Dividing the Spoils: The War for Alexander the Great's Empire (46 page)

Read Dividing the Spoils: The War for Alexander the Great's Empire Online

Authors: Robin Waterfield

Tags: #History, #Ancient, #General, #Military, #Social History

BOOK: Dividing the Spoils: The War for Alexander the Great's Empire
12.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Ferguson, J., 1975,
Utopias in the Classical World
(London: Thames and Hudson).

Ferguson, W. S., 1948, “Demetrius Poliorcetes and the Hellenic League,”
Hesperia
17, 112–36.

Fraser, P., 1972,
Ptolemaic Alexandria
, 3 vols. (Oxford: Oxford University Press).

Fraser, P., 1996,
Cities of Alexander the Great
(Oxford: Oxford University Press).

Fredricksmeyer, E., 1979, “Divine Honors for Philip II,”
Transactions of the American Philological Association
109, 39–61.

Fredricksmeyer, E., 1981, “On the Background of the Ruler Cult,” in H. J. Dell (ed.),
Ancient Macedonian Studies in Honor of Charles F. Edson
(Thessaloniki: Institute for Balkan Studies), 145–56.

Fredricksmeyer, E., 2000, “Alexander the Great and the Kingdom of Asia,” in Bosworth/Baynham 2000, 136–66.

Frösén, J. (ed.), 1997,
Early Hellenistic Athens: Symptoms of a Change
(Helsinki: Finnish Institute at Athens).

Gabbert, J., 1997,
Antigonos II Gonatas: A Political Biography
(London: Routledge). Garlan, Y., 1984, “War and Siegecraft,” in Walbank et al. 1984, 353–62.

Goukowsky, P., 1978/1981,
Essai sur les origines du mythe d’Alexandre, 336–270 av. J.-C
., 2 vols. (Nancy: Université de Nancy).

Grainger, J., 1990a,
The Cities of Seleukid Syria
(Oxford: Oxford University Press).

*Grainger, J., 1990b,
Seleukos Nikator: Constructing a Hellenistic Kingdom
(London: Routledge).

*Grainger, J., 1992,
Hellenistic Phoenicia
(Oxford: Oxford University Press).

Grainger, J., 1999,
The League of the Aetolians
(Leiden: Brill).

Grainger, J., 2007,
Alexander the Great Failure: The Collapse of the Macedonian Empire
(New York: Continuum).

*Green, P., 1990,
Alexander to Actium: The Historical Evolution of the Hellenistic Age
(Berkeley: University of California Press).

Green, P., 1991,
Alexander of Macedon, 356–323
BC
: A Historical Biography
(Berkeley: University of California Press).

*Green, P. (ed.), 1993,
Hellenistic History and Culture
(Berkeley: University of California Press).

Green, P., 2003, “Delivering the Go(o)ds: Demetrius Poliorcetes and Hellenistic Divine Kingship,” in G. Bakewell and J. Sickinger (eds.),
Gestures: Essays in Ancient History, Literature and Philosophy Presented to Alan L. Boegehold
(Oxford: Oxbow, 2003), 258–77.

Green, P., 2007,
The Hellenistic Age: A Short History
(New York: The Modern Library).

Greenwalt, W., 1984, “The Search for Arrhidaeus,”
Ancient World
10, 69–77.

Greenwalt, W., 1988, “Argaeus, Ptolemy II and Alexander’s Corpse,”
Ancient History Bulletin
2, 39–41.

Greenwalt, W., 1989, “Polygamy and Succession in Argead Macedonia,”
Arethusa
22, 19–43.

Greenwalt, W., 1999, “Argead Name Changes,”
Ancient Macedonia
6, 453–62.

Greenwalt, W., 2010, “Argead
Dunasteia
during the Reigns of Philip II and Alexander III: Aristotle Reconsidered,” in Carney/Ogden 2010, 151–63 (and endnotes).

Griffith, G. T., 1935/1984,
The Mercenaries of the Hellenistic World
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press; repr. Chicago: Ares Press).

Griffith, G. T. (ed.), 1966,
Alexander the Great: The Main Problems
(Cambridge: Heffer).

Gruen, E., 1985, “The Coronation of the Diadochoi,” in J. Eadie and J. Ober (eds.),
The Craft of the Ancient Historian: Essays in Honor of C. G. Starr
(Lanham: University Press of America), 253–71.

Gruen, E., 1993, “The Polis in the Hellenistic World,” in R. Rosen and J. Farrell (eds.),
Nomodeiktes: Studies in Honor of Martin Ostwald
(Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press), 339–54.

*Gutzwiller, K., 2007,
A Guide to Hellenistic Literature
(Oxford: Blackwell). Habicht, C., 1970,
Gottmenschentum und griechische Städte
(2nd ed., Munich: Beck).

*Habicht, C., 1997,
Athens from Alexander to Antony
, trans. D. Schneider (Cambridge: Harvard University Press).

Hadley, R. A., 1974, “Royal Propaganda of Seleucus I and Lysimachus,”
Journal of Hellenic Studies
94, 50–65.

Hadot, P., 2002, “The Hellenistic Schools,” ch. 7 (pp. 91–145) of
What Is Ancient Philosophy?
, trans. M. Chase (Cambridge: Harvard University Press).

Hahm, D., 2000, “Kings and Constitutions: Hellenistic Theories,” in C. Rowe and M. Schofield (eds.),
The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Political Thought
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 457–76.

Hamilton, J. R., 1984, “The Origins of Ruler-Cult,”
Prudentia
16, 3–16.

Hammond, N. G. L., 1984, “Alexander’s Veterans after His Death,”
Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies
25, 51–61.

Hammond, N. G. L., 1985, “Some Macedonian Offices
c
. 336–309
BC
,”
Journal of Hellenic Studies
105, 156–60.

Hammond, N. G. L., 1988, “The Royal Journal of Alexander,”
Historia
37, 129–50.

Hammond, N. G. L., 1989a,
The Macedonian State: The Origins, Institutions, and History
(Oxford: Oxford University Press).

Hammond, N. G. L., 1989b,
Alexander the Great: King, Commander and Statesman
(2nd ed., Bristol: Bristol Classical Press).

Hammond, N. G. L., 1989c, “Arms and the King: The Insignia of Alexander the Great,”
Phoenix
43, 217–24.

Hammond, N. G. L., 1993, “The Macedonian Imprint on the Hellenistic World,” in Green 1993, 12–23 (with a response by E. Borza, 23–35).

Hammond, N. G. L., 1999, “The Nature of the Hellenistic States,”
Ancient Macedonia
6, 483–88.

Hammond, N. G. L., 2000, “The Continuity of Macedonian Institutions and the Macedonian Kingdoms of the Hellenistic Era,”
Historia
49, 141–60.

*Hammond, N. G. L., Griffith, G. T., and Walbank, F. W., 1972/1979/1988,
A History of Macedonia
, 3 vols. (Oxford: Oxford University Press). The third volume, by Hammond and Walbank, is of most relevance to this book.

Hatzopoulos, M., 1996,
Macedonian Institutions under the Kings: A Historical and Epigraphical Study
, 2 vols. (Athens: Center for Greek and Roman Antiquity).

Hauben, H., 1974, “A Royal Toast in 302
BC
,”
Ancient Society
5, 105–17.

Hauben, H., 1977a, “The First War of the Successors (321
BC
): Chronological and Historical Problems,”
Ancient Society
8, 85–120.

Hauben, H., 1977b, “Rhodes, Alexander and the Diadochi from 333/2–304
BC
,”
Historia
26, 307–39.

Heckel, W., 1982, “The Career of Antigenes,”
Symbolae Osloenses
57, 57–67.

Heckel, W., 1985, “The Macedonian Veterans in Kilikia,”
Liverpool Classical Monthly
10, 109–10.

Heckel, W., 1988,
The Last Days and Testament of Alexander the Great: A Prosopographic Study
(Stuttgart: Steiner =
Historia
Einzelschriften 56).

*Heckel, W., 1992,
The Marshals of Alexander’s Empire
(London: Routledge, 1992). [Much of the material of this book is repeated in id.,
Who’s Who in the Age of Alexander: Prosopography of Alexander’s Empire
(Oxford: Blackwell, 2006).]

Heckel, W., 1999, “The Politics of Antipatros, 324–319
BC
,”
Ancient Macedonia
6, 489–98.

Heckel, W., 2002, “The Politics of Distrust: Alexander and His Successors,” in D. Ogden (ed.),
The Hellenistic World: New Perspectives
(London: Duckworth), 81–95.

Heckel, W., 2007, “The Earliest Evidence for the Plot to Poison Alexander,” in Heckel et al. 2007, 265–75.

*Heckel, W., and Tritle, L. (eds.), 2009,
Alexander the Great: A New History
(Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell).

Heckel, W., et al. (eds.), 2007,
Alexander’s Empire: Formulation to Decay
(Claremont: Regina).

Herman, G., 1980–81, “The ‘Friends’ of the Early Hellenistic Rulers: Servants or Officials?”
Talanta
12–13, 103–49.

Herman, G., 1997, “The Court Society of the Hellenistic Age,” in Cartledge et al. 1997, 199–224.

Hölbl, G., 2000,
A History of the Ptolemaic Empire
, trans. T. Saavedra (London: Routledge).

Holt, F., 1988,
Alexander the Great and Bactria: The Formation of a Greek Frontier in Central Asia
(Leiden: Brill).

Holt, F., 1999,
Thundering Zeus: The Making of Hellenistic Bactria
(Berkeley: University of California Press).

Hope Simpson, R., 1954, “The Political Circumstances of the Peace of 311
BC
,”
Journal of Hellenic Studies
74, 25–31.

Hope Simpson, R., 1955, “Ptolemaeus’ Invasion of Greece in 313
BC
,”
Mnemosyne
ser. 4, 8, 34–7.

Hope Simpson, R., 1957, “Antigonus, Polyperchon and the Macedonian Regency,”
Historia
6, 371–73.

Hope Simpson, R., 1959, “Antigonus the One-Eyed and the Greeks,”
Historia
8, 385–409.

Howe, S., 2002,
Empire: A Very Short Introduction
(Oxford: Oxford University Press).

*Hughes Fowler, B., 1989,
The Hellenistic Aesthetic
(Madison: University of Wisconsin Press).

Hunter, R., 2003, “Literature and Its Contexts,” in Erskine 2003, 477–93.

Invernizzi, A., 1996, “Seleucia on the Tigris: Centre and Periphery in Seleucid Asia,” in P. Bilde et al. (eds.),
Centre and Periphery in the Hellenistic World
(2nd ed., Aarhus: Aarhus University Press), 230–50.

Jenkins, G., 1967, “The Monetary Systems in the Early Hellenistic Time with Special Regard to the Economic Policy of the Ptolemaic Kings,” in A. Kindler (ed.),
Proceedings of the International Numismatic Convention, Jerusalem 1963
(Tel Aviv: Schocken), 53–74.

Johnson, C., 2000, “Ptolemy I’s Epiklesis
Soter
: Origin and Definition,”
Ancient History Bulletin
14, 101–6.

Johnson, C., 2002, “
OGIS
98 and the Divinization of the Ptolemies,”
Historia
5, 112–16.

Jones, A. H. M., 1940,
The Greek City from Alexander to Justinian
(Oxford: Oxford University Press).

Jordan, D., 1980, “Two Inscribed Lead Tablets from a Well in the Athenian Kerameikos,”
Mitteilungen des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts: Athenische Abteilung
95, 225–39.

Kertész, I., 1974, “Ptolemy I and the Battle of Gaza,”
Studia Aegyptica
, 231–41.

Koenen, L., 1994, “The Ptolemaic King as a Religious Figure,” in Bulloch et al. 1994, 25–115.

Kuhrt, A., 1996, “The Seleucid Kings and Babylonia: New Perspectives,” in P. Bilde et al. (eds.),
Aspects of Hellenistic Kingship
(Aarhus: Aarhus University Press), 41–54.

Kuhrt, A., and Sherwin-White, S., 1994, “The Transition from Achaemenid to Seleucid Rule in Babylonia: Revolution or Evolution?,”
Achaemenid History
8, 311–27.

*Kuhrt, A., and Sherwin-White, S. (eds.), 1988,
Hellenism in the East: The Interaction of Greek and Non-Greek Civilizations from Syria to Central Asia after Alexander
(Berkeley: University of California Press).

Landucci Gattinoni, F., 1992,
Lisimaco di Tracia: Un sovrano nella prospettiva del primo ellenismo
(Milan: Jaca, 1992).

Landucci Gattinoni, F., 2003,
L’arte del potere: Vita e opere di Cassandro di Macedonia
(Stuttgart: Steiner =
Historia
Einzelschriften 171).

Landucci Gattinoni, F., 2009, “Cassander’s Wife and Heirs,” in Wheatley/Hannah 2009, 261–75.

Landucci Gattinoni, F., 2010, “Cassander and the Legacy of Philip II and Alexander III in Diodorus’
Library
,” in Carney/Ogden 2010, 113–21 (and endnotes).

Other books

Deep Water by Corris, Peter
An Unlikely Duchess by Mary Balogh
All I Desire is Steven by James L. Craig
Marianne Surrenders by James, Marco
Three Women by March Hastings
The courts of chaos by Roger Zelazny