well. He ordered his ministers to âbreak up theoligarchies everywhere and set up democracies instead.â He forbade his armies to plunder conquered lands, and he founded new cities galoreâusually named Alexandria. The greatest of these, at the mouth of the Nile Delta, became for many centuries the intellectual and commercial center of the Mediterranean world. Alexander wanted to create an empire fusing the best of both Greek and Eastern cultures. He recruited Persians into his armies and assigned Persian wives to his generals, sending back to Europe any Macedonians who resisted this enforced equality. He himself married the daughter of the dethroned Persian king.
Alexander was revered as a god in his own lifetime. He was reputedly a descendant of Achilles on his motherâs side, and rumors of Alexanderâs supernatural abilities abounded, reinforced by his unnatural speed and apparent personal invincibility in battle. Described by a friend as âthe only philosopher whom I have ever seen in arms,â he loved poetry and music. As a boy he declared that if he could only save one possession it would be Homerâs
Iliad
. He was always alert to symbolism. On first setting foot on the shores of the Persian empire, in Asia Minor, his first act was to make a pilgrimage to Troy to honor his ancestor Achilles. He named Bucephala, a town on the Indus, after his beloved horse Bucephalus, which had died in battle.
Alexander also had a more brutish side: he drunkenly killed one of his officers in a row at a banquet, a crime he deeply regretted. His own death is said to have resulted from too much carousing. âSex and sleep alone make me conscious that I am mortal,â he reportedly declared. He had several wives and mistresses, but his great love was his boyhood friend Hephaistion.
Alexander could be merciless. On succeeding to the throne after his fatherâs assassination, he executed all rival claimants, including his infant half-brother. He executed one of his greatest friends for treason, and also the friendâs blameless father, his veteran general,Parmenion: Alexander refused to run the risk of paternal vengeance. He enslaved or crucified all the Tyrians after they resisted his siege of their city and razed Thebes to the ground, a warning to the restless Greek city-states of what they could expect from rebellion. Toward the end of his life he became increasingly despotic.
Alexanderâs treatment of his enemies, however, often demonstrated his nobility of spirit. When an Indian king demanded to face him in battle, Alexander fought and defeated him, but rewarded him with the restoration of his kingdom and that of a less fortunate neighbor as well. He treated the wives of Darius, the defeated Persian king, with âthe utmost delicacy and respectâ and allowed the Jews, Persians and others to worship as they wished.
Alexander changed the face of the world by making Hellenismâthe Greek way of lifeâinto the global culture. When asked on his deathbed to whom he would leave his kingdom, Alexander replied: âTo the strongest.â After his death, his empire, which had spanned half the world, disintegrated. No one could match him.
QIN SHI HUANGDI
c.
259â210 BC
If you govern the people by punishment, the people will fear. Being fearful, they will not commit villainies
.
Lord Shangâs legalism, adopted by Qin Shi Huangdi as the basis for his rule
Qin Shi Huangdi created the first unified Chinese empire, which emerged from the Warring States Period. By 221 BC he had successfullydestroyed the last remaining rival kingdoms within China and made himself supreme ruler: the First Emperor. A ruthless statesman and conqueror of manic gifts, haunted by madness, sadism and paranoia, Qin Shi Huangdiâs reign quickly degenerated into a brutal and bloody tyranny. His reputation in China had always been that of a tyrant until Chairman Mao Zedong, another monstrous