(Alexander the Great mosaic
c. 100 BCE, [Public Domain] via Creative Commons)
Many ancient cultures
practiced polygamy at one point in time, or at least condoned a semblance of
concubinage. The Macedonia of Philip II (382-337 BCE) and Alexander the Great
(356-323 BCE) still practiced polygamy, at least among the nobility.
Monarchies throughout history
have used marriage to formulate alliances; nobles of Macedonia used the same
technique, but they hardly stopped at one marriage. If a Macedonian king needed
to keep three noble houses loyal to the throne, it would not be uncommon for
the king to take a wife from each of the three houses.
Alexander the Great’s mother,
Olympia, was not the only wife of Philip II. At the time of Philip’s death by
assassination in 337 BCE, he had a large household of seven wives. Alexander,
too, took several wives during his short thirty-three year life. He married
Roxane (or Rhoxane), in 327 BCE, after her father surrendered the Sogdian Rock
(somewhere in Afghanistan) to Alexander. Later, after the majority of his
conquests were over, Alexander married a second wife in 324 BCE—she was a
daughter of the deceased Persian King, Darius III.
Written by C. Keith Hansley
thehistorianshut.com
Source:
- Alexander the Great: The Story of an Ancient Life by Thomas R. Martin and Christopher W. Blackwell. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2012.
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