Andromenes Of Corinth
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Andromenes Of Corinth
Andromenes ( grc, Ἀνδρομένης, link=no) may refer to: *Andromenes (Macedonian) Andromenes ( grc, Ἀνδρομένης, link=no) may refer to: *Andromenes (Macedonian), a Macedonian nobleman and father of four sons: Amyntas (son of Andromenes), Amyntas, Attalus (son of Andromenes), Attalus, Polemon (son of Andromenes), Polemo ..., a Macedonian nobleman and father of four sons: Amyntas, Attalus, Polemon and Simmias * Andromenes of Corinth, Olympic stadion winner in 304 and 308 {{disambiguation ...
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Andromenes (Macedonian)
Andromenes ( grc, Ἀνδρομένης, link=no) may refer to: *Andromenes (Macedonian), a Macedonian nobleman and father of four sons: Amyntas (son of Andromenes), Amyntas, Attalus (son of Andromenes), Attalus, Polemon (son of Andromenes), Polemon and Simmias of Macedon, Simmias *Andromenes of Corinth, List of Olympic winners of the Stadion race, Olympic stadion winner in 304 and 308 {{disambiguation ...
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Amyntas (son Of Andromenes)
Amyntas ( el, Ἀμύντας; died 330 BC) was a Macedonian officer in Alexander the Great's army, son of Andromenes from Tymphaia. After the Battle of the Granicus, 334 BC, when the garrison of Sardis was quietly surrendered to Alexander, Amyntas was the officer sent forward to receive it from the commander, Mithrenes. Two years after, 332, we again hear of him as being sent into Macedonia to collect levies, while Alexander after the siege of Gaza advanced to Egypt; and he returned with them in the ensuing year, when the king was in possession of Susa. After the execution of Philotas on a charge of treason in 330 Amyntas and two other sons of Andromenes ( Attalus and Simmias) were arrested on suspicion of having been engaged in the plot. The suspicion was strengthened by their known intimacy with Philotas, and by the fact that their brother Polemon had fled from the camp when the latter was apprehended, or according to Curtius, when he was given up to the torture. Amyntas defe ...
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Attalus (son Of Andromenes)
Attalus (Greek: Ἄτταλος; fl. 4th century BC), son of Andromenes from Tymphaia, and one of Alexander's officers, was accused with his brothers, Amyntas and Simmias, of having been engaged in the conspiracy of Philotas in 330 BC, but was acquitted, together with his brothers. In 328, Attalus was left with Polyperchon and other officers in Bactria with part of the troops, while the king himself marched against the Sogdians. He accompanied Alexander in his expedition into India, and was employed in several important duties. In Alexander's last illness in 323, Attalus was one of the seven chief officers who passed the night in the temple of Serapis at Babylon, in order to learn from the god whether Alexander should be carried into the temple. After the death of Alexander, Attalus joined Perdiccas, whose sister, Atalantê, he had married. He accompanied his brother-in-law in his unfortunate campaign against Egypt in 321, and had the command of the fleet. After the murder of Pe ...
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Polemon (son Of Andromenes)
Polemon ( grc, Πολέμων; lived 4th century BC), son of Andromenes (Macedonian), Andromenes the Stymphaean, was a Macedonian officer in the service of Alexander the Great (336–323 BC). The great intimacy between him and Philotas caused him to be suspected in 330 BC, together with his brothers Amyntas of Macedonia, Amyntas, Attalus (son of Andromenes), Attalus, and Simmias of Macedon, Simmias, of participating in the treasonable designs imputed to Philotas: a charge to which Polemon had the imprudence to give countenance by taking to flight immediately on learning the arrest of Philotas. Amyntas, however, who remained, having successfully defended himself before the assembly of the army, also obtained the pardon or acquittal of Polemon. In the disputes that followed the death of Alexander the Great, Alexander (323 BC), Polemon, like his brother Attalus, distinguished himself as a warm partisan of Perdiccas. To conciliate the favour of the regent, he ineffectually tried to p ...
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Simmias Of Macedon
Simmias ( grc, Σιμμίας) was a Macedonian officer, son of Andromenes from Tymphaia and brother of Attalus and Amyntas, the officers of Alexander the Great. He probably served in the division of the phalanx, commanded by his brother Amyntas, as we find him taking the command of it at the battle of Gaugamela during his brother's absence. On this occasion his division was one of those which bore the chief brunt of the battle. In 330 BC he was accused, together with his brothers, of having been concerned in the conspiracy of Philotas; but the vigorous defence of Amyntas before the Macedonian army procured their joint acquittal. References * Smith, William (editor); ''Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology''"Simmias (2)" Boston Boston (), officially the City of Boston, is the state capital and most populous city of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts, as well as the cultural and financial center of the New England region of the United States. It is the ...
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Andromenes Of Corinth
Andromenes ( grc, Ἀνδρομένης, link=no) may refer to: *Andromenes (Macedonian) Andromenes ( grc, Ἀνδρομένης, link=no) may refer to: *Andromenes (Macedonian), a Macedonian nobleman and father of four sons: Amyntas (son of Andromenes), Amyntas, Attalus (son of Andromenes), Attalus, Polemon (son of Andromenes), Polemo ..., a Macedonian nobleman and father of four sons: Amyntas, Attalus, Polemon and Simmias * Andromenes of Corinth, Olympic stadion winner in 304 and 308 {{disambiguation ...
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