Continuing our tour of the Mediterranean circa 300 BC, we now turn to the squabbling Hellenic successor kingdoms in the East. Alexander the Great and his Macedonians succeeded in building a world empire that stretched from Greece to India in twelve short years, but Alexander's sudden death threw his newly-acquired realm into chaos. Following nearly twenty years of constant warfare, Alexander's generals, the Diadochi, managed to impose some order on the situation by divvying out the empire for themselves. However, the instability of the times as well as the mythos and legacy of Alexander would spill out into the Western Mediterranean, setting both Carthage and Rome on a collision course which would lead to the First Punic War.
Link to the Layman's Historian website
Link to my Map of the Mediterranean World Circa 300 BC
Link to the Episode 16 page on the Layman's Historian website
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Episode 12 - The Battle for Carthage
Episode 11 - The Enemy in Africa
Episode 10 - Syracuse in Retreat
Episode 9 - Agathocles and the Age of Alexander
Episode 8 - Timoleon and the End of the Second Sicilian War
Episode 7 - Dionysius the Tyrant
Episode 6 - Carthage Strikes Back
Episode 5 - Syracuse, Sicily, and the Hellenes
Episode 4 - A Punic Sea
Episode 3 - Qart-Hadasht - The New City
Episode 2 - Dido's Drama
Episode 1 - The Middlemen of the Mediterranean
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