HISTORY REPORT #1 My report is on Alexander III (354-323 B. C. E) of Macedon. My source for report is an article from January, 1968 edition of the National Geographic. The article is titled “In the Footsteps of Alexander the Great.” It discusses entire journey through Asia and Egypt conquering every country that he wished.
As if being king of Macedon wasn’t enough for an eighteen year old boy to handle. Throughout his battle he took over countries like Egypt, Persia, Mesopotamia, and Asia Minor. At the age of twenty-four he was king of more than three countries. Alexander the Great became king of Macedon in 336 B. C. E.
ascending his father’s throne. Since his father, Philip II, had conquered Greece too. Beginning his voyage in 334, at the age of twenty, Alexander crossed the Hellespont into Asia. The Persian offered Alexander battle at the Granicus River on the coast of Asia Minor. Alexander led a cavalry charge across the river into the teeth of the enemy.
His courage, inspired his soldiers, and the victory opened all of Asia Minor to conquest by the Greeks. In 331 B. C. E. Alexander marched into Mesopotamia to meet an army Darius III, Persia’s king, had assembled.
Once again Alexander and his army broke the Persian line and Darius was forced to flee. Eventually in 330 B. C. E. , in a series of brilliant battles, Alexander destroyed the power of Darius III and took his lands and titles for himself. He might have stopped then, rich in glory and plunder.
The Essay on Machiavelli Vs King George Iii
MACHIAVELLI VS. KING GEORGE III During colonial times, King George III was a tyrant ruler. He was unstable and constantly inflicted hardship upon the people of the American Colonies. King George III thought that imposing more demands on the colonists would allow him to reach his goals such as bringing in more money for the British government. Machiavelli, on the other hand, thought that a ruler ...
But his thirst for fame and his questing sprit drove him on. For seven more years he fought his way up from mountain to mountain, from city to city, from the steppes of Russia to the valley of Indus, as his troops turned sullen and mutinous. In time he brought them back to Babylon, which he saw death and the break up of his subjugated but unreconstructed empire.