What Happened After Alexander the Great Died — Fexingo History

Antipater's Regency: The Man Who Held Alexander's Empire Together After Babylon

5 min · 9. juni 2026
episode Antipater's Regency: The Man Who Held Alexander's Empire Together After Babylon cover

Beskrivelse

In the chaos following Alexander the Great's death in 323 BCE, one man emerged as the unlikely glue holding the Macedonian empire together: Antipater. While the Diadochi generals carved up territories at the Partition of Babylon, Antipater stayed behind in Macedon as regent, facing down a Greek rebellion in the Lamian War, managing the volatile Athenian orator Demosthenes, and navigating the treacherous politics of Alexander's mother Olympias and his widow Roxana. This episode follows Antipater's ruthless consolidation of power, his brutal sack of Athens, and his ultimate decision to hand the regency to the aging general Polyperchon rather than his own son Cassander—a choice that triggered decades of civil war. We also explore the contrast between Alexander's grand eastern ambitions and Antipater's pragmatic, old-school Macedonian focus on keeping Greece and Macedon stable. How did a man who never fought in Asia end up shaping the Hellenistic world more than any Diadochi general? #Antipater #LamianWar #Demosthenes #PartitionOfBabylon #Diadochi #Macedon #Hellenistic #AlexanderTheGreat #Polyperchon #Cassander #Olympias #Roxana #Athens #Crannon #Leosthenes #FexingoHistory #History #AncientHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til å kommentere

Registrer deg nå og bli medlem av What Happened After Alexander the Great Died — Fexingo History sitt community!

Prøv gratis

Prøv gratis i 14 dager

99 kr / Måned etter prøveperioden. · Avslutt når som helst.

  • Eksklusive podkaster
  • 20 timer lydbøker i måneden
  • Gratis podkaster

Alle episoder

158 Episoder

episode The Hellenistic City That Alexander Never Saw: Alexandria by Egypt cover

The Hellenistic City That Alexander Never Saw: Alexandria by Egypt

Alexander the Great founded Alexandria in 331 BCE, but he never lived to see the city he named after himself. In the decades after his death, the Ptolemies transformed a fishing village into the Mediterranean's greatest metropolis. This episode explores the early development of Alexandria under Ptolemy I Soter and Ptolemy II Philadelphus: the grid of the Heptastadion causeway, the Library and Mouseion that made it a center of learning, the cult of Serapis, and the lighthouse that became one of the Seven Wonders. Lucas and Luna discuss the city's multicultural population—Greeks, Egyptians, Jews, and others—and how the Ptolemies balanced Greek and Egyptian traditions. They also cover the Alexandrian coinage system, the role of the royal quarter (Bruchium), and the first Ptolemaic procession that dazzled the ancient world. How did a city built on sand become the intellectual capital of the Hellenistic world? #Alexandria #PtolemySoter #PtolemyPhiladelphus #LibraryOfAlexandria #LighthouseOfAlexandria #Serapis #Heptastadion #Mouseion #HellenisticWorld #Diadochi #Ptolemaic #AlexandrianCoinage #Bruchium #AncientEgypt #HellenisticCulture #PtolemaicProcession #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

16. juli 20266 min
episode Seleucus Nicator and the Indian War Elephants cover

Seleucus Nicator and the Indian War Elephants

In this episode of What Happened After Alexander the Great Died, Lucas and Luna explore the remarkable career of Seleucus I Nicator, the Diadochi who founded the Seleucid Empire. They focus on his most daring gambit: trading vast territories in the east for 500 war elephants from the Mauryan emperor Chandragupta Maurya. The conversation traces how Seleucus, after the Battle of Ipsus in 301 BC, used those elephants to secure his throne and reshape Hellenistic warfare. They discuss the diplomatic treaty, the ambiguity of the Indus valley cession, and the cultural exchange that followed—including the spread of Indian ideas like the concept of a universal ruler, or chakravartin, into the Greek world. The episode also touches on the legacy of Seleucus's son Antiochus I, who continued his father's elephant corps. A donation segment in the middle reflects on the value of ad-free history content, with a link to support the show at buy me a coffee dot com slash fexingo. #SeleucusINicator #ChandraguptaMaurya #MauryaEmpire #WarElephants #Diadochi #SeleucidEmpire #BattleOfIpsus #HellenisticHistory #IndianHistory #AlexanderTheGreat #Chakravartin #AntiochusISoter #ElephantCorps #HellenisticWarfare #AncientDiplomacy #History #FexingoHistory #AncientIndia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går6 min
episode Cassander and the Death of Alexander's Dynasty cover

Cassander and the Death of Alexander's Dynasty

In the chaos after Alexander the Great's death, one man methodically erased his bloodline. Cassander of Macedon — son of Antipater, rival of Olympias, and king of Macedon — orchestrated the murders of Alexander's mother, wife, and son. This episode explores how Cassander rose to power, his siege of Pydna, the execution of Olympias by stoning, the poisoning of Alexander IV and Roxane in Amphipolis, and the controversial story of Alexander's illegitimate son Heracles. We also examine Cassander's cultural legacy: he rebuilt Thebes, founded Cassandreia, and locked the philosopher Aristotle in a tense friendship that shaped early Peripatetic thought. Along the way, we separate historical evidence from propaganda, drawing on Diodorus Siculus, Justin, and Pausanias. A dark chapter in the Diadochi wars that saw the end of the Argead dynasty and the birth of Antipatrid rule. #Cassander #Antipater #Olympias #AlexanderIV #Roxane #Heracles #Pydna #Amphipolis #Thebes #Cassandreia #ArgeadDynasty #Diadochi #HellenisticPeriod #AncientMacedon #DiodorusSiculus #Justin #Pausanias #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

I går7 min
episode Perdiccas and the Bloody Birth of the Diadochi Wars cover

Perdiccas and the Bloody Birth of the Diadochi Wars

When Alexander the Great died in Babylon on June 11, 323 BCE, his generals faced an impossible question: who should rule the largest empire the world had ever seen? This episode zooms in on the chaotic first weeks after Alexander's death, focusing on Perdiccas, the senior general who tried to hold the empire together. We explore the Babylon Settlement, the immediate power struggles between the infantry and the Companion cavalry, the role of Alexander's half-brother Philip Arrhidaeus, and the harsh reality that the empire's unity was a fiction from the start. Why did Perdiccas, once the most powerful man in Asia, fail so spectacularly? How did the ambitions of Ptolemy, Antipater, and Craterus unravel his plans? And what does the Partition of Babylon tell us about the nature of Alexander's empire? Drawing on the accounts of Diodorus Siculus, Arrian, and Curtius Rufus, we piece together the pivotal council where the Diadochi first drew their battle lines. No romance, no heroism — just the raw politics of succession that set the stage for forty years of war. #Perdiccas #Diadochi #AlexanderTheGreat #BabylonSettlement #HellenisticPeriod #PartitionOfBabylon #PhilipArrhidaeus #Craterus #Antipater #PtolemySoter #Meleager #Arrian #DiodorusSiculus #CurtiusRufus #MacedonianEmpire #SuccessionCrisis #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14. juli 20267 min
episode Agathocles of Syracuse and the Hellenistic West cover

Agathocles of Syracuse and the Hellenistic West

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the remarkable career of Agathocles of Syracuse, the tyrant-king who brought the Hellenistic world to the shores of North Africa. From his rise as a radical democrat in Syracuse to his audacious invasion of Carthage in 310 BCE, Agathocles reshaped the western Mediterranean. They discuss his siege of Carthage, his use of mercenaries and brutal tactics, and how his story connects to the Diadochi in the east. The episode also examines the cultural and political impact of the Hellenistic model on Sicily and Carthage, including Agathocles' self-fashioning as a basileus and the legacy of his reign for later figures like Pyrrhus of Epirus and the Punic Wars. No prior knowledge of Agathocles is needed, but listeners familiar with the Hellenistic period will find new connections between east and west. #Agathocles #Syracuse #Carthage #HellenisticWest #Diadochi #GreekHistory #Sicily #AncientWarfare #Tyrant #Punic #Basileus #Mercenaries #NorthAfrica #310BCE #ClassicalHistory #Siege #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14. juli 20267 min