Dividing the Spoils: The War for Alexander the Great's Empire (45 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
9.32Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Briant, P., 1990, “The Seleucid Kingdom and the Achaemenid Empire,” in P. Bilde et al. (eds.),
Religion and Religious Practice in the Seleucid Kingdom
(Aarhus: Aarhus University Press), 40–65.

Briant, P., 2002,
From Cyrus to Alexander: A History of the Persian Empire
, trans. P. Daniels (Winona Lake, Ind.: Eisenbrauns).

Briant, P., and Joannès, F. (eds.), 2006,
La transition entre l’empire achéménide et les royaumes hellénistiques
(Paris: de Boccard).

*Briant, P., 2010,
Alexander the Great and His Empire: A Short Introduction
, trans. A. Kuhrt (Princeton: Princeton University Press).

*Bringmann, K., 1994, “The King as Benefactor: Some Remarks on Ideal Kingship in the Age of Hellenism,” in Bulloch et al. 1994, 7–24.

Brunt, P., 1975, “Alexander, Barsine and Heracles,”
Rivista di Filologia e d’Instruzione Classica
103, 22–34.

Bugh, G. (ed.), 2006a,
The Cambridge Companion to the Hellenistic World
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press).

Bugh, G., 2006b, “Hellenistic Military Developments,” in Bugh 2006a, 265–94.

Bulloch, A., et al. (eds.), 1994,
Images and Ideologies: Self-Definition in the Hellenistic World
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994).

Burn, L., 2005,
Hellenistic Art from Alexander the Great to Augustus
(Los Angeles: Getty Publications).

Burstein, S., 1974,
Outpost of Hellenism: The Emergence of Heraclea on the Black Sea
(Berkeley: University of California Press).

Burstein, S., 1980, “Lysimachus and the Greek Cities of Asia: The Case of Miletus,”
Ancient World
3, 73–9.

Burstein, S., 1984, “Lysimachus the
Gazophylax
: A Modern Scholarly Myth?,” in W. Heckel and R. Sullivan (eds.),
Ancient Coins of the Graeco-Roman World
(Waterloo: Wilfred Laurier University Press), 57–68.

Burstein, S., 1986a, “Lysimachus and the Greek Cities: The Early Years,”
Ancient World
14, 19–24.

Burstein, S., 1986b, “Lysimachus and the Greek Cities: A Problem in Interpretation,”
Ancient Macedonia
4, 133–38.

Burstein, S., 2003/2008, “The Legacy of Alexander: New Ways of Being Greek in the Hellenistic Period,” in W. Heckel and L. Tritle (eds.),
Crossroads of History: The Age of Alexander
(Claremont: Regina), 217–42 (repr. as “Greek Identity in the
Hellenistic Period,” in K. Zacharia (ed.),
Hellenisms: Culture, Identity, and Ethnicity from Antiquity to Modernity
(Aldershot: Ashgate), 59–77).

Canfora, L., 1990,
The Vanished Library: A Wonder of the Ancient World
(Berkeley: University of California Press).

Carlier, P., 2000, “Homeric and Macedonian Kingship,” in R. Brock and S. Hodkinson (eds.),
Alternatives to Athens: Varieties of Political Organization and Community in Ancient Greece
(Oxford: Oxford University Press), 259–68.

Carlsen, J., et al. (eds.), 1993,
Alexander the Great: Reality and Myth
(Rome: “L’Erma” di Bretschneider).

Carney, E., 1983, “Regicide in Macedonia,”
La Parola del Passato
38, 260–72.

Carney, E., 1994, “Olympias, Adea Eurydice, and the End of the Argead Dynasty,” in Worthington 1994a, 357–80.

Carney, E., 1995, “Women and
Basileia
: Legitimacy and Female Political Action in Macedonia,”
Classical Journal
90, 367–91.

Carney, E., 1999, “The Curious Death of the Antipatrid Dynasty,”
Ancient Macedonia
6, 209–16.

*Carney, E., 2000a,
Women and Monarchy in Macedonia
(Norman: University of Oklahoma Press).

Carney, E., 2000b, “The Initiation of Cult for Royal Macedonian Women,”
Classical Philology
95, 21–43.

Carney, E., 2001, “The Trouble with Philip Arrhidaeus,”
Ancient History Bulletin
15, 63–89.

Carney, E., 2004, “Women and Military Leadership in Macedonia,”
Ancient World
35, 184–95.

*Carney, E., 2006,
Olympias, Mother of Alexander the Great
(London: Routledge).

Carney, E., and Ogden, D. (eds.), 2010,
Philip II and Alexander the Great: Father and Son, Lives and Afterlives
(New York: Oxford University Press).

Cartledge, P., 2000, “Greek Political Thought: The Historical Context,” in C. Rowe and M. Schofield (eds.),
The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Political Thought
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press), 11–22.

Cartledge, P., 2004,
Alexander the Great: The Hunt for a New Past
(London: Macmillan).

Cartledge, P., et al. (eds.), 1997,
Hellenistic Constructs: Essays in Culture, History, and Historiography
(Berkeley: University of California Press).

Cawkwell, G., 1994, “The Deification of Alexander the Great: A Note,” in Worthington 1994a, 293–306.

*Chamoux, F., 2003,
Hellenistic Civilization
, trans. M. Roussel (Oxford: Blackwell).

Champion, J., 2009,
Pyrrhus of Epirus
(Barnsley: Pen & Sword).

Chaniotis, A., 2003, “The Divinity of Hellenistic Rulers,” in Erskine 2003, 431–45.

*Chaniotis, A., 2005,
War in the Hellenistic World
(Oxford: Blackwell).

Clarysse, W., 1985, “Greeks and Egyptians in the Ptolemaic Army and Administration,”
Aegyptus
65, 57–66.

Cohen, G., 1978,
The Seleucid Colonies: Studies in Founding, Administration and Organization
(Wiesbaden: Steiner = Historia Einzelschriften 30).

Cole, S.G., 1984,
Theoi Megaloi: The Cult of the Great Gods at Samothrace
(Leiden: Brill).

Collins, A., 2001, “The Office of Chiliarch under Alexander and the Successors,”
Phoenix
55, 259–83.

Collins, N., 1997, “The Various Fathers of Ptolemy I,”
Mnemosyne
ser. 4, 50, 436–76.

*Collins, N., 2000,
The Library in Alexandria and the Bible in Greek
(Leiden: Brill).

Connor, P. (ed.), 1994,
Ancient Macedonia: An Australian Symposium
(Sydney: Meditarch =
Mediterranean Archaeology
7, 1–126).

*Cribb, J., and Herrmann, G. (eds.), 2007,
After Alexander: Central Asia before Islam
(Oxford: Oxford University Press =
Proceedings of the British Academy
133).

Decleva Caizzi, F., 1994, “The Porch and the Garden: Early Hellenistic Images of the Philosophical Life,” in Bulloch et al. 1994, 303–29.

Delev, P., 2000, “Lysimachus, the Getae and Archaeology,”
Classical Quarterly
n.s. 50, 384–401.

Delev, P., 2003, “Lysimachus and the Third War of the Successors (314–311
BC
),” in H. Angelova (ed.),
Thracia Pontica VI.2
(Sofia: Center for Underwater Archaeology), 63–70.

Depuydt, L., 1997, “The Time of Death of Alexander the Great: 11 June 323
BC
(–322), ca. 4:00–5:00 pm,”
Die Welt des Orients
28, 117–35 (with an appendix in id.,
From Xerxes’ Murder (465) to Arridaios’ Execution (317): Updates to Achaemenid Chronology
(Oxford: Archaeopress, 2008), 47–51).

Devine, A. M., 1984, “Diodorus’ Account of the Battle of Gaza,”
Acta Classica
27, 31–40.

Devine, A. M., 1985a, “Diodorus’ Account of the Battle of Paraitacene (317 b.c.),”
Ancient World
12, 75–86.

Devine, A. M., 1985b, “Diodorus’ Account of the Battle of Gabiene,”
Ancient World
12, 87–96.

Dimitrov, D., and
i
ikova, M., 1978,
The Thracian City of Seuthopolis
, trans. M. P. Alexieva (Oxford: Archaeopress).

*Dixon, M., 2007, “Corinth, Greek Freedom, and the Diadochoi, 323–301
BC
,” in Heckel et al. 2007, 151–78.

Dmitriev, S., 2004, “Alexander’s Exiles Decree,”
Klio
86, 34–81.

Dmitriev, S., 2007, “The Last Marriage and the Death of Lysimachus,”
Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies
47, 135–49.

Dreyer, B., 2009, “Heroes, Cults, and Divinity,” in Heckel/Tritle 2009, 218–34.

Eckstein, A., 2009, “Hellenistic Monarchy in Theory and Practice,” in R. Balot (ed.),
A Companion to Greek and Roman Political Thought
(Oxford: Blackwell), 247–65.

*Eddy, S., 1961,
The King Is Dead: Studies in the Near Eastern Resistance to Hellenism 334–31
BC
(Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press).

Ehrenberg, V., 1969,
The Greek State
(2nd ed., London: Methuen).

Ellis, W., 1994,
Ptolemy of Egypt
(London: Routledge).

Engels, D., 1978a, “A Note on the Death of Alexander,”
Classical Philology
73, 224–28.

Engels, D., 1978b,
Alexander the Great and the Logistics of the Macedonian Army
(Berkeley: University of California Press).

Epplett, C., 2007, “War Elephants in the Hellenistic World,” in Heckel et al. 2007, 209–32.

Errington, R. M., 1970, “From Babylon to Triparadeisos: 323–320
BC
,”
Journal of Hellenic Studies
90, 49–77.

Errington, R. M., 1974, “Macedonian ‘Royal Style’ and Its Historical Significance,”
Journal of Hellenic Studies
94, 20–37.

Errington, R. M., 1976, “Alexander in the Hellenistic World,” in E. Badian (ed.),
Alexandre le Grand: Image et réalité
(Geneva: Fondation Hardt), 137–79.

Errington, R. M., 1977, “Diodorus Siculus and the Chronology of the Early Diadochi,”
Hermes
105, 478–504.

Errington, R. M., 1978, “The Nature of the Macedonian State under the Monarchy,”
Chiron
8, 77–133.

Errington, R. M., 1990,
A History of Macedonia
, trans. C. Errington (Berkeley: University of California Press).

*Errington, R. M., 2008,
A History of the Hellenistic World
(Oxford: Blackwell).

*Erskine, A., 1995, “Culture and Power in Ptolemaic Egypt: The Museum and Library of Alexandria,”
Greece and Rome
42, 38–48.

*Erskine, A., 2002, “Life after Death: Alexandria and the Body of Alexander,”
Greece and Rome
49, 163–79.

Erskine, A. (ed.), 2003,
A Companion to the Hellenistic World
(Oxford: Blackwell).

Ferguson, J., 1973,
The Heritage of Hellenism
(London: Thames and Hudson).

Other books

The Elusive Flame by Kathleen E. Woodiwiss
Younger Than Yesterday by Bliss, Harper
My Angel by Christine Young
June Bug by Jess Lourey
The Key West Anthology by C. A. Harms
The Paris Architect: A Novel by Charles Belfoure
The Sword of Morning Star by Richard Meade