What Happened After Alexander the Great Died — Fexingo History

The Diadochi's Elephant Arms Race: War Beasts of the Hellenistic Age

8 min · 3. heinä 2026
jakson The Diadochi's Elephant Arms Race: War Beasts of the Hellenistic Age kansikuva

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After Alexander the Great died, his generals didn't just fight over his empire with phalanxes and warships. They also unleashed a new kind of terror on the battlefield: war elephants. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Diadochi transformed Alexander's small contingent of Indian elephants into a full-blown arms race, with Seleucus trading territory for five hundred elephants from the Maurya Empire, and Ptolemy sending hunters deep into Africa to capture forest elephants. They discuss the logistics of moving and feeding these massive animals, the battles where elephants turned the tide — like Ipsus and the Siege of Megalopolis — and the eventual decline of elephant warfare as the Romans learned to counter them. A short conversation about a surprisingly sophisticated ancient military industry. #WarElephants #Diadochi #HellenisticPeriod #SeleucusINicator #PtolemyISoter #ChandraguptaMaurya #BattleOfIpsus #AlexanderTheGreat #AncientWarfare #ElephantArmsRace #MauryaEmpire #AfricanForestElephant #IndianElephant #SiegeOfMegalopolis #Poliorcetics #MilitaryHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The Coin That Conquered the East: Alexander's Bactrian Legacy kansikuva

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After Alexander's death, his easternmost satrapies didn't just fade away. In Bactria and Sogdiana, Greek settlers built a kingdom that lasted for two centuries, minting some of the most beautiful coins of the ancient world—and even influencing Indian art. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Greco-Bactrian kingdom through its coins: the gold stater of Eucratides, the silver tetradrachm of Demetrius I, and the strange bilingual issues of Agathocles. They discuss how the kingdom traded Buddhist stupas for Greek temples, how its Greek kings adopted the Indian title Dharmika, and how archaeological finds at Ai Khanoum reveal a city that was half-Athens, half-Persepolis. They also touch on the mystery of the 'Bactrian treasure' looted during the Soviet era and the legacy of Menander I, the only Greek king to convert to Buddhism and to appear in the Milindapanha. It's a story of cultural fusion, forgotten empires, and the surprising survival of Hellenism in the heart of Central Asia. #GrecoBactrian #Bactria #Sogdiana #AiKhanoum #Eucratides #DemetriusI #Agathocles #MenanderI #Milindapanha #Buddhism #Hellenism #Coinage #Tetradrachm #AlexandersSuccessors #Diadochi #CentralAsia #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson Pyrrhus of Epirus: The King Who Fought the Diadochi kansikuva

Pyrrhus of Epirus: The King Who Fought the Diadochi

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In 305 BC, Demetrius Poliorcetes—son of Antigonus Monophthalmus—laid siege to the island city of Rhodes with the most advanced military technology the Hellenistic world had ever seen. This episode explores the year-long siege that gave Demetrius his epithet 'the Besieger,' focusing on his massive siege towers, including the famous helepolis, naval blockades, and Rhodian countermeasures. We examine how the Rhodians, led by architect Diognetus, used flooding, fire, and diplomacy to outlast Demetrius's relentless assaults. The siege ended in a negotiated peace that left Rhodes independent and Demetrius humbled. We also discuss the legacy: the Colossus of Rhodes, built from melted-down siege equipment, and the shift in Hellenistic warfare toward ever-larger engines. Featuring the helepolis, Demetrius Poliorcetes, Antigonus Monophthalmus, Diognetus, Rhodes, and the Diadochi wars. #DemetriusPoliorcetes #SiegeOfRhodes #Helepolis #Diadochi #HellenisticWarfare #AntigonusMonophthalmus #Rhodes #Diognetus #ColossusOfRhodes #AncientSiege #NavalBlockade #HellenisticWorld #SiegeTower #DiodorusSiculus #Plutarch #History #MilitaryHistory #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Eilen8 min
jakson The Hellenistic Silver Crisis and the Rise of the Attic Standard kansikuva

The Hellenistic Silver Crisis and the Rise of the Attic Standard

In this episode of What Happened After Alexander the Great Died, Lucas and Luna dive into the economic chaos that followed Alexander's conquests. They explore how the Diadochi — Antigonus, Ptolemy, Seleucus, Lysimachus, and Cassander — fought not only with armies but with coinage. The silver crisis of the late 4th century BCE, exacerbated by Alexander's massive coin hoards and the disruption of Persian mines, forced each successor kingdom to adopt its own monetary policy. The episode focuses on the so-called 'Attic Standard' versus the 'Phoenician Standard' used by Ptolemy in Egypt, and how these decisions shaped trade, military pay, and the rise of new economic powers like Rhodes. Lucas explains the role of the Laurion silver mines in Attica, the shift to gold coinage by Antigonus, and the long-term consequences for the Hellenistic economy. A lesser-known but pivotal element: the emergence of the Rhodian standard as a major trade currency. Perfect for listeners who want to understand the nuts and bolts of how empires fall apart financially. #Diadochi #SilverCrisis #HellenisticEconomy #AtticStandard #PhoenicianStandard #RhodianStandard #LaurionMines #AntigonusMonophthalmus #PtolemyISoter #SeleucusINicator #Lysimachus #Cassander #Coinage #History #FexingoHistory #AncientEconomy #MonetaryPolicy #HellenisticPeriod Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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jakson The Cynics and Stoics After Alexander kansikuva

The Cynics and Stoics After Alexander

Episode 141 of What Happened After Alexander the Great Died explores the philosophical revolutions that emerged from the chaos of the Diadochi wars. Lucas and Luna dive into the lives of Diogenes of Sinope, the Cynic who mocked Alexander to his face, and Zeno of Citium, the Phoenician merchant who founded Stoicism after a shipwreck. They discuss how Alexander's conquests, by uprooting traditional Greek city-state values and exposing Hellenes to Persian and Indian ideas, created a fertile ground for new philosophies that prioritized inner virtue over external power. The episode traces the Cynic ideal of self-sufficiency through Crates and Hipparchia, the married philosophers who lived on the streets of Athens, then shifts to Zeno's Stoic system with its emphasis on logos, cosmic reason, and the unity of mankind. Lucas and Luna consider how these ideas resonated in a world where old certainties had crumbled and individuals needed a new moral compass. They also touch on the Stoic influence on later Roman thinkers like Seneca and Marcus Aurelius, and how the Hellenistic kings themselves sometimes patronized or persecuted philosophers. A natural conversation about finding meaning in an age of empires. #Diogenes #ZenoOfCitium #Cynicism #Stoicism #HellenisticPhilosophy #AlexanderTheGreat #Diadochi #Hipparchia #CratesOfThebes #AntigonusGonatas #Logos #Cosmopolitanism #AncientGreece #Philosophy #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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