Episode 4: The Man Who Became a God

In the winter of 331 BCE, Alexander the Great visited the famed Oracle at Siwa in the Egyptian desert. There, it is said, he discovered an amazing truth: he was not the son of Philip II but of the god Zeus-Ammon.

This news did not come out of the blue. Alexander had grown up close to the gods. Through his ancestors Herakles and Achilles, they were even part of his family.

In The Man Who Became a God, Malcolm and Frances explore these links, what Alexander made of the Oracle’s news, and Alexander’s connection to Dionysus. Their conversation takes them from a snake in the Macedonian palace to a drunken revel in India, from war against Tyre to a scandal in Bactria. Stepping beyond the literary sources, they also dive into what Alexander’s coins say about his supposed divinity and how it was used by his successors after Alexander’s death.

Resources
on-line texts for the Alexander Historians:
Arrian
Curtius
Diodorus
Plutarch
Justin

About Malcolm and Frances
Malcolm spends his days with his head in books and his heart in faraway lands, especially ones conquered by Alexander. When he looks at maps of Alexander’s empire, his go-to response remains “Crikey”.
Frances is an academic who specialises in Hellenistic numismatics. She is currently writing a novel about Alexander’s first wife, Roxane, bringing life to the woman who existed in the shadow of a man who was larger than life.

Spearpoint Socials
Facebook
Instagram: @spearpointATG
Threads: @spearpointatg
X: @SpearpointATG

Malcolm
Instagram: @thesecondachilles
Facebook: @alexander.of.macedon

Frances
Instagram: @futuristichistorian
Email: spearpointatg@gmail.com

Intro + Outro Music
Epic by Hot_Dope (pixabay.com)

Episode 3: From Alexander to The Great

Alexander the Great not only conquered the Achaemenid Persian Empire, but also many nations in Central Asia and parts of ancient northwest India. In ten years of campaigning, he did not lose a single battle. He became the richest man in the world, and was regarded by many as a god. 

Despite this, none of his men, indeed, no ancient Macedonian, ever called him ‘the Great.’ So, where did this title come from? What was Greatness when it came to a king? What role might a monk in his cell during the age of Charlemagne might have played in its story? And is it appropriate for us today to still call Alexander, ‘the Great?’

All of these questions, and more, are answered as Malcolm and Frances explore the origin and history of Alexander’s enduring epithet.

Resources
on-line texts for the Alexander Historians:
Arrian
Curtius
Diodorus
Plutarch
Justin

About Malcolm and Frances
Malcolm spends his days with his head in books and his heart in faraway lands, especially ones conquered by Alexander. When he looks at maps of Alexander’s empire, his go-to response remains “Crikey”.
Frances is an academic who specialises in Hellenistic numismatics. She is currently writing a novel about Alexander’s first wife, Roxane, bringing life to the woman who existed in the shadow of a man who was larger than life.

Spearpoint Socials
Facebook
Instagram: @spearpointATG
Threads: @SpearpointATG
X: @SpearpointATG

Malcolm
Instagram: @thesecondachilles
Facebook: @alexander.of.macedon

Frances
Instagram: @futuristichistorian
Email: spearpointatg@gmail.com

Intro + Outro Music
Epic by Hot_Dope (pixabay.com)

Episode 2: Alexander and the Sources

Alexander the Great (356-323 BCE) is one of the most influential men ever to live. Through his conquests, he changed the world forever, politically, socially, and even physically. 

Today, our knowledge of what Alexander achieved comes from five writers, known collectively as the Alexander historians, all of whom wrote their accounts of the conqueror’s life between three and five hundred years after his death. 

These writers all provide important insights into Alexander’s story, his world, and what others thought about him. 

Beginning with the Alexander historians, Malcolm and Frances trace Alexander the Great’s story back to those who rode with him on his journey of conquest. It’s a world changing narrative rooted in fact, that finds expression in fiction, and is enlarged by mythology 

Resources
on-line texts for the Alexander Historians:
Arrian
Curtius
Diodorus
Plutarch
Justin

About Malcolm and Frances
Malcolm spends his days with his head in books and his heart in faraway lands, especially ones conquered by Alexander. When he looks at maps of Alexander’s empire, his go-to response remains “Crikey”.
Frances is an academic who specialises in Hellenistic numismatics. She is currently writing a novel about Alexander’s first wife, Roxane, bringing life to the woman who existed in the shadow of a man who was larger than life.

Spearpoint Socials
Facebook
Instagram: @spearpointATG
Threads: @SpearpointATG
X: @SpearpointATG

Malcolm
Instagram: @thesecondachilles
Facebook: @alexander.of.macedon

Frances
Instagram: @futuristichistorian
Emailspearpointatg@gmail.com

Intro + Outro Music
Epic by Hot_Dope (pixabay.com)

Episode 1: An Introduction

Malcolm Mann and Frances Joseph like nothing better than thinking and talking about Alexander the Great. Why? Check out this pre-episode to hear their brief personal introductions and find out who they are and where their interest in the legendary king and conqueror comes from.

Resources
on-line texts for the Alexander Historians:
Arrian
Curtius
Diodorus
Plutarch
Justin

About Malcolm and Frances
Malcolm spends his days with his head in books and his heart in faraway lands, especially ones conquered by Alexander. When he looks at maps of Alexander’s empire, his go-to response remains “Crikey”.

Frances is an academic who specialises in Hellenistic numismatics. She is currently writing a novel about Alexander’s first wife, Roxane, bringing life to the woman who existed in the shadow of a man who was larger than life.

Spearpoint Socials
Facebook

Instagram: @spearpointATG
Threads: @spearpointatg
X: @SpearpointATG

Malcolm
Instagram: @thesecondachilles
Facebook: @alexander.of.macedon

Frances
Instagram: @futiristichistorian
Emailspearpointatg@gmail.com

Intro + Outro Music
Epic by Hot_Dope (pixabay.com)