DIADOCHI

dīădˈəkī [Gr.,=successors], the Macedonian generals and administrators who succeeded Alexander the Great. Alexander's empire, the largest that the world had known to that time, was quickly built. At his death in 323 b.c. it disintegrated even more quickly. Alexander's more important followers, later known as the Diadochi, sought to increase their personal power in a bloody scramble. Chief among them were Antipater, Perdiccas, Eumenes, Craterus, Antigonus (Antigonus I), Ptolemy (Ptolemy I), Seleucus (Seleucus I), and Lysimachus.

The first struggle was over the regency; theoretically Alexander's feeble-minded brother, Philip, and also Alexander's posthumous son by Roxana had the real claim to the inheritance. Perdiccas had the regency (323–322), in effect if not in name, to which Antipater also had claim. Eumenes supported Perdiccas, while Antigonus, Ptolemy, and Craterus supported Antipater. In 321, battle was joined; the allies of Antipater won, although Craterus was killed. On the death (319) of Antipater the struggle was on again. There were shifting alliances, but in general the chief figure was Antigonus, who, with the help of his son, Demetrius Poliorcetes (Demetrius I of Macedon), attempted to rebuild Alexander's empire. He failed. Antigonus and Demetrius were finally defeated in the battle of Ipsus (301 b.c.). The Diadochi had been declaring themselves kings, Antigonus first and then the others.

The contest was carried on to the next generation, with Demetrius fighting successfully against Cassander, the son of Antipater, and it was pursued even further with the wars between the Seleucidae and the Ptolemies. Commonly, however, the period of the Diadochi is said to end with the victory of Seleucus I over Lysimachus at the battle of Corupedion in 281, fixing the boundaries of the Hellenistic world for the next century. This left the descendants of Ptolemy, Seleucus, and Antigonus as the chief claimants to power in the Hellenistic age, and the empire of Alexander was irrevocably split.

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Diadochi  - 199 results

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...Hegemony, 323-281 B.C. 3. Macedonia-History-Diadochi, 323-276 B.C. 4. Generals?reece-Biography...refer to a work titled Concerning the Diadochi (Successors), while Dionysius of Halicarnassus...title for a single work, History of the Diadochi and the Epigoni. The suggestion is...
...III. THE DIADOCHI AS EXECUTORS OF ALEXANDERS IDEAS...IV. THE YOUNGER GENERATION OF DIADOCHI, AND THE PRINCESSES OF THEIR DAY...HOME POLITICS DURING THE WARS OF THE DIADOCHI 78...
...III. THE DIADOCHI AS EXECUTORS OF ALEXANDERS IDEAS...IV. THE YOUNGER GENERATION OF DIADOCHI, AND THE PRINCESSES OF THEIR DAY...HOME POLITICS DURING THE WARS OF THE DIADOCHI 71...
...261 The Boundless Luxury of the Diadochi 261 SCULPTURE...Winds 346 235. Coins of the Diadochi 347 FIGURE 236...
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journal articles on: Diadochi  - 1 result

 
 
...after expelling Seleucus from Babylon, until the battle of Ipsus. Antigonus arrived in Babylon early in 316. The Babylonian or Diadochi Chronicle (BM 34660 obv. 14-15) states that in the month of Tashritu (Teshri), in the seventh year of Philip III, a royal army...


 

encyclopedia articles on: Diadochi  - 20 results

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DIADOCHI diad ki Gr.,=successors, the Macedonian generals and...Alexanders more important followers, later known as the Diadochi, sought to increase their personal power in a bloody scramble...finally defeated in the battle of Ipsus (301 b.c.). The Diadochi had been declaring themselves kings, Antigonus first and...
...Alexander the Great, he played a leading part in the wars of the Diadochi . In the new partition of the empire in 312 b.c. he received...Corupedion in Lydia in 281, an event that marked the end of the Diadochi. Seleucus was murdered before he could achieve his ambition...
CASSANDER k san d r, 358 297 b.c., king of Macedon, one of the chief figures in the wars of the Diadochi . The son of Antipater, he was an officer under Alexander the Great, but there was ill feeling between them. After his fathers...
...Alexander (323) he ruled as regent from Babylon. He strove in vain to hold the empire together, but was opposed by others of the Diadochi . He was defeated by Ptolemy I in Egypt and was killed in a mutiny of his troops. ____________________ Copyright 2009 Columbia...
...323 b.c., the influence of Greek civilization continued to expand over the Mediterranean world and W Asia. The wars of the Diadochi marked, it is true, the breakup of Alexanders brief empire, but the establishment of Macedonian dynasties in Egypt, Syria...
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