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Olympias and Antipater
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OLYMPIAS AND ANTIPATER
[13] PYRRHUS, King of Epirus, entered at the very beginning of
his life upon the extraordinary series of romantic
adventures which so strikingly marked his career. He became
an exile and a fugitive from his father's house when he was
only two years old, having been suddenly borne away at that
period by the attendants of the household, to avoid a most
imminent personal danger that threatened him. The
circumstances which gave occasion for this extraordinary
ereption were as follows:
The country of Epirus, as will be seen by the accompanying
map, was situated on the eastern shore of the Adriatic Sea,
and on the southwestern confines of Macedonia. The kingdom
of Epirus was thus very near to, and in some
[14] respects dependent upon, the kingdom of Macedon. In fact,
the public affairs of the two countries, through the
personal relations and connections which subsisted from time
to time between the royal families that reigned over them
respectively, were often intimately intermingled, so that
there could scarcely be any important war, or even any great
civil dissension in Macedon, which did not sooner or later
draw the king or the people of Epirus to take part in the
dispute, either on one side or on the other. And as it
sometimes happened that in these questions of Macedonian
politics the king and the people of Epirus took opposite
sides, the affairs of the great kingdom were often the means
of bringing into the smaller one an infinite degree of
trouble and confusion.
The period of Pyrrhus's career was immediately subsequent to
that of Alexander the Great, the birth of Pyrrhus having
taken place about four years after the death of Alexander.
At this time it happened that the relations which subsisted
between the royal families of the two kingdoms were very
intimate. This intimacy arose from an extremely important
intermarriage which had taken place between the two families
in the preceding generation—namely,
[15] the marriage of Philip of Macedon with Olympias, the
daughter of a king of Epirus. Philip and Olympias were the
father and mother of Alexander the Great. Of course, during
the whole period of the great conqueror's history, the
people of Epirus, as well as those of Macedon, felt a
special interest in his career. They considered him as a
descendant of their own royal line, as well as of that of
Macedon, and so, very naturally, appropriated to themselves
some portion of the glory which he acquired. Olympias, too,
who sometimes, after her marriage with Philip, resided at
Epirus, and sometimes at Macedon, maintained an intimate and
close connection, both with her own and with Philip's
family; and thus, through various results of her agency, as
well as through the fame of Alexander's exploits, the
governments of the two countries were continually
commingled.
It must not, however, by any means be supposed that the
relations which were established through the influence of
Olympias, between the courts of Epirus and of Macedon, were
always of a friendly character. They were, in fact, often
the very reverse. Olympias was a woman of a very passionate
and ungovernable temper, and of a very determined will; and
as Philip
[16] was himself as impetuous and as resolute as she, the
domestic life of this distinguished pair was a constant
succession of storms. At the commencement of her married
life, Olympias was, of course, generally successful in
accomplishing her purposes. Among other measures, she
induced Philip to establish her brother upon the throne of
Epirus, in the place of another prince who was more directly
in the line of succession. As, however, the true heir did
not, on this account, relinquish his claims, two parties
were formed in the country, adhering respectively to the two
branches of the family that claimed the throne, and a
division ensued, which, in the end, involved the kingdom of
Epirus in protracted civil wars. While, therefore, Olympias
continued to hold an influence over her husband's mind, she
exercised it in such a way as to open sources of serious
calamity and trouble for her own native land.
After a time, however, she lost this influence entirely. Her
disputes with Philip ended at length in a bitter and
implacable quarrel. Philip married another woman, named
Cleopatra, partly, indeed, as a measure of political
alliance, and partly as an act of hostility and hatred
against Olympias, whom he accused of the most
[17] disgraceful crimes. Olympias went home to Epirus in a rage,
and sought refuge in the court of her brother.
Alexander, her son, was left behind at Macedon at this
separation between his father and mother. He was then about
nineteen years of age. He took part with his mother in the
contest. It is true, he remained for a time at the court of
Philip after his mother's departure, but his mind was in a
very irritable and sullen mood; and at length, on the
occasion of a great public festival, an angry conversation
between Alexander and Philip occurred, growing out of some
allusions which were made to Olympias by some of the guests,
in the course of which Alexander openly denounced and defied
the king, and then abruptly left the court, and went off to
Epirus to join his mother. Of course the attention of the
people of Epirus was strongly attracted to this quarrel, and
they took sides, some with Philip, and some with Olympias
and Alexander.
Not very long after this, Philip was assassinated in the
most mysterious and extraordinary manner.
Olympias was generally accused of
[18] having been the instigator of this deed. There was no
positive evidence of her guilt; nor, on the other hand, had
there ever been in her character and conduct any such
indications of the presence of even the ordinary sentiments
of justice and humanity in her heart as could form a
presumption of her innocence. In a word, she was such a
woman that it was more easy and natural, as it seemed, for
mankind to believe her guilty than innocent; and she has
accordingly been very generally condemned, though on very
slender evidence, as accessory to the crime.
Of course, the death of Philip, whether Olympias was the
procurer of it or not, was of the greatest conceivable
advantage to her in respect to its effect upon her position,
and upon the promotion of her ambitious schemes. The way was
at once opened again for her return to Macedon. Alexander,
her son, succeeded immediately to the throne. He was very
young, and would submit, as she supposed, very readily to
the influence of his mother. This proved, in fact, in some
sense to be true. Alexander, whatever may have been his
faults in other respects, was a very dutiful son. He treated
his mother, as long as he lived, with the utmost
[19] consideration and respect, while yet he would not in any
sense subject himself to her authority and influence in his
political career. He formed his own plans, and executed them
in his own way; and if there was ever at any time any
dispute or disagreement between him and Olympias in respect
to his measures, she soon learned that he was not to be
controlled in these things, and gave up the struggle. Nor
was this a very extraordinary result; for we often see that
a refractory woman, who can not by any process be made to
submit to her husband, is easily and completely managed by a
son.
Things went on thus tolerably smoothly while Alexander
lived. It was only tolerably, however; for Olympias,
though she always continued on friendly terms with Alexander
himself, quarreled incessantly with the commanders and
ministers of state whom he left with her at Macedon while he
was absent on his Asiatic campaigns. These contentions
caused no very serious difficulty so long as Alexander
himself was alive to interpose, when occasion required, and
settle the difficulties and disputes which originated in
them before they became unmanageable. Alexander was always
adroit enough to do this in a manner that was
respect- [20] ful and considerate toward his mother, and which yet preserved
the actual administrative power of the kingdom in the hands
to which he had intrusted it.
He thus amused his mother's mind, and soothed her irritable
temper by marks of consideration and regard, and sustained
her in a very dignified and lofty position in the royal
household, while yet he confided to her very little
substantial power.
The officer whom Alexander had left in chief command at
Macedon, while absent on his Asiatic expedition, was
Antipater. Antipater was a very venerable man, then nearly
seventy years of age. He had been the principal minister of
state in Macedonia for a long period of time, having served
Philip in that capacity with great fidelity and success for
many years before Alexander's accession. During the whole
term of his public office, he had maintained a most exalted
reputation for wisdom and virtue. Philip placed the most
absolute and entire confidence in him, and often committed
the most momentous affairs to his direction. And yet,
notwithstanding the illustrious position which Antipater
thus occupied, and the great influence and control which he
exercised in the public affairs
[21] of Macedon, he was simple and unpretending in his manners,
and kind and considerate to all around him, as if he were
entirely devoid of all feelings of personal ambition, and
were actuated only by an honest and sincere devotedness to
the cause of those whom he served. Various anecdotes were
related of him in the Macedonian court, which showed the
estimation in which he was held. For example, Philip one
day, at a time when placed in circumstances which required
special caution and vigilance on his part, made his
appearance at a late hour in the morning, and he apologized
for it by saying to the officers, "I have slept rather late
this morning, but then I knew that Antipater was awake."
Alexander, too, felt the highest respect and veneration for
Antipater's character. At one time some person expressed
surprise that Antipater did not clothe himself in a purple
robe—the badge of nobility and greatness as the other great
commanders and ministers of state were accustomed to do.
"Those men," said Alexander, "wear purple on the outside,
but Antipater is purple within."
The whole country, in a word, felt so much confidence in the
wisdom, the justice, and the moderation of Antipater, that
they submitted
[22] very readily to his sway during the absence of Alexander.
Olympias, however, caused him continual trouble. In the
exercise of his regency, he governed the country as he
thought his duty to the people of the realm and to Alexander
required, without yielding at all to the demands or
expectations of Olympias. She, consequently, finding that he
was unmanageable, did all in her power to embarrass him in
his plans, and to thwart and circumvent him. She wrote
letters continually to Alexander, complaining incessantly of
his conduct, sometimes misrepresenting occurrences which had
actually taken place, and sometimes making accusations
wholly groundless and untrue. Antipater, in the same manner,
in his letters to Alexander, complained of the interference
of Olympias, and of the trouble and embarrassment which her
conduct occasioned him. Alexander succeeded for a season in
settling these difficulties more or less perfectly, from
time to time, as they arose; but at last he concluded to
make a change in the regency. Accordingly, on an occasion
when a considerable body of new recruits from Macedon was to
be marched into Asia, Alexander ordered Antipater to
accompany them, and, at the same time, he sent home
an- [23] other general named Craterus, in charge of a body of
troops from Asia, whose term of service had expired.
His plan was to retain Antipater in his service in Asia, and
to give to Craterus the government of Macedon, thinking it
possible, perhaps, that Craterus might agree better with
Olympias than Antipater had done.
Antipater was not to leave Macedon until Craterus should
arrive there; and while Craterus was on his journey,
Alexander suddenly died. This event changed the whole aspect
of affairs throughout the empire, and led to a series of
very important events, which followed each other in rapid
succession, and which were the means of affecting the
condition and the fortunes of Olympias in a very material
manner. The state of the case was substantially thus. The
story forms quite a complicated plot, which it will require
close attention on the part of the reader clearly to
comprehend.
The question which rose first to the mind of every one, as
soon as Alexander's death became known, was that of the
succession. There was, as it happened, no member of
Alexander's own family who could be considered as clearly
and unquestionably his heir. At the time of his
[24] death he had no child. He had a wife, however, whose name
was Roxana, and a child was born to her a few months after
Alexander's death. Roxana was the daughter of an Asiatic
prince. Alexander had taken her prisoner, with some other
ladies, at a fort on a rock, where her father had placed her
for safety. Roxana was extremely beautiful, and Alexander,
as soon as he saw her, determined to make her his wife.
Among the thousands of captives that he made in his Asiatic
campaign, Roxana, it was said, was the most lovely of all;
and as it was only about four years after her marriage that
Alexander died, she was still in the full bloom of youth and
beauty when her son was born.
But besides this son, born thus a few months after
Alexander's death, there was a brother of Alexander, or,
rather, a half-brother, whose claims to the succession
seemed to be more direct, for he was living at the time that
Alexander died. The name of his brother was Aridæus. He was
imbecile in intellect, and wholly insignificant as a
political personage, except so far as he was by birth the
next heir to Alexander in the Macedonian line. He was not
the son of Olympias, but of another mother, and his
imbecility was caused, it was said, by an
at- [25] tempt of Olympias to poison him in his youth. She was
prompted to do this by her rage and jealousy against his
mother, for whose sake Philip had abandoned her. The poison
had ruined the poor child's intellect, though it had failed
to destroy his life. Alexander, when he succeeded to the
throne, adopted measures to protect Aridæus from any future
attempt which his mother might make to destroy him, and for
this, as well as perhaps for other reasons, took Aridæus
with him on his Asiatic campaign. Aridæus and Roxana were
both at Babylon when Alexander died.
Whatever might be thought of the comparative claims of
Aridæus and of Roxana's babe in respect to the inheritance
of the Macedonian crown, it was plain that neither of them
was capable of exercising any actual power—Alexander's son
being incapacitated by his youthfulness, and his brother by
his imbecility. The real power fell immediately into the
hands of Alexander's great generals and counselors of state.
These generals, on consultation with each other, determined
not to decide the question of succession in favor of either
of the two heirs, but to invest the sovereignty of the
empire jointly in them both. So they gave to
[26] Aridæus the name of Philip, and to Roxana's babe that of
Alexander. They made these two princes jointly the nominal
sovereigns, and then proceeded, in their name, to divide all
the actual power among themselves.
In this division, Egypt, and the African countries adjoining
it, were assigned to a very distinguished general of the
name of Ptolemy, who became the founder of a long line of
Egyptian sovereigns, known as the Ptolemaic dynasty—the line
from which, some centuries later, the renowned Cleopatra
sprang. Macedon and Greece, with the other European
provinces, were allotted to Antipater and Craterus—Craterus
himself being then on the way to Macedon with the invalid
and disbanded troops whom Alexander had sent home. Craterus
was in feeble health at this time, and was returning to
Macedon partly on this account. In fact, he was not fully
able to take the active command of the detachment committed
to him, and Alexander had accordingly sent an officer with
him, named Polysperchon, who was to assist him in the
performance of his duties on the march. This Polysperchon,
as will appear in the sequel, took a very important part in
the events which occurred in Macedonia after he and Craterus
had arrived there.
[27] In addition to these great and important provinces—that of
Egypt in Africa, and Macedon and Greece in Europe—there were
various other smaller ones in Asia Minor and in Syria, which
were assigned to different generals and ministers of state
who had been attached to the service of Alexander, and who
all now claimed their several portions in the general
distribution of power which took place after his death. The
distribution gave at first a tolerable degree of
satisfaction. It was made in the name of Philip the king,
though the personage who really controlled the arrangement
was Perdiccas, the general who was nearest to the person of
Alexander, and highest in rank at the time of the great
conqueror's decease. In fact, as soon as Alexander died,
Perdiccas assumed the command of the army, and the general
direction of affairs.
He intended, as was supposed, to make himself emperor in the
place of Alexander. At first he had strongly urged that
Roxana’s child should be declared heir to the throne, to the
exclusion of Aridæus. His secret motive
[28] in this was, that by governing as regent during the long
minority of the infant, he might prepare the way for finally
seizing the kingdom himself. The other generals of the army,
however, would not consent to this; they were inclined to
insist that Aridæus should be king. The army was divided on
this question for some days, and the dispute ran very high.
It seemed, in fact, for a time, that there was no hope that
it could be accommodated. There was every indication that a
civil war must ensue—to break out first under the very walls
of Babylon. At length, however, as has already been stated,
the question was compromised, and it was agreed that the
crown of Alexander should become the joint inheritance of
Aridæus and of the infant child, and that Perdiccas should
exercise at Babylon the functions of regent. Of course, when
the division of the empire was made, it was made in the name
of Philip; for the child of Roxana, at the time of the
division, was not yet born. But, though made in King
Philip's name, it was really the work of Perdiccas. His
plan, it was supposed, in the assignment of provinces to the
various generals, was to remove them from Babylon, and give
them employment in distant fields, where they would
[29] not interfere with him in the execution of his plans for
making himself master of the supreme power.
After these arrangements had been made, and the affairs of
the empire had been tolerably well settled for the time
being by this distribution of power, and Perdiccas began to
consider what ulterior measures he should adopt for the
widening and extending of his power, a question arose which
for a season greatly perplexed him: it was the question of
his marriage. Two proposals were made to him—one by
Olympias, and one by Antipater. Each of these personages had
a daughter whom they were desirous that Perdiccas should
make his wife. The daughter of Olympias was named
Cleopatra—that of Antipater was Nicæa. Cleopatra was a young
widow. She was residing at this time in Syria. She had been
married to a king of Epirus named Alexander, but was now
residing in Sardis, in Asia Minor. Some of the counselors
of Perdiccas represented to him very strongly that a
marriage with her would strengthen his position more than
any other alliance that he could form, as she was the sister
of Alexander the Great, and by his marriage with her he
would secure to his side the influence of
Olym- [30] pias and of all of Alexander's family. Perdiccas so far acceded
to these views that he sent a messenger to Sardis to visit
Cleopatra in his name, and to make her a present. Olympias
and Cleopatra accordingly considered the arrangement a
settled affair.
In the mean time, however, Antipater, who seems to have been
more in earnest in his plans, sent off his daughter Nicæa
herself to Babylon, to be offered directly to Perdiccas
there. She arrived at Babylon after the messenger of
Perdiccas had gone to visit Cleopatra. The arrival of Nicæa
brought up very distinctly to the mind of Perdiccas the
advantages of an alliance with Antipater. Olympias, it is
true, had a great name, but she possessed no real power.
Antipater, on the other hand, held sway over a
widely-extended region, which comprised some of the most
wealthy and populous countries on the globe. He had a large
army under his command, too, consisting of the bravest and
best-disciplined troops in the world; and he himself, though
advanced in age, was a very able and effective commander. In
a word, Perdiccas was persuaded, by these and similar
considerations, that the alliance of Antipater would be more
serviceable to him than that of Olympias, and
[31] he accordingly married Nicæa. Olympias, who had always
hated Antipater before, was now, when she found herself thus
supplanted by him in her plans for allying herself with
Perdiccas, aroused to the highest pitch of indignation and
rage.
Besides the marriage of Perdiccas, another matrimonial
question arose about this time, which led to a great deal of
difficulty. There was a lady of the royal family of Macedon
named Cynane—a daughter of Philip of Macedon, and
half-sister of Alexander the Great—who had a daughter named
Ada. Cynane conceived the design of marrying her daughter to
King Philip, who was now, as well as Roxana and her babe, in
the hands of Perdiccas as their guardian. Cynane set out
from Macedon with her daughter, on the journey to Asia, in
order to carry this arrangement into effect. This was
considered as a very bold undertaking on the part of Cynane
and her daughter; for Perdiccas would, of course, be
implacably hostile to any plan for the marriage of Philip,
and especially so to his marrying a princess of the royal
family of Macedon. In fact, as soon as Perdiccas heard of
the movement which Cynane was making, he was enraged at the
audacity of it, and sent
[32] messengers to intercept Cynane and murder her on the way.
This transaction, however, as soon as it was known, produced
a great excitement throughout the whole of the Macedonian
army. The army, in fact, felt so strong an attachment for
every branch and every member of the family of Alexander,
that they would not tolerate any violence or wrong against
any one of them. Perdiccas was quite terrified at the storm
which he had raised. He immediately countermanded the orders
which he had given to the assassins; and, to atone for his
error and allay the excitement, he received Ada, when she
arrived at Babylon, with great apparent kindness, and
finally consented to the plan of her being married to
Philip. She was accordingly married to him, and the army was
appeased. Ada received at this time the name of Eurydice,
and she became subsequently, under that name, quite renowned
in history.
During the time in which these several transactions, were
taking place, various intrigues and contentions were going
on among the governors of the different provinces in Europe
and Asia, which, as the results of them did not particularly
affect the affairs of Epirus, we need not here particularly
describe. During all this
pe- [33] riod, however, Perdiccas was extending and maturing his
arrangements, and laying his plans for securing the whole
empire to himself; while Antipater and Ptolemy, in Macedon
and Egypt, were all the time holding secret communications
with each other, and endeavoring to devise means by which
they might thwart and circumvent him. The quarrel was an
example of what very often occurs in such political systems
as the Macedonian empire presented at this time—namely, a
combining of the extremities against the centre. For some
time the efforts of the parties were confined to the
maneuvers and counter-maneuvers which they devised against
each other. Antipater was, in fact, restrained from open
hostility against Perdiccas from a regard to his daughter
Nicæa, who, as has been already mentioned, was Perdiccas'
wife. At length, however, under the influence of the
increasing hostility which prevailed between the two
families, Perdiccas determined to divorce Nicæa, and marry
Cleopatra after all. As soon as Antipater learned this, he
resolved at once upon open war. The campaign commenced with
a double operation. Perdiccas himself raised an army; and,
taking Philip and Eurydice, and also Roxana and her babe in
his
[34] train, he marched into Egypt to make war against Ptolemy. At
the same time, Antipater and Craterus, at the head of a
large Macedonian force, passed across the Hellespont into
Asia Minor, on their way to attack Perdiccas in Babylon.
Perdiccas sent a large detachment of troops, under the
command of a distinguished general, to meet and encounter
Antipater and Craterus in Asia Minor, while he was himself
engaged in the Egyptian campaign.
The result of the contest was fatal to the cause of
Perdiccas. Antipater advanced triumphantly through Asia
Minor, though in one of the battles which took place there
Craterus was slain. But while Craterus himself fell, his
troops were victorious. Thus the fortunes of war in this
quarter went against Perdiccas. The result of his own
operations in Egypt was still more disastrous to him. As he
approached the Egyptian frontier, he found his soldiers very
averse to fighting against Ptolemy, a general whom they had
always regarded with extreme respect and veneration, and
who, as was well known, had governed his province in Egypt
with the greatest wisdom, justice, and moderation. Perdiccas
treated this disaffection in a very haughty and domineering
manner. He
[35] called his soldiers rebels, and threatened to punish them as
such. This aroused their indignation, and from secret
murmurings they proceeded to loud and angry complaints.
Perdiccas was not their king, they said, to lord it over
them in that imperious manner. He was nothing but the tutor
of their kings, and they would not submit to any insolence
from him. Perdiccas was soon quite alarmed to observe the
degree of dissatisfaction which he had awakened, and the
violence of the form which it seemed to be assuming. He
changed his tone, and attempted to soothe and conciliate the
minds of his men. He at length succeeded so far as to
restore some degree of order and discipline to the army, and
in that condition the expedition entered Egypt.
Perdiccas crossed one of the branches of the Nile, and then
led his army forward to attack Ptolemy in a strong fortress,
where he had intrenched himself with his troops. The forces
of Perdiccas, though much more numerous than those of
Ptolemy, fought with very little spirit; while those of
Ptolemy exerted themselves to the utmost, under the
influence of the strong attachment which they felt for their
command- [36] er. Perdiccas was beaten in the engagement; and he was so much
weakened by the defeat, that he determined to retreat back
across the river. When the army arrived at the bank of the
stream, the troops began to pass over; but after about half
the army had crossed, they found, to their surprise, that
the water, which had been growing gradually deeper all the
time, became impassable. The cause of this deepening of the
stream was at first a great mystery, since the surface of
the water, as was evident by marks along the shore, remained
all the time at the same level. It was at length ascertained
that the cause of this extraordinary phenomenon was, that
the sands in the bottom of the river were trampled up by the
feet of the men and horses in crossing, so that the current
of the water could wash them away; and such was the immense
number of footsteps made by the successive bodies of troops,
that, by the time the transportation had been half
accomplished, the water had become too deep to be forded.
Perdiccas was thus, as it were, caught in a trap—half his
army being on one side of the river, and himself, with the
remainder, on the other.
He was seriously alarmed at the dangerous situation in which
he thus found himself placed,
[37] and immediately resorted to a variety of expedients to
remedy the unexpected difficulty. All his efforts were,
however, vain. Finally, as it seemed imperiously necessary
to effect a junction between the two divisions of his army,
he ordered those who had gone over to make an attempt, at
all hazards, to return. They did so; but in the attempt,
vast numbers of men got beyond their depth, and were swept
down by the current and drowned. Multitudes of the bodies,
both of the dead and of the dying, were seized and devoured
by the crocodiles which lined the shores of the river below.
There were about two thousand men thus lost in the attempt
to recross the stream.
In all military operations, the criterion of merit, in the
opinion of an army, is success; and, of course, the
discontent and disaffection which prevailed in the camp of
Perdiccas broke out anew in consequence of these
misfortunes. There was a general mutiny. The officers
themselves took the lead in it, and one hundred of them went
over in a body to Ptolemy's side, taking with them a
considerable portion of the army; while those that were left
remained with Perdiccas, not to defend, but to destroy him.
A troop of horse gathered around his tent,
guard- [38] ing it on all sides, to prevent the escape of their victim, and
then a certain number of the men rushed in and killed him in
the midst of his terror and despair.
Ptolemy now advanced to the camp of Perdiccas, and was
received there with acclamation. The whole army submitted
themselves at once to his command. An arrangement was made
for the return of the army to Babylon, with the kings and
their train. Pithon, one of the generals of Perdiccas, took
the command of the army, and the charge of the royal family,
on the return. In the mean time, Antipater had passed into
Asia, victorious over the forces that Perdiccas had sent
against him. A new congress of generals was held, and a new
distribution of power was made. By the new arrangement,
Antipater was to retain his command in Macedon and Greece,
and to have the custody of the kings. Accordingly, when
every thing had thus been settled, Antipater set out on his
return to Macedon, with Philip and Eurydice, and also Roxana
and the infant Alexander, in his train. The venerable
soldier—for he was now about eighty years of age—was
received in Macedon, on his return, with universal honor and
applause. There were several
considera- [39] tions, in fact, which conspired to exalt Antipater in the
estimation of his countrymen on this occasion. He had
performed a great military exploit in conducting the
expedition into Asia, from which he was now triumphantly
returning. He was bringing back to Macedon, too, the royal
family of Alexander, the representatives of the ancient
Macedonian line; and by being made the custodian of these
princes, and regent of the empire in their name, he had been
raised to the most exalted position which the whole world at
that period could afford. The Macedonians received him,
accordingly, on his return, with loud and universal
acclamations.
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