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5* Nile Cruise as low as $45 per person per night
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Bahariya Oasis, Temple of Alexander the Great
Alexander III of Macedon (356-323
bc), better known to history as 'Alexander the Great', spent several months in
Egypt as part of his on-going campaign against the mighty Persian Empire of
Darius III. After conquering Persia's naval bases all along the coastline of
Asia Minor and Syria-Palestine, Alexander marched south into Egypt where he
remained for some six months. With his reputation going before him, Alexander was met by Egypt's Persian governor Mazaces. With no armed forces and with no likelihood of any assistance following the defeated Darius' swift departure back east to Persia, Mazaces simply handed over the treasury's 800 talents and "all the royal furniture". In return he was kept on as part of the new administration together with the new governor Cleomenes, who was made responsible for finance and created the royal mint around 331 bc. Cleomenes was a hard-headed, unscrupulous businessman who quickly amassed a personal fortune of 8,000 talents during his career as governor. Yet he remained loyal to Alexander with whom he kept up a regular correspondence, sending him such delicacies as smoked quail by the thousand. After installing a garrison at the key defensive site of Pelusium, Alexander then ordered his fleet to sail south up the Nile to the traditional capital Memphis (Ineb-hedj) at the apex of the Delta where he himself would arrive by land at the head of his troops. Passing by the ancient religious site of Heliopolis (Iunu) with its vast white temples and obelisks, Egypt made an enormous impression on both the Macedonian troops and their 24 year old leader. Brought up with his formidable mother Olympias' tales of Egyptian gods, the religiously-minded Alexander must have been completely dumbstruck in a land so steeped in ritual, where priests held enormous power wielded inside temples not built to human scale. Passing by the great pyramids of Giza, still gleaming in their shining white limestone, he finally reached Memphis to a genuinely rapturous reception. Greek travelers had actually been visiting Egypt for centuries, many of them setting up trading colonies or acting as mercenaries. Others such as the historian Herodotus and philosopher Plato came to study a culture they regarded with awe as the cradle of civilization, their knowledge almost certainly part of Alexander's education. Yet for almost 200 years Egypt had been occupied by Persia who had incorporated it into the growing empire, and assuming the Egyptian crown by right of conquest the Persian king had ruled in absentia through a satrap, exploiting its vast grain reserves and taxing its people. The Persians showed relatively little respect for the ancient traditions and were deeply unpopular, and the Egyptians' had rebelled so often parts of the country remained virtually independent. Alexander was therefore hailed as
Savior and Liberator, and as the people's choice and legitimate heir he was
offered the double crown of the Two Lands. Anointed as pharaoh in Memphis on 14
November 332 bc, the culmination of his coronation was the climactic moment when
the high priest named him 'son of the gods' according to traditions dating back
almost 3,000 years. This title deeply affected him, and Olympias' references to
him being the son of Zeus must have filled his mind; indeed, there were even
scenes of the king of the gods Amun ('Zeus') impregnating selected queens with
the heir to the throne! In a world where the gods were perceived as living
entities and were considered a part of everyday life, Alexander must now have
began to believe in his own divinity as a fact rather than a simple exercise of
propaganda. Ever keen to discuss philosophy
which the Greeks believed to have originated in Egypt, Alexander attended
lectures given by the Egyptian philosopher Psammon. Wholeheartedly agreeing with
his teaching that "all men are ruled by god, because in every case that element
which imposes itself and achieves mastery is divine", Alexander also drew on his
own experiences when he added that whilst god is indeed the father of all
mankind, "it is the noblest and best whom he makes his own" (Plutarch).
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