Alexander the Great: The Conqueror Who Changed the Ancient World — Fexingo History

Alexander's Purge of Cleitus: The Black Cleitus Killing

8 min · 14. juni 2026
episode Alexander's Purge of Cleitus: The Black Cleitus Killing cover

Description

In 328 BCE, Alexander the Great killed one of his most trusted generals in a drunken rage. Cleitus the Black had saved Alexander's life at the Granicus River, served as commander of the Royal Squadron, and was the brother of his wet nurse. But at a banquet in Maracanda, a bitter argument over Persian customs and Macedonian traditions ended in tragedy. Lucas and Luna explore the events of that night, the tensions between Alexander's adoption of Achaemenid court culture and his Macedonian veterans' resentment, and how the murder haunted Alexander for the rest of his short life. Drawing from Arrian, Plutarch, and Curtius Rufus, they discuss Cleitus's career, the role of flatterers like Anaxarchus, and the psychological aftermath—Alexander's three days of grief, his self-imposed isolation, and the political manipulation that followed. This episode examines a turning point in Alexander's character, where the conqueror began to lose the loyalty of his inner circle. #AlexanderTheGreat #CleitusTheBlack #Maracanda #Achaemenid #Macedonian #Proskynesis #Anaxarchus #Arrian #Plutarch #CurtiusRufus #Granicus #Purge #Assassination #AncientHistory #FexingoHistory #HistoryPodcast #Mediterranean #Macedonia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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153 episodes

episode Alexander the Great and the Indian Ascetics: The Gymnosophists artwork

Alexander the Great and the Indian Ascetics: The Gymnosophists

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore Alexander the Great's encounter with the gymnosophists, the naked philosophers of India, during his campaign in the Punjab around 326 BCE. Luke explains how Alexander, curious about their wisdom and hoping to demonstrate Greek intellectual superiority, engaged them with a series of riddles. The story, preserved by Plutarch and Arrian, reveals a fascinating cross-cultural dialogue in which the ascetics' sharp answers challenged Alexander's ambitions. We discuss the broader context of Alexander's interest in philosophy, his meeting with the Indian sage Calanus (Kalyana), and how these interactions reflect Hellenistic curiosity about Indian thought. The episode also touches on the legendary meeting with Dandamis, who reportedly refused Alexander's summons, and the symbolism of the encounter for Alexander's self-image as a philosopher-king. A nuanced look at an often-overlooked moment of intellectual contact between Greece and India. #Gymnosophists #AlexanderTheGreat #IndianPhilosophers #Plutarch #Arrian #Calanus #Dandamis #HellenisticPhilosophy #GreekIndianContact #Punjab #Taxila #AncientIndia #CrossCulturalDialogue #PhilosopherKing #ConquestAndWisdom #AncientHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

13. juli 20266 min
episode Alexander's Siege of Aornos: The Impossible Fortress artwork

Alexander's Siege of Aornos: The Impossible Fortress

In 327 BCE, Alexander the Great faced one of his most daunting challenges: the siege of Aornos, a massive mountain fortress in modern-day Pakistan that local legend said even Heracles had failed to take. This episode follows Alexander's audacious assault on a natural stronghold nearly 8,000 feet high, defended by fierce tribal forces. We explore the geography of the Pir-Sar ridge, the engineering marvel of a siege ramp built by Macedonian engineers, and the psychological warfare that turned a near-impossible climb into a strategic victory. Along the way, we touch on Alexander's rivalry with Heracles, the use of local guides, and why the capture of Aornos mattered for his Indian campaign. Lucas and Luna unpack the accounts of Arrian and Curtius Rufus, the brutal hand-to-hand fighting on narrow ledges, and what the siege reveals about Alexander's tactical genius and relentless ambition. #AlexanderTheGreat #SiegeOfAornos #MacedonianEmpire #PirSar #Heracles #IndianCampaign #AncientWarfare #Arrian #CurtiusRufus #SiegeCraft #MacedonianPhalanx #AncientHistory #MilitaryHistory #327BCE #SwatValley #Hellenistic #EpicHistory #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

13. juli 20268 min
episode Alexander's City Foundations: The Urban Legacy of a Conqueror artwork

Alexander's City Foundations: The Urban Legacy of a Conqueror

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore a lesser-known aspect of Alexander the Great's conquests: the cities he founded across his empire. From the strategic Alexandria by Egypt to the remote Alexandria Eschate on the Jaxartes River, these urban centers were more than military outposts—they were engines of Hellenistic culture, trade, and administration. We look at how Alexander chose locations, the practical challenges of building on the march, and what archaeology has revealed about these cities. We also discuss the curious case of Alexandria in Arachosia (modern Kandahar) and the Bactrian city of Ai Khanoum, which may or may not have been founded by Alexander. Along the way, we touch on the role of Greek settlers, the fusion of Persian and Greek architectural styles, and the long-term fate of these foundations under the Seleucids and later empires. The conversation ends with a reflection on whether Alexander's city-building was a deliberate strategy or a byproduct of his ambition. #AlexanderTheGreat #HellenisticPeriod #Alexandria #CityFoundations #AlexandriaEschate #AiKhanoum #SeleucidEmpire #Bactria #JaxartesRiver #HinduKush #Ptolemy #Seleucus #Hellenization #AncientUrbanism #AncientGreece #PersianEmpire #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday5 min
episode Alexander's Chandragupta Maurya The Indian Emperor He Never Met artwork

Alexander's Chandragupta Maurya The Indian Emperor He Never Met

What if Alexander the Great had pushed further into the Indian subcontinent? The answer might have been Chandragupta Maurya, the young adventurer who reportedly met Alexander, learned from his tactics, and went on to forge the first pan-Indian empire. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the shadowy encounter between two of history's greatest conquerors—one fading, one rising. They unravel the classical sources: Plutarch's claim that Chandragupta spoke with Alexander, and the Indian traditions that say he met the Greeks in the Punjab. They trace how Chandragupta used Alexander's battle-tested methods against the Nanda Empire, built a bureaucracy inspired by Persian satrapies, and even faced off against Alexander's successor Seleucus. The conversation digs into the Arthashastra—Chandragupta's statecraft manual—and the diplomatic fusion that followed: Seleucus ceding territory for 500 war elephants. No battle scenes, no siege tactics—just the quiet, world-changing ripple of an encounter that may never have happened. #ChandraguptaMaurya #AlexanderTheGreat #MauryaEmpire #NandaEmpire #Seleucus #Arthashastra #Plutarch #IndianHistory #AncientIndia #GreekBactrian #Megasthenes #Punjab #IndusValley #ClassicalAntiquity #Conquerors #History #FexingoHistory #AncientEmpires Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Yesterday6 min
episode Alexander's Bactrian Camel Experiment: Logistics in the Afghan Desert artwork

Alexander's Bactrian Camel Experiment: Logistics in the Afghan Desert

When Alexander pushed east through the scorched landscapes of Bactria and Sogdiana, his army faced a logistical nightmare: water shortages, brutal heat, and terrain that horses and oxen could barely cross. In response, Alexander made one of antiquity's most overlooked strategic gambles — a massive requisition of Bactrian camels, the desert ships of Central Asia. This episode dives into the camel corps that saved his campaign: how the two-humped Bactrian camel could travel days without water, carry heavier loads than horses, and navigate the rock-strewn passes of the Hindu Kush. We explore the camel's domestication history in the Oxus basin, Alexander's shrewd use of local knowledge, and the logistical calculations that kept his army moving through some of the most punishing country on earth. Featuring the Bactrian city of Maracanda, the Sogdian resistance led by Spitamenes, and the little-known story of how Alexander's camel trains became a model for later Silk Road caravans. A granular look at the unglamorous but vital science of supply that made conquest possible. #BactrianCamel #AlexanderTheGreat #AncientLogistics #Bactria #Sogdiana #HinduKush #Maracanda #Spitamenes #MacedonianArmy #SilkRoad #CamelDomestication #OxusRiver #CentralAsia #AncientWarfare #AfghanDesert #Logistics #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

11. juli 20265 min