Siddhesh Joshi (Editor)

Alexander II of Macedon

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Reign
  
371–369 BC

Mother
  
Eurydice I of Macedon

Grandparents
  
Arrhidaeus, Sirras

Father
  
Amyntas III

Siblings
  
Philip II of Macedon

Successor
  
Perdiccas III

Died
  
368 BC

Predecessor
  
Amyntas III

Name
  
Alexander of


Role
  
Amyntas III of Macedon's son

Parents
  
Eurydice I of Macedon, Amyntas III of Macedon

Nephews
  
Alexander the Great, Philip III of Macedon, Caranus

Nieces
  
Cleopatra of Macedon, Cynane, Thessalonike of Macedon, Europa of Macedon

Similar People
  
Amyntas III of Macedon, Philip II of Macedon, Philip III of Macedon, Cleopatra of Macedon, Alexander the Great

Alexander II of Macedon (Greek: Ἀλέξανδρος Β΄) was king of Macedon in 371–369 BC, following the death of his father Amyntas III.

Contents

Family

He was the eldest of the three sons of king Amyntas and Queen Eurydice I.

Reign

Although he had already attained his majority, Alexander was very young when he ascended to the throne in 371 BC. This caused immediate problems for the new king as enemies to the dynasty resumed war. Alexander simultaneously faced an Illyrian invasion from the north-west and an attack from the east by the pretender Pausanias. Pausanias quickly captured several cities and threatened the queen mother, who was at the palace in Pella with her young sons. Alexander defeated his enemies with the help of the Athenian general Iphicrates, who had been sailing along the Macedonian coast on the way to recapture Amphipolis.

At the request of the Thessalian Aleuadae, Alexander intervened in a civil war in Thessaly. He successfully gained control of Larissa and several other cities but, betraying a promise he had made, put garrisons in them. This provoked a hostile reaction from Thebes, the leading military power in Greece at the time. The Theban general Pelopidas drove the Macedonians from Thessaly. He then neutralized Alexander by favoring the ambitions of Alexander's brother-in-law Ptolemy of Aloros, and forced Alexander to abandon his alliance with Athens in favor of Thebes. As part of this new alliance, Alexander had to hand over hostages, including his younger brother Philip.

Alexander was assassinated during a festival at the instigation of Ptolemy. Although Alexander's brother Perdiccas III became the next king, he was under age, and Ptolemy became regent.

References

Alexander II of Macedon Wikipedia