The Legitimation of Conquest

Monarchical Representation and the Art of Government in the Empire of Alexander the Great

The Legitimation of Conquest

Monarchical Representation and the Art of Government in the Empire of Alexander the Great

€80.00*

Prices incl. VAT, if applicable plus handling costs

Delivery to Germany only. Use our contact form for foreign inquiries.

available, immediately via download

Within a single decade (334–325 BC) Alexander III of Macedon conquered much of the known world of his time, creating an empire that stretched from the Balkans to India and southern Egypt. His clear intention of establishing permanent dominion over this huge and culturally diverse territory raises questions about whether and how he tried to legitimate his position and about the reactions of various groups subject to his rule: Macedonians, Greeks, the army, indigenous elites. Starting from Max Weber's "Herrschaftssoziologie", the 15 authors discuss Alexander's strategies of legitimation as well as the motives his subjects may have had for offering him obedience. The analysis of monarchical representation and political communication in these case-studies on symbolic performances and economic, administrative and religious measures sheds new light on the reasons for the swift Macedonian conquest: It appears that Alexander and his staff owed their success not only to their military talent but also to their communication skills and their capacity to cater to the expectations of their audiences.

Series Studies in Ancient Monarchies
ISBN 978-3-515-12783-7
Media type eBook - PDF
Edition number 1.
Copyright year 2020
Publisher Franz Steiner Verlag
Length 363 pages
Illustrations 9 b/w figs.
Language English
Copy protection digital watermark