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

Alexander the Great's Persian Administration: The Satraps He Trusted and Betrayed

6 min · 15. juni 2026
episode Alexander the Great's Persian Administration: The Satraps He Trusted and Betrayed cover

Description

After conquering the Achaemenid Empire, Alexander the Great faced an even greater challenge: governing it. This episode dives into Alexander's controversial satrap appointments — the Persian nobles he kept in power, the Macedonians he installed, and the ruthless sack of Persepolis. We explore the administrative genius of Mazaeus, who was allowed to govern Babylon despite being a Persian general at Gaugamela; the tragic fate of Bessus, the satrap of Bactria who murdered Darius III and declared himself king; and the infamous case of Harpalus, Alexander's childhood friend turned embezzler. Lucas and Luna unpack how Alexander tried to blend Macedonian and Persian governance, and why that policy sowed the seeds of rebellion among his own men. They also examine the fate of the hundred Persian satrapies after Alexander's death, when the Diadochi turned his empire into a patchwork of warring kingdoms. This episode is for anyone who wants to understand Alexander not just as a conqueror, but as an administrator — and why his empire crumbled so fast after he died. #AlexanderTheGreat #PersianEmpire #Satrapies #Mazaeus #Bessus #Harpalus #Persepolis #Babylon #Bactria #Diadochi #Achaemenid #MacedonianEmpire #Administration #Conquest #AncientHistory #GreekHistory #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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105 episodes

episode Alexander the Great's Siege of Gaza: The Unyielding Fortress artwork

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In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna delve into one of Alexander the Great's most brutal and least-discussed sieges: the conquest of Gaza in 332 BCE. Discover how the Persian eunuch governor Batis turned a seemingly minor city into a formidable obstacle, forcing Alexander to deploy siege towers, battering rams, and mining operations against towering mudbrick walls. Learn about the strategic importance of Gaza as a gateway to Egypt, the psychological warfare that followed the city's fall, and the gruesome fate of Batis, who met a death reminiscent of Hector in Homer's Iliad. We explore the military engineering that made the siege possible—including the use of debris from neighboring cities for ramps—and the aftermath that saw Alexander's clemency replaced by brutal retribution. This episode also touches on the logistics of ancient siege warfare, the role of siege engineers like Diades of Thessaly, and the political calculus that led Alexander to make an example of Gaza. Perfect for history enthusiasts who want to go beyond the well-trodden battles of Issus and Gaugamela. #AlexanderTheGreat #SiegeOfGaza #Batis #AncientSiegeWarfare #DiadesOfThessaly #MudbrickWalls #332BCE #HellenisticHistory #MacedonianEmpire #SiegeTowers #BatteringRams #MiningOperations #Iliad #EgyptConquest #AncientLogistics #History #FexingoHistory #MilitaryHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19. juni 20267 min
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Yesterday7 min
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17. juni 202611 min
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