Alexander

A History of the Origin and Growth of the Art Of War from the Earliest Times to the Battle of Ipsus, B.C. 301, With a Detailed Account of the Campaigns of the Great Macedonian

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Last edited by VacuumBot
August 4, 2013 | History

Alexander

A History of the Origin and Growth of the Art Of War from the Earliest Times to the Battle of Ipsus, B.C. 301, With a Detailed Account of the Campaigns of the Great Macedonian

  • 1.0 (1 rating) ·
  • 12 Want to read
  • 3 Currently reading
  • 1 Have read

Alexander the Great (356-323 B.C.) was incontestably one of the greatest military generals of all time and one of the most powerful personalities of antiquity. From the time he sacked Thebes and crossed the Hellespont to his death eleven years later, he conquered the entire Persian empire, including Tyre, Egypt, and Babylon, and moved on to present-day northern India and Afghanistan.

He influenced the spread of Hellenism throughout the Near East and Asia, establishing many cities such as Alexandria that flourished long after his death.

This classic study of Alexander, his predecessors, and his influence on the art of war remains fascinating and relevant over a hundred years after its initial publication.

The classical works dealing with warfare in and before Alexander's time gave little more than bare facts of military matters; Dodge's contribution was to vividly reconstruct every major battle of Alexander's brilliant military career, provide much needed background material concerning the art of war before and during Alexander's reign, and fully illustrate his narrative with invaluable maps and charts. The result is a masterpiece of military history - the book that inspired General J. F. C.

Fuller to write his own classic study of Alexander, and one which will similarly inspire generations of future readers.

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Tales End Press
Language
English

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Book Details


Table of Contents

I. In General.
II. Early History of War.
III. Early Oriental Armies.
IV. Early Greek Armies and Wars.
V. Cyrus and Darius. B.C. 558–485.
VI. Armies in the Fifth Century B.C.
VII. Miltiades – Marathon. B.C. 490.
VIII. Brasidas. B.C. 424–422.
IX. Xenophon – Agesilaus. B.C. 401–394
X. Epaminondas. B.C. 371–362.
XI. Philip and Macedon. B.C. 359–336.
XII. Philip and His Army. B.C. 359–336.
XIII. The Art of Fortification and Sieges.
XIV. Alexander and Greece. B.C. 336.
XV. The Danube. B.C. 335.
XVI. Pelium. B.C. 335.
XVII. Thebes. B.C. 335.
XVIII. Off For Asia. B.C. 334.
XIX. Battle of the Granicus. May, B.C. 334.
XX. Sardis, Miletus, Halicarnassus. Fall, B.C. 334.
XXI. To the Taurus. Winter, B.C. 331–333.
XXII. Cilicia. Summer and fall, B.C. 333.
XXIII. Issus. November, B.C. 333.
XXIV. Tyre. November, B.C. 333, to August, B.C. 332.
XXV. Gaza and Egypt. September, B.C. 332, to Spring, B.C. 331.
XXVI. On to Babylon. Spring to September, B.C. 331.
XXVII. Arbela, October 1, B.C. 331.
XXVIII. Babylon, Susa. The Uxians. October to December, B.C. 331.
XXIX. The Persian Gates. December, B.C. 331, to March, B.C. 330.
XXX. Darius. March to July, B.C. 330.
XXXI. Bessus. July to Fall, B.C. 330.
XXXII. Philotas. Fall, B.C. 330.
XXXIII. The Caucasus. Fall, B.C. 330, to May, B.C. 329.
XXXIV. The Jaxartes. Summer, B.C. 329.
XXXV. Spitamenes. Summer, B.C. 329, to Fall, B.C. 328.
XXXVI. Clitus. Winter, B.C. 329–328.
XXXVII. Roxana. Winter, B.C. 328–327.
XXXVIII. The Cophen Country. May, B.C. 327, to Winter.
XXXIX. Aornus. Late Winter, B.C. 326.
XL. Porus. March to May, B.C. 326.
XLI. Battle of the Hydaspes. May, B.C. 326.
XLII. The Five Rivers. May to July, B.C. 326.
XLIII. Turning Back. July to October, B.C. 386.
XLIV. The Mallians. November, B.C. 326, to February, B.C. 326.
XLV. Gedrosia. February, B.C. 326, to February, B.C. 324.
XLVI. Mutiny. July, B.C. 324.
XLVII. Babylon. August, B.C. 324, to June, B.C. 323.
XLVIII. The Man and Soldier.
XLIX. The Successors of Alexander. Eumenes and Antiognus. Philopœmen.
Appendix A. Some Ancient Marches.
Appendix B. Losses in Some Ancient Battles.
Appendix C. Marches of Alexander.
Appendix D. Genealogy of Alexander.
Appendix E. List of Dates.

The Physical Object

Format
eBook (EPUB)

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL25399601M
ISBN 10
1623580072
ISBN 13
9781623580070
Library Thing
450160
Goodreads
13624336

First Sentence

"ALL early history is a record of wars."

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Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
August 4, 2013 Edited by VacuumBot Updated format 'E-book (EPUB)' to 'eBook (EPUB)'
September 8, 2012 Edited by VacuumBot Updated format 'EPUB ebook' to 'E-book (EPUB)'
August 4, 2012 Edited by JonathanH Edited without comment.
August 4, 2012 Edited by JonathanH Added new cover
August 4, 2012 Created by JonathanH Added new book.