Alexander the Great: History & Facial Reconstructions Revealed

Alexander the Great

Alexander III of Macedon, or more commonly known as Alexander the Great, succeeded his father at the young age of 20, becoming the King of the Greek city-state Macedon.

He spent most of his years as king conducting military campaigns, particularly against the Persian king Darius III, but also against other Greek city-states and even an Indian kingdom.

By the age of 33, his massive collection of territories stretched from Greece to northwestern India.

Many historians consider him to be one of the most successful military commanders in history.

But what did he look like? Today we’ll explore his fascinating history and discuss what his true face might have been, before revealing some re-creations of his appearance.

On June 10, 323 BC in the late evening, after battling an unknown illness for nearly two weeks, Alexander the Great (Megas Alexandros), also referred to as “King of Kings” quietly died at the royal palace in the heart of Babylon.

After almost a decade of conquest, the Macedonian king reigned over much of the Eastern hemisphere and his death, is argued to have done more than anything else to create the dividing lines between European, African and Asian civilisation, as is known today.

At the young age of thirteen, in front of his father King Phillip II and several nobles of the Macedonian court, Alexander tamed a spirited horse named Bucephalus.

Having guaranteed he could break the mount’s spirit despite the failures of men several years his senior, his triumph was greeted with more than just surprise and applause – the young man’s strength was recognised immediately.

Pulling Alexander aside after he dismounted, the proud Phillip infamously told the prince, “My boy, you must find a kingdom large enough for your ambitions. Macedonia is just too small for you.”

Having swept out of the highlands of Macedon to solidify the Greek peninsula after his father’s death, he turned his attention toward the kingdoms to the south and east in 334 BC.

From his base in Pella, he soon conquered Asia Minor before making his way to the Mediterranean coast to take Egypt from the Persian Empire by the end of 331 despite often commanding smaller armies on unfamiliar terrain.

Wherever Alexander went, victory soon followed. Moving through what is today Syria and Iraq, he relentlessly pursued Darius III, the Great King of Persia, feeling it his responsibility to avenge Greek losses by Darius I and Xerxes.

Moving down the royal road after taking Babylon and Susa, he led his army in the plunder of Persepolis.

Now King of All Asia – a fact cemented by Darius III’s murder at the hand of his captors – Alexander turned his men toward the Endless Ocean.

After another five years of battle, much of it in the mountainous Hindu Kush, Alexander the Great finally made a miscalculation: his men wanted to go home.

Angry to be asked to turn around despite being just three months’ march from his ultimate goal, he relented.

His kingdom, now at its largest boundary, extended over more than two million square miles from northern Greece to western India – land without a proper heir.

The bloody struggle that followed lasted more than 40 years.

Alexander was acknowledged as a military genius who always led by example.

READ MORE: Greco-Buddhism: The Bonds of Ancient Greece and India.

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