces 18 00:01:46,340 --> 00:01:49,900 to fight an invasion by the mighty Persian Empire. 19 00:01:51,680 --> 00:01:57,860 At the narrow pass of Thermopylae, a small Greek force, led by 300 Spartans, 20 00:01:59,239 --> 00:02:05,979 held up the enormous Persian army for three days, before they were finally encircled and killed. 21 00:02:08,060 --> 00:02:13,400 Then, in the straits of Salamis, the Greek fleet defeated the Persian navy ... 22 00:02:17,620 --> 00:02:23,480 But they couldn't prevent the Persians burning the sacred temples of the Athenian acropolis. 23 00:02:26,060 --> 00:02:34,680 The next year, at Plataea, the Greeks won a decisive land battle against the Persians,and forced them to abandon their invasion. 24 00:02:40,240 --> 00:02:44,240 The next fifty years were the golden age of classical Greece. 25 00:02:45,599 --> 00:02:51,799 But rising tension between Athens and Sparta, and their allies, eventually led to war, 26 00:02:52,280 --> 00:02:56,419 dragging the Greek world into decades of destructive fighting. 27 00:02:57,879 --> 00:03:04,539 Wars between the Greek city-states continued for almost a century, leaving them exhausted... 28 00:03:05,139 --> 00:03:09,139 and vulnerable to a new, rising power to the north... 29 00:03:11,139 --> 00:03:16,259 For centuries, sophisticated Greeks had viewed the mountainous kingdom of Macedonia 30 00:03:16,620 --> 00:03:21,060 as a backwater, hicksville - barely Greek at all. 31 00:03:23,060 --> 00:03:28,719 But under King Philip II, Macedonia emerged as a formidable military force. 32 00:03:31,479 --> 00:03:40,519 His most famous reform: the introduction of the sarissa, an 18 foot pike, twice the length of a normal Greek spear, 33 00:03:40,919 --> 00:03:46,799 and wielded by trained infantry fighting in close formation, known as a phalanx. 34 00:03:51,180 --> 00:03:59,060 In 338 BC, at the Battle of Chaeronea, Philip's army crushed the joint forces of Thebes and Athens. 35 00:04:02,900 --> 00:04:08,439 Through alliance and conquest, Philip had already gained control over most of his neighbours. 36 00:04:09,860 --> 00:04:16,259 Now, following this victory, he united all Greece in an alliance known as the Hellenic League, 37 00:04:16,779 --> 00:04:21,879 or League of Corinth, with Philip as hegemon – or supreme commander. 38 00:04:23,860 --> 00:04:26,439 Only Sparta stood aside. 39 00:04:28,839 --> 00:04:36,359 Philip began to plan a great campaign - a Panhellenic, or all-Greek, war against the Persian Empire. 40 00:04:37,600 --> 00:04:44,020 Their old foe was now an ailing superpower, its great riches ripe for the taking... 41 00:04:46,839 --> 00:04:52,939 But on the eve of launching his war, Philip was assassinated by his own bodyguard 42 00:04:53,740 --> 00:04:57,360 – victim of Macedonia's brutal court rivalries. 43 00:05:00,000 --> 00:05:09,779 He was succeeded by his 20 year-old son Alexander: brilliant, restless, tutored by the great philosopher Aristotle, 44 00:05:10,459 --> 00:05:13,279 and already an experienced military commander. 45 00:05:15,019 --> 00:05:22,959 Alexander inherited his father's grand plan to invade Persia, but first he had to secure his own position as king: 46 00:05:24,759 --> 00:05:33,599 At home, he had potential rivals executed, then crushed rebellions in Illyria, Thessaly, and central Greece. 47 00:05:34,500 --> 00:05:42,639 He made a special example of Thebes – completely destroying the ancient city, and selling its people into slavery. 48 00:05:44,720 --> 00:05:56,180 In the spring of 334 BC, now ready to launch his war against the Persian Empire, Alexander led his army across the Hellespont into Asia Minor. 49 00:05:57,160 --> 00:06:02,140 It was the start of one of the greatest military campaigns in history. 50 00:06:03,300 --> 00:06:08,199 The Macedonian Army 51 00:06:10,100 --> 00:06:15,300 Alexander's army was about 40,000 strong, drawn from all parts of Greece. 52 00:06:16,680 --> 00:06:21,680 The infantry were commanded by the veteran Macedonian general Parmenion. 53 00:06:23,899 --> 00:06:30,439 In the front rank, 9,000 Macedonian phalangites, armed with the 18-foot sarissa. 54 00:06:31,060 --> 00:06:38,720 These were professional soldiers, well-trained and drilled, who formed up for battle in the phalanx, 16 ranks deep. 55 00:06:39,759 --> 00:06:46,579 This packed formation presented a solid wall of iron spear-tips, and was virtually unstoppable. 56 00:06:47,439 --> 00:06:54,600 But it was also difficult to manoeuvre, and highly vulnerable to attacks on its flanks or rear. 57 00:06:55,459 --> 00:07:02,479 So 3,000 elite infantry, the hypaspists, or 'shield-bearers', armed with shorter spears, 58 00:07:02,939 --> 00:07:09,319 guarded its flanks. They were commanded by Parmenion's son, Nikanor. 59 00:07:11,279 --> 00:07:18,579 The second line of Alexander's army was made up of 7,000 Greek allies and 5,000 mercenaries, 60 00:07:18,939 --> 00:07:28,199 armed as hoplites. They took their name from the hoplon, their large round shield, and carried, shorter, 8 foot spears. 61 00:07:31,139 --> 00:07:39,279 A hoplite phalanx was not as effective as the Macedonian phalangites, but still well-armed and heavily armoured for the time. 62 00:07:44,740 --> 00:07:52,840 The Agrianes were the army's elite skirmishers, expert javelin-throwers from what's now southern Bulgaria. 63 00:07:53,920 --> 00:07:59,819 Other skirmishers from Thrace, and Illyria, were armed with javelins, slings and bows. 64 00:08:04,399 --> 00:08:13,919 The shock troops of Alexander's army were the Companion Cavalry, 1,800 elite horsemen armed with spear and sword, 65 00:08:14,360 --> 00:08:21,879 commanded by Philotas, another son of Parmenion. Alexander led the royal squadron in person. 66 00:08:24,180 --> 00:08:29,480 There were also 1,800 cavalry from Thessaly, commanded by Kallas, 67 00:08:30,860 --> 00:08:40,700 600 from other parts of Greece, led by Erigyius, and 900 mounted scouts from Thrace and Paeonia, under Kassander. 68 00:08:47,840 --> 00:08:54,639 THE GRANICUS 69 00:08:56,000 --> 00:09:05,320 The great Persian Empire was divided into provinces, called satrapies. Each satrapy was ruled by a governor, or satrap. 70 00:09:08,580 --> 00:09:14,780 Those in Asia Minor now threatened by Alexander's invasion met to discuss strategy. 71 00:09:15,899 --> 00:09:23,299 Memnon of Rhodes, a skilled Greek general in Persian service, urged them to avoid battle with Alexander. 72 00:09:24,120 --> 00:09:27,860 Instead, he advised them to use a 'scorched earth' strategy 73 00:09:28,759 --> 00:09:36,740 – to burn villages and crops, and withdraw to the interior - Alexander's army, he promised, would quickly starve. 74 00:09:38,679 --> 00:09:45,359 It was good advice. But the satraps were unwilling to lay waste to their own provinces without a fight. 75 00:09:50,059 --> 00:09:54,500 So they decided to face Alexander's army at the River Granicus. 76 00:09:59,700 --> 00:10:06,840 The Persian army formed up behind the river, which was shallow, but 60 feet wide with steep banks. 77 00:10:09,399 --> 00:10:15,240 Their front line was a wall of cavalry, about 10,000 horsemen from across the empire 78 00:10:16,500 --> 00:10:25,860 – Medes and Hyrcanians from modern Iran, Bactrians from Afghanistan, and Paphlagonians from Turkey's Black Sea coast. 79 00:10:27,440 --> 00:10:32,880 Behind, in reserve, were the infantry – several thousand Greek mercenaries, 80 00:10:33,519 --> 00:10:38,939 a common sight in Persian armies at this time. These men fought for Persian gold, 81 00:10:39,100 --> 00:10:43,100 and were armed with the round shield and short spear of hoplites. 82 00:10:44,559 --> 00:10:52,179 The Persians may have been unsure if they could trust these men in combat against fellow Greeks, and so placed them at the rear. 83 00:10:54,519 --> 00:11:03,519 Alexander, determined to attack and destroy this Persian force before it could retreat, raced to the Granicus with his best troops. 84 00:11:04,500 --> 00:11:11,120 On his left wing, he posted Thessalian, Greek and Thracian cavalry, under Parmenion's command. 85 00:11:14,659 --> 00:11:27,059 In the centre, were the massed spears of the phalanx, its six divisions commanded by Perdikkas, Koinos, Amyntas, Philip, Meleager, and Krateros. 86 00:11:29,899 --> 00:11:35,120 On the right, Alexander himself, with the Companion Cavalry under Philotas, as well 87 00:11:35,879 --> 00:11:41,679 as the elite hypaspists, the Agrianes javelin-throwers, and the archers. 88 00:11:43,080 --> 00:11:51,040 Alexander, with 13,000 infantry, and 5,000 cavalry in all, was probably slightly outnumbered. 89 00:11:52,840 --> 00:11:58,639 But ignoring advice to wait until dawn to cross the river, he ordered an immediate assault. 90 00:11:59,500 --> 00:12:07,539 He sent a squadron of Companion cavalry to ford the river, followed by a regiment of hypaspists and the Paeonian light cavalry. 91 00:12:08,840 --> 00:12:14,680 Alexander, calling on his men to show their courage, then led his right wing across the river. 92 00:12:22,000 --> 00:12:26,740 As they reached the middle of the river, the Greeks came under a hail of javelins, 93 00:12:26,980 --> 00:12:36,759 darts and arrows from the Persian line. Those that made it to the far bank were immediately charged by the Persian cavalry. 94 00:12:39,279 --> 00:12:41,339 🎶 95 00:12:43,840 --> 00:12:46,840 Alexander was in the thick of the fighting. 96 00:12:50,320 --> 00:12:54,740 “he attacked where the whole mass of their cavalry and leaders were stationed. 97 00:12:55,200 --> 00:13:03,540 Around him a desperate conflict raged... horses were jammed against horses and men against men, 98 00:13:04,740 --> 00:13:12,639 the Macedonians striving to drive the Persians away from the river bank, the Persians determined to prevent them crossing 99 00:13:13,580 --> 00:13:16,220 and to push them back into the river.” 100 00:13:18,820 --> 00:13:20,820 🎶 101 00:13:23,440 --> 00:13:30,860 Alexander's attack seemed reckless, but he was buying time for the rest of his army to cross the river, 102 00:13:31,340 --> 00:13:34,500 including the irresistible Macedonian phalanx. 103 00:13:39,120 --> 00:13:45,620 Then suddenly Alexander was fighting for his life, charged by two Persian nobles. 104 00:13:47,820 --> 00:13:52,580 “Rhoesaces rode up to Alexander and struck him on the head with his sword, 105 00:13:52,820 --> 00:14:00,360 breaking off a piece of his helmet. But the helmet broke the force of the blow, and Alexander struck him down with his lance. 106 00:14:00,679 --> 00:14:06,459 Then, from behind, Spithridates raised his sword against the king, but Black Cleitus, 107 00:14:06,799 --> 00:14:14,439 son of Dropidas, anticipated his blow, struck his arm, and cut it off, sword and all.” 108 00:14:20,539 --> 00:14:32,279 Now the Greek army was across the river, and the Persian cavalry faced a wall of Macedonian spears. Most turned and fled. 109 00:14:35,120 --> 00:14:36,019 🎶 110 00:14:38,960 --> 00:14:46,040 The speed and shock of Alexander's attack meant Persia's Greek mercenaries hadn't even had time to join the battle. 111 00:14:46,960 --> 00:14:55,240 Alexander, in a blood-rage, or possibly regarding these Greeks as traitors, ignored their appeals for mercy. 112 00:14:57,500 --> 00:15:02,399 The mercenaries were surrounded on all sides, and massacred. 113 00:15:10,019 --> 00:15:16,939 Alexander had won a great victory. Asia Minor now lay at his mercy. 114 00:15:18,240 --> 00:15:22,659 But the Persian Empire was still a land of immense wealth and power. 115 00:15:24,419 --> 00:15:28,839 Already it was mobilising its vast resources to face him. 116 00:15:29,620 --> 00:15:39,759 If Alexander was to conquer this empire and take his place in history, he'd next have to face Darius, King of Kings, himself... 117 00:15:44,580 --> 00:15:53,740 Now, as Alexander approached Sardis, capital of the Persian province of Lydia, its commander surrendered without a fight. 118 00:15:55,000 --> 00:16:01,279 But before Alexander could advance further, he needed to neutralise Persian naval power 119 00:16:03,039 --> 00:16:08,240 Persia had a powerful fleet, with major naval bases around the eastern Mediterranean - that 120 00:16:08,620 --> 00:16:12,820 could potentially cut his lines of communication back to Greece. 121 00:16:15,419 --> 00:16:21,799 Rather than challenge the Persians at sea, Alexander decided to attack their nearest bases: 122 00:16:22,480 --> 00:16:26,379 the Greek coastal cities of Miletus and Halicarnassus. 123 00:16:27,620 --> 00:16:32,919 Both put up determined resistance, but were taken by winter. 124 00:16:35,519 --> 00:16:43,720 The following spring of 333 BC, Alexander continued his advance into Lycia... and Phrygia. 125 00:16:45,159 --> 00:16:54,199 At Gordium, he was shown the legendary 'Gordian Knot' – a prophesy said that whoever could unpick it would rule all Asia. 126 00:16:54,980 --> 00:16:59,960 Alexander simply took his sword, and sliced it in half. 127 00:17:05,559 --> 00:17:13,579 Meanwhile Memnon of Rhodes, a skilled Greek general in Persian service, led Persian warships into the Aegean, 128 00:17:14,160 --> 00:17:17,580 and captured the islands of Chios and Lesbos. 129 00:17:18,839 --> 00:17:23,299 But after Memnon's sudden death from illness, the offensive was abandoned. 130 00:17:26,319 --> 00:17:32,319 The Battle of Issus 131 00:17:33,140 --> 00:17:39,300 18 months had passed since Alexander's army crossed the Hellespont and invaded the Persian Empire. 132 00:17:40,500 --> 00:17:49,539 Now Alexander led his men into Cilicia... and was soon poised to cross the Nur Mountains into Syria. 133 00:17:50,740 --> 00:18:00,400 But then the main Persian army, led by King Darius III himself, emerged behind the Greek army, to the north. 134 00:18:01,380 --> 00:18:08,480 Darius was determined to trap and destroy Alexander's army, which he outnumbered almost 2 to 1. 135 00:18:09,019 --> 00:18:15,339 So he blocked Alexander's only escape route, by moving his army to the coastal plain near Issus, 136 00:18:15,640 --> 00:18:19,420 just 6 miles wide from mountains to sea. 137 00:18:24,559 --> 00:18:34,019 The narrow battlefield would force Alexander to fight, but it also prevented Darius exploiting his huge numerical advantage. 138 00:18:35,079 --> 00:18:43,079 His army, by some estimates, was up to 100,000 strong, and contained some of the finest soldiers in his vast empire 139 00:18:43,220 --> 00:18:48,600 - including 10,000 of his own household troops, known as the Immortals. 140 00:18:51,779 --> 00:18:57,460 His best cavalry were massed on his right, towards the sea, where the ground was better for horses. 141 00:18:59,099 --> 00:19:03,939 His best infantry, his Greek mercenary hoplites, formed the centre. 142 00:19:07,200 --> 00:19:10,380 Persian infantry formed his left wing. 143 00:19:14,119 --> 00:19:21,679 Alexander deployed his own army for battle, once again entrusting his left wing, nearest the sea, to Parmenion 144 00:19:22,119 --> 00:19:24,519 , with the Greek cavalry and infantry. 145 00:19:27,059 --> 00:19:30,819 In the centre, as always, was the Macedonian phalanx. 146 00:19:33,200 --> 00:19:39,360 Alexander positioned himself and his best troops on the right wing, toward the mountain slopes – 147 00:19:39,799 --> 00:19:47,980 his elite Agriane javelin-throwers, his archers, and behind them, the Hypaspists and the Companion cavalry. 148 00:19:51,700 --> 00:19:57,259 When Alexander saw the strength of the Persian cavalry facing Parmenion on the left, 149 00:19:57,720 --> 00:20:01,420 he moved across his Thessalian cavalry to reinforce him. 150 00:20:03,920 --> 00:20:12,680 Despite his overwhelming numbers, Darius held his position behind a small river, the Pinarus, and waited for Alexander to attack. 151 00:20:15,559 --> 00:20:18,240 He didn't have to wait long. 152 00:20:20,400 --> 00:20:26,060 Alexander called out to his men, urging them to fight bravely, picking out some by name. 153 00:20:27,460 --> 00:20:32,220 Then, at the head of his army's right wing, he charged. 154 00:20:39,279 --> 00:20:45,240 Once again, the speed and shock of the Macedonian advance sent the enemy reeling back. 155 00:20:48,440 --> 00:20:53,160 But in the centre of the battlefield, the Macedonian phalanx was in trouble. 156 00:20:54,420 --> 00:20:58,820 In its effort to keep up with Alexander, its formation had become disordered. 157 00:20:59,400 --> 00:21:06,740 Now, in fierce fighting, with Darius's Greek mercenaries, the phalanx was slowly being driven back. 158 00:21:12,140 --> 00:21:19,980 Alexander, seeing the danger, regrouped, and led the Companions in a headlong charge straight at the Persian centre. 159 00:21:24,660 --> 00:21:29,019 The Greek mercenaries, threatened on their flank, were soon in disarray, 160 00:21:29,339 --> 00:21:32,619 and the Macedonian phalanx was able to resume its advance. 161 00:21:35,640 --> 00:21:40,340 Alexander fought his way towards the Great King, Darius himself. 162 00:21:43,440 --> 00:21:51,420 Rather than face this apparently mad and fearless Macedonian king, Darius fled the battlefield in his royal chariot. 163 00:21:55,140 --> 00:22:02,080 Meanwhile the Macedonian left wing, under Parmenion, was in a desperate fight against the best of the Persian cavalry. 164 00:22:04,740 --> 00:22:11,319 If the Persians could break through here, they could envelop Alexander's army, and snatch victory from the jaws of defeat. 165 00:22:12,740 --> 00:22:18,120 But Parmenion and his troops fought doggedly, and continued to hold the Persians at bay. 166 00:22:21,619 --> 00:22:30,699 As the news that Darius had fled spread among his troops, they abandoned the fight, and tried to save themselves. 167 00:22:37,640 --> 00:22:40,360 The battle turned into a massacre. 168 00:22:43,619 --> 00:22:50,279 Ptolemy, one of the Macedonian commanders, told Alexander there were so many Persian dead, 169 00:22:50,720 --> 00:22:56,200 his men had used them to fill a deep ravine, so they could cross over it. 170 00:23:03,980 --> 00:23:10,579 Son of Amun 171 00:23:12,599 --> 00:23:16,359 The Battle of Issus was a stunning victory for Alexander. 172 00:23:17,579 --> 00:23:27,299 And amongst the spoils of victory, were Darius's wife, mother, and three children, all taken alive, and well treated by Alexander. 173 00:23:30,740 --> 00:23:38,279 With the Persian field army in retreat, Alexander now turned to subduing the western territories of the Persian empire. 174 00:23:42,460 --> 00:23:47,980 The next year, 332, the coastal cities of Phoenicia submitted to Alexander 175 00:23:48,339 --> 00:23:51,720 – ending Persian naval power in the Mediterranean. 176 00:23:52,720 --> 00:23:55,839 But the island-city of Tyre resisted. 177 00:23:58,460 --> 00:24:05,140 Tyre's defenders fought bravely and skilfully – even when Alexander began building a causeway to the island, 178 00:24:05,359 --> 00:24:11,279 protected by two giant siege towers... which they counter-attacked with fire ships. 179 00:24:12,480 --> 00:24:21,259 But after seven months, the city walls were breached, and Tyre fell. Most of its citizens were killed or enslaved. 180 00:24:22,799 --> 00:24:25,579 Gaza too was taken by siege. 181 00:24:27,700 --> 00:24:31,860 Alexander continued to Pelusium, on the Nile Delta, 182 00:24:32,460 --> 00:24:39,160 where the Persian governor of Egypt surrendered the entire province to Alexander, along with the royal treasury. 183 00:24:45,039 --> 00:24:53,740 At Memphis, priests of this ancient land welcomed Alexander as their liberator from Persian rule, and crowned him Pharaoh. 184 00:24:57,400 --> 00:25:01,860 At the mouth of the Nile, he founded a new city, Alexandria... 185 00:25:02,859 --> 00:25:09,479 then travelled to the desert oracle of Siwah, where, according to some accounts, the priests welcomed 186 00:25:09,720 --> 00:25:12,660 him as son of Amun, king of the gods. 187 00:25:16,240 --> 00:25:24,259 Alexander returned east to Tyre... where in 331 BC, he received news of trouble back home. 188 00:25:26,839 --> 00:25:32,240 Despite his great victories over the Persians, many Greeks regarded Alexander as a tyrant. 189 00:25:33,920 --> 00:25:39,880 King Agis of Sparta, with Persian support, now launched a revolt against Macedonia. 190 00:25:41,339 --> 00:25:46,980 Antipater, Alexander's commander in Greece, was already dealing with rebellion in Thrace. 191 00:25:48,160 --> 00:25:54,840 But he quickly marched south... and met Agis in battle near the city of Megalopolis. 192 00:25:59,559 --> 00:26:05,019 Even the legendary Spartans were now no match for Macedonian military power. 193 00:26:10,559 --> 00:26:16,740 The Spartan army was crushed. King Agis himself was among the fallen. 194 00:26:29,599 --> 00:26:35,779 With his base in Greece secure once more, Alexander advanced towards the Persian heartlands, 195 00:26:36,559 --> 00:26:39,179 seeking a final showdown with Darius. 196 00:26:39,859 --> 00:26:44,439 He received a letter from the Persian king, offering him a fortune in gold, 197 00:26:44,940 --> 00:26:49,180 his daughter in marriage, and half his empire in exchange for peace. 198 00:26:50,480 --> 00:26:59,039 But Alexander's stunning victories, all the oracles and acclamations, had now convinced him that his destiny was to rule the world... 199 00:27:00,019 --> 00:27:08,599 He rejected the Persian king's offer. He didn't want half the empire - he was coming to take it all... 200 00:27:18,339 --> 00:27:25,879 In 334 BC, Alexander, 21 year-old ruler of the small Greek kingdom of Macedonia, 201 00:27:26,500 --> 00:27:30,299 led an invasion of the vast Persian Empire. 202 00:27:32,099 --> 00:27:40,179 It seemed impossible odds, but thanks to Greek military dominance, and Alexander's fearless leadership, 203 00:27:40,619 --> 00:27:48,359 he won two great battles against the Persians… at the River Granicus, and at Issus. 204 00:27:52,960 --> 00:28:00,640 Having subdued Persian lands west of the Euphrates River, he now headed east into the empire's heartlands, 205 00:28:01,099 --> 00:28:06,039 seeking a final showdown with the Persian King, Darius III. 206 00:28:09,119 --> 00:28:14,559 Receiving news that a great Persian army, led by Darius, had assembled at Gaugemela, 207 00:28:14,759 --> 00:28:19,119 near modern Mosul in Iraq – he made straight for it. 208 00:28:20,880 --> 00:28:30,120 This was Darius's last chance to stop Alexander – and Alexander's chance to smash Persian power once and for all. 209 00:28:31,519 --> 00:28:38,180 The Battle of Gaugamela 210 00:28:39,460 --> 00:28:45,400 Darius had chosen to fight on open ground, where his advantage in numbers would be more telling. 211 00:28:46,740 --> 00:28:54,079 His soldiers had also worked hard to clear and flatten the terrain, to make it suitable for Persian war chariots. 212 00:28:56,019 --> 00:29:01,119 By modern estimates, the Persian Army was between 50 and 80,000 strong, 213 00:29:01,680 --> 00:29:04,799 and made up of contingents from across the empire: 214 00:29:06,579 --> 00:29:09,799 infantry from Syria and Babylonia... 215 00:29:12,220 --> 00:29:16,319 cavalry from Armenia, India and Central Asia... 216 00:29:19,180 --> 00:29:26,820 up to 200 scythed chariots... even a handful of war elephants. 217 00:29:29,460 --> 00:29:35,259 Alexander's army was smaller, and may have been outnumbered by as much as two to one. 218 00:29:36,980 --> 00:29:40,000 He deployed his units in their usual formation: 219 00:29:40,859 --> 00:29:46,500 On the left flank, Thracian and Thessalian cavalry, commanded by Parmenion. 220 00:29:49,279 --> 00:29:56,799 In the centre, the Macedonian veterans of the phalanx – each armed with their 18 foot sarissa pike. 221 00:29:59,440 --> 00:30:07,720 On the right flank, Alexander with his elite cavalry, the Companions; and his best infantry, the hypaspists. 222 00:30:09,259 --> 00:30:13,960 These were the units with which Alexander planned to launch his main attack. 223 00:30:16,500 --> 00:30:22,380 Greek hoplites formed a second line, and supported both wings – which were angled back, 224 00:30:22,720 --> 00:30:25,779 to guard against encirclement by the Persians. 225 00:30:31,680 --> 00:30:38,440 The battle began when Alexander led his wing out to the right – a move that took the Persians by surprise. 226 00:30:40,220 --> 00:30:44,620 Could Alexander really be trying to encircle their huge army? 227 00:30:48,640 --> 00:30:54,900 The Persians mirrored his movement, taking troops away from their centre, to outflank Alexander, 228 00:30:55,420 --> 00:30:59,580 and prevent him leaving the area they'd cleared for the Persian chariots. 229 00:31:01,400 --> 00:31:07,920 But Alexander's unusual manoeuvre was a trap - to entice the Persians to weaken their centre. 230 00:31:08,740 --> 00:31:15,680 When he saw that it had worked, he ordered his Greek cavalry to charge, to keep the Persians fixed in position. 231 00:31:18,880 --> 00:31:22,600 A giant cavalry battle developed on the right wing. 232 00:31:24,079 --> 00:31:29,819 Darius, meanwhile, judging this to be the decisive moment, unleashed his chariots. 233 00:31:39,240 --> 00:31:43,759 But expert Agrianes javelin-throwers took out horses and crews 234 00:31:45,980 --> 00:31:52,019 – while the Greek infantry opened lanes, allowing the chariots to pass harmlessly through. 235 00:31:59,859 --> 00:32:05,199 Now Alexander led his Companion cavalry, and parts of the Macedonian phalanx, 236 00:32:05,500 --> 00:32:12,680 in a headlong charge straight at the weakened Persian centre, fighting his way towards Darius himself. 237 00:32:13,759 --> 00:32:17,920 The sudden ferocity of Alexander's assault threw the Persians into panic 238 00:32:18,299 --> 00:32:24,839 – the centre of the army broke and ran - King Darius himself leading the rout. 239 00:32:30,059 --> 00:32:38,960 But Alexander's left wing was in serious trouble – Parmenion, facing a huge onslaught by Persian cavalry, 240 00:32:39,200 --> 00:32:46,059 was virtually surrounded - Indian and Scythian horsemen had even ridden through a gap in the Greek line 241 00:32:46,900 --> 00:32:53,360 – but rather than wheeling and attacking the Greeks from behind, they'd carried straight on to loot their camp. 242 00:32:58,799 --> 00:33:02,960 Parmenion sent a desperate appeal to Alexander for help. 243 00:33:06,900 --> 00:33:13,180 The King abandoned his pursuit of Darius, regrouped, and charged the Persian right wing. 244 00:33:22,900 --> 00:33:29,820 It was the hardest and bloodiest fighting of the battle – claiming the lives of sixty of Alexander's Companions. 245 00:33:34,539 --> 00:33:42,559 Finally, as news of Darius's flight spread across the battlefield, the last Persian horsemen turned and fled. 246 00:33:48,200 --> 00:33:53,440 The Battle of Gaugamela was a stunning and complete victory for Alexander. 247 00:33:54,539 --> 00:34:02,099 According to ancient sources, he lost just a few hundred men, while the Persians lost thousands. 248 00:34:07,160 --> 00:34:16,800 Alexander had routed Darius's great army, and now the road to Babylon – the empire's main capital - lay open. 249 00:34:18,619 --> 00:34:27,380 The Macedonian king entered the great city in triumph, recognised by Persian officials as its new rightful ruler. 250 00:34:28,480 --> 00:34:35,920 So too at the city of Susa, where Alexander ceremonially took his seat upon the royal throne of Persia. 251 00:34:38,400 --> 00:34:43,059 In the Zagros mountains, at a pass known as the Persian Gates, 252 00:34:43,480 --> 00:34:47,940 a courageous Persian force held up Alexander's army for a month. 253 00:34:49,880 --> 00:34:54,099 The Greeks eventually found a mountain path that bypassed their position, 254 00:34:54,659 --> 00:34:58,079 allowing them to encircle and wipe out the defenders. 255 00:34:59,260 --> 00:35:06,440 In early 330 BC, Alexander reached Persepolis, the empire's ceremonial capital. 256 00:35:07,000 --> 00:35:13,480 Alexander wanted to appear as a liberator to the Persians – as a legitimate successor to King Darius 257 00:35:17,800 --> 00:35:25,039 - but now, he ordered Persepolis to be pillaged and burnt – retribution for the Persian invasion of Greece, 258 00:35:25,260 --> 00:35:29,900 and the burning of Athens' sacred temples in 480 BC. 259 00:35:35,340 --> 00:35:43,180 Alexander now headed north into Media, where Darius had taken refuge in the royal city of Ecbatana. 260 00:35:44,420 --> 00:35:52,099 Alexander was determined to capture Darius – but the fugitive king fled east in the hope of raising a new army 261 00:35:52,219 --> 00:35:56,399 in the provinces of Parthia, Bactria, and Sogdia. 262 00:35:58,000 --> 00:36:05,619 It was not to be. As Alexander closed in, the Persian king was murdered by one of his own governors, 263 00:36:05,940 --> 00:36:10,760 Bessus, who then proclaimed himself the empire’s new ruler. 264 00:36:13,519 --> 00:36:21,440 Alexander gave orders for Darius to be buried in the royal tombs of Persepolis, alongside his ancestors. 265 00:36:22,539 --> 00:36:26,739 Then he paused to organise his vast new empire. 266 00:36:28,199 --> 00:36:32,779 Alexander appointed viceroys to rule the provinces on his behalf, 267 00:36:33,179 --> 00:36:37,559 keeping several Persians - who had sworn loyalty - in their posts. 268 00:36:39,000 --> 00:36:46,559 Then he resumed his march east. His goal: to find and kill the usurper Bessus... 269 00:36:47,659 --> 00:36:55,920 subjugate the empire's eastern provinces... and reach the far edge of the world... 270 00:37:04,880 --> 00:37:10,480 In 330 BC, Alexander continued his march east. 271 00:37:11,900 --> 00:37:18,820 His goal: to find and kill Bessus - a Persian usurper, claiming to be the rightful king 272 00:37:19,579 --> 00:37:23,659 – and to subjugate the empire's eastern provinces... 273 00:37:28,500 --> 00:37:36,960 Alexander headed first for Aria, today part of Afghanistan, where the Persian governor Satibarzanes 274 00:37:37,320 --> 00:37:42,380 had launched a revolt – after initially pretending to submit to Alexander. 275 00:37:43,579 --> 00:37:51,059 The rebellion was crushed, and Satibarzanes killed in single combat by a Greek cavalry officer. 276 00:37:52,360 --> 00:38:01,000 Nearby, Alexander founded the city of Alexandria Ariana, modern Herat – one of around a dozen cities 277 00:38:01,099 --> 00:38:06,279 that Alexander would eventually found, almost all bearing his name. 278 00:38:09,000 --> 00:38:12,420 Alexander marched on to Phrada. 279 00:38:14,139 --> 00:38:18,679 The Macedonian court had a long tradition of plots and assassination. 280 00:38:20,460 --> 00:38:26,500 Six years before, Alexander's own father, King Philip, had been murdered by his bodyguard. 281 00:38:28,719 --> 00:38:33,239 He was now informed that Philotas, commander of his Companion Cavalry, 282 00:38:33,539 --> 00:38:37,840 had uncovered a plot to assassinate Alexander, but kept it secret. 283 00:38:40,139 --> 00:38:45,900 Philotas, and his father Parmenion, were among the most respected of Alexander's commanders, 284 00:38:46,239 --> 00:38:50,219 and had played crucial roles in all his great victories. 285 00:38:52,420 --> 00:38:58,519 But when Philotas confessed under torture, Alexander had him executed. 286 00:38:58,820 --> 00:39:06,720 then sent assassins back to Ecbatana, where Parmenion was governor, to kill him before he even heard of his son's death, 287 00:39:07,219 --> 00:39:10,159 and had a chance to turn against Alexander. 288 00:39:12,320 --> 00:39:16,740 In 329, Alexander resumed his pursuit of Bessus. 289 00:39:17,980 --> 00:39:24,639 En route, he founded the city of Alexandria Arachosia – modern Kandahar, in southern Afghanistan. 290 00:39:27,659 --> 00:39:34,619 As he reached Kunduz, Bessus was betrayed by his own men, and handed over in chains. 291 00:39:35,760 --> 00:39:41,020 Alexander sent him back to Persia for execution, as a king-slayer. 292 00:39:44,639 --> 00:39:50,960 Alexander pushed on into modern Tajikistan, where the Sogdians rose up against him. 293 00:39:53,280 --> 00:39:58,460 He had to fight off attacks by local tribes, and take several towns by assault. 294 00:40:03,219 --> 00:40:11,859 On the banks of the Jaxartes River, he founded the city of Alexandria-Eschate, meaning Alexandria 'the Furthest' 295 00:40:12,539 --> 00:40:18,300 – so-named because he had, at last, reached the limit of the Persian Empire. 296 00:40:23,039 --> 00:40:29,059 This frontier was frequently raided by nomads, known to the Greeks as Scythians. 297 00:40:30,739 --> 00:40:35,559 Alexander lured them into a decisive battle near the Jaxartes. 298 00:40:45,760 --> 00:40:51,240 The result was a crushing victory for the Macedonian king, that put an end to the raids. 299 00:40:54,000 --> 00:40:59,559 But fighting against Bactrian and Sogdian tribes continued, frustrating Alexander, 300 00:41:00,000 --> 00:41:03,820 and tying him down in a difficult guerilla war. 301 00:41:05,400 --> 00:41:10,460 Tyrant 302 00:41:11,019 --> 00:41:15,780 By now, many of the Macedonian troops were unhappy with Alexander. 303 00:41:16,619 --> 00:41:22,940 Most had not seen their homes in years, but their king seemed bent on conquest without end. 304 00:41:23,719 --> 00:41:29,759 What was worse, he'd begun to adopt the rituals and dress of their defeated Persian enemy 305 00:41:30,239 --> 00:41:33,839 – customs they viewed as effeminate, and decadent. 306 00:41:39,440 --> 00:41:47,880 At Maracanda, modern Samarkand, after a furious, drunken argument, Alexander killed Cleitus the Black. 307 00:41:50,960 --> 00:41:58,280 Cleitus had been one of Alexander's best generals, and the man who'd saved his life at the Battle of the Granicus. 308 00:41:59,739 --> 00:42:06,819 Alexander was full of remorse, but his growing arrogance was alienating more and more old comrades. 309 00:42:09,199 --> 00:42:14,480 When he tried to make his countrymen perform the traditional Persian ritual of proskynesis 310 00:42:15,159 --> 00:42:19,500 – prostrating themselves before the king - he crossed a line. 311 00:42:20,940 --> 00:42:29,700 To Greeks this was blasphemy – only a god was worthy of such respect - and Alexander was forced to back down. 312 00:42:33,139 --> 00:42:42,539 In Bactria, another plot to assassinate Alexander was uncovered. This time the ringleader was a royal page 313 00:42:43,059 --> 00:42:46,980 – one of the sons of Macedonian nobility who attended the king. 314 00:42:48,380 --> 00:42:57,680 Hermolaus had become murderously bitter towards Alexander over a perceived injustice. He and his accomplices were tortured, 315 00:42:58,159 --> 00:43:00,639 and then stoned to death. 316 00:43:02,880 --> 00:43:08,800 Callisthenes, Alexander's official historian, was also implicated in the conspiracy. 317 00:43:10,219 --> 00:43:13,659 He was thrown in prison, where he later died. 318 00:43:15,099 --> 00:43:25,199 That summer, in 327 - according to legend - Alexander became captivated by the beauty of Roxana, daughter of a Bactrian lord. 319 00:43:26,559 --> 00:43:33,199 Their marriage was also a sound political move, helping to end local revolt against his rule 320 00:43:33,840 --> 00:43:40,720 – and allowing him to continue his advance... into modern Pakistan, and India. 321 00:43:44,820 --> 00:43:51,460 To the Edge of the World 322 00:43:51,920 --> 00:44:00,920 Alexander now prepared to subdue the Persian Empire's most eastern provinces, which had yet to recognise his kingship. 323 00:44:04,900 --> 00:44:12,079 To do so he would first have to cross the Hindu Kush mountains and reach the Indus river valley. 324 00:44:18,380 --> 00:44:26,400 Advancing in two columns, his army won a series of skirmishes against the Aspasii and Assaceni, 325 00:44:27,760 --> 00:44:32,060 as they fought their way into what's now the Swat Valley of northern Pakistan. 326 00:44:34,480 --> 00:44:40,000 After a fierce siege, Alexander took the Assacenian capital of Massaga. 327 00:44:41,760 --> 00:44:50,360 According to legend it was ruled by a beautiful queen, Cleophis, who bore Alexander a son, and was allowed to keep her throne. 328 00:44:53,119 --> 00:44:58,960 The ruler of Taxila, near modern Islamabad, had formed an alliance with Alexander. 329 00:45:00,119 --> 00:45:06,500 Together they marched to face Porus, king of Pauravas, at the Battle of the Hydaspes. 330 00:45:11,360 --> 00:45:19,400 It was Alexander's costliest battle, as Porus's war elephants inflicted terrible casualties amongst the Greeks. 331 00:45:20,940 --> 00:45:30,079 But despite Porus's fearless leadership, the battle ended in a decisive victory for Alexander, winning him control of the Punjab. 332 00:45:32,780 --> 00:45:42,180 Alexander wanted to push on into India, to reach the great river which ancient Greek geographers said formed the edge of the world. 333 00:45:43,139 --> 00:45:49,359 But at the River Hyphasis, known today as the Beas, his army mutinied. 334 00:45:52,079 --> 00:46:00,719 His men had marched thousands of miles, fought countless battles, and not seen their homes in 8 years. 335 00:46:01,599 --> 00:46:05,980 They'd heard rumours of gigantic armies waiting for them in India. 336 00:46:07,000 --> 00:46:09,659 They refused to go any further. 337 00:46:14,940 --> 00:46:19,360 Alexander was furious, but had to turn the army around. 338 00:46:20,300 --> 00:46:25,860 He followed the rivers of the Punjab to the sea – a journey that took 10 months. 339 00:46:26,699 --> 00:46:35,219 On the way, he defeated the Mahlians, but while leading the assault on their capital, was wounded in the chest and nearly killed. 340 00:46:41,880 --> 00:46:50,140 After reaching the coast, part of the army under Nearchus, she boarded and returned by sea to Persia. 341 00:46:51,000 --> 00:46:56,139 sailing through the Strait Hormuz and swam to the Persian Gulf. 342 00:46:58,960 --> 00:47:06,699 It was one of the great ancient voyages of exploration, as these waters had been previously unknown to Greeks. 343 00:47:09,599 --> 00:47:15,819 Meanwhile Alexander led the rest of the army back by land through the Gedrosian desert, 344 00:47:16,179 --> 00:47:25,019 today in southern Pakistan. But extreme heat and shortages of food and water led to terrible suffering, 345 00:47:25,400 --> 00:47:27,940 and many deaths among his army. 346 00:47:30,139 --> 00:47:36,299 On his return to Persia, Alexander executed several of his viceroys and governors 347 00:47:37,059 --> 00:47:44,119 - men accused of ruling unjustly, and robbing temples and tombs, during his long absence in the east. 348 00:47:47,380 --> 00:47:54,920 At Susa, he arranged a magnificent mass-marriage of Macedonian officers to 80 Persian noblewomen, 349 00:47:55,440 --> 00:47:58,539 to strengthen bonds between his two kingdoms. 350 00:47:59,079 --> 00:48:03,380 Alexander himself married two Persian princesses. 351 00:48:04,059 --> 00:48:13,779 He also paid all his soldiers debts, and ordered 30,000 youths from across the empire to be trained in the Macedonian art of war. 352 00:48:19,880 --> 00:48:23,900 But at Opis, his Macedonian troops mutinied. 353 00:48:25,059 --> 00:48:34,019 They were offended by Alexander's apparent preference for Persian advisors and Persian ways. Alexander had the ringleaders executed, 354 00:48:34,320 --> 00:48:38,900 and made a speech to the men, reminding them of the glories they'd won together, 355 00:48:39,480 --> 00:48:43,599 and leading eventually to an emotional reconciliation. 356 00:48:47,820 --> 00:48:54,940 At Ecbatana, Alexander's closest and most trusted friend, Hephaestion, died of fever. 357 00:48:56,360 --> 00:49:05,640 The king was grief stricken, went days without eating, and ordered a period of public mourning across the empire. 358 00:49:10,159 --> 00:49:15,619 Alexander waged a successful campaign against the mountain raiders of Cossaea, 359 00:49:16,300 --> 00:49:19,700 who not even the Persian kings had been able to subdue. 360 00:49:21,900 --> 00:49:26,559 Returning to Babylon, he was met by embassies from distant peoples, 361 00:49:26,980 --> 00:49:41,039 come to recognise his greatness – Aethiopians, Libyans, European Scythians, Lucanians, Etruscans, Gauls and Iberians. 362 00:49:44,139 --> 00:49:48,659 Alexander's Bactrian wife Roxana was now pregnant... 363 00:49:49,380 --> 00:49:56,039 But as he planned his next campaign, to Arabia and beyond, he developed a sudden fever, 364 00:49:57,199 --> 00:50:02,259 and died days later, aged just 32. 365 00:50:05,219 --> 00:50:15,919 The cause of Alexander's death has never been established. It may have been malaria, cholera, typhus... or poison. 366 00:50:18,960 --> 00:50:25,079 The Successors 367 00:50:26,280 --> 00:50:36,180 Alexander died undefeated in battle. His reputation as a brilliant, fearless and daring military commander remains undimmed. 368 00:50:37,219 --> 00:50:45,119 His decade long campaign created one of the largest empires ever known, stretching from Greece to Pakistan. 369 00:50:46,139 --> 00:50:52,420 But it was vast and unstable, held together only by his own brilliance and name. 370 00:50:53,380 --> 00:50:59,920 Alexander left no plans for his succession, and his generals soon began fighting among themselves 371 00:51:00,400 --> 00:51:03,160 to carve out their own empires. 372 00:51:04,420 --> 00:51:10,680 In the Wars of the Successors, Alexander's widow Roxana and his young son were murdered. 373 00:51:13,239 --> 00:51:23,119 His own gold sarcophagus, en route to Macedonia for burial was hijacked, and ended up in Alexandria, in Egypt. 374 00:51:23,860 --> 00:51:29,660 Today, it's location remains one of the world's great unsolved mysteries. 375 00:51:31,860 --> 00:51:38,519 Few men have ever had such an impact on the course of history as Alexander the Great. 376 00:51:39,500 --> 00:51:44,519 The breath-taking achievements of his short life ushered in the Hellenistic Age, 377 00:51:45,039 --> 00:51:51,659 as Greek ideas spread across the territory of his former empire, fusing with local traditions to trigger 378 00:51:51,880 --> 00:51:55,940 new developments in art, science, government and language. 379 00:51:59,340 --> 00:52:04,079 Some of the successor kingdoms to his great empire were short-lived 380 00:52:04,500 --> 00:52:19,579 – others endured for centuries.. but all, in turn, would fall to new forces... and in the west, to the rising power of Rome. 381 00:52:28,019 --> 00:52:34,780 Research and artwork for this video comes from Osprey Publishing's extensive range of books on ancient history. 382 00:52:35,380 --> 00:52:42,780 Every Osprey book examines a particular battle, campaign or combat unit in authoritative, meticulous detail. 383 00:52:43,500 --> 00:52:49,039 And with more than 3,000 titles, they cover everything from ancient warfare to modern conflict. 384 00:52:49,460 --> 00:52:52,760 Visit their website to see their online catalogue. 385 00:52:53,800 --> 00:52:59,880 Thank you to all the Patreon supporters who made this video possible, and to the channel ‘Invicta’ 386 00:53:00,420 --> 00:53:05,139 – find out more about key moments from the past in their ‘Moments in History’ series. 387 00:53:07,019 --> 00:53:10,360 Joachim wrote and translated 388 00:53:15,400 --> 00:53:15,900 He writes and translates into several languages: Joachim Moczko