Bella Diadochorum
(Redirectum de Bella Diodochorum)
Bella Diadochorum[1] vel Successorum[2] sunt quae secutores Alexandri inter annos 323 et 281 a.C.n. pugnaverunt de imperio, ab illo conquisito, in regna plura dividendo.
![](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/77/PtolemyCoinWithAlexanderWearingElephantScalp.jpg/220px-PtolemyCoinWithAlexanderWearingElephantScalp.jpg)
Fontes, quos de hoc aevo legere possumus, pauca et incerta de rerum chronologia referunt. Sunt igitur eruditi qui ad chronologiam "superiorem" haereant, ab Iulio Beloch(de) elaboratam,[3] inter quos Brianus Bosworth et Patricius Wheatley;[4] alii chronologiam "inferiorem" post Eugenium Manni suadent,[5] inter quos R. M. Errington, Eduardus Anson.[6] Est etiam chronologia "mixta" a P. J. Stylianou et Thoma Boiy suasa.[7] De his rebus, et praesertim de tertio bello Diadochorum recenter scripserunt Alexander Meeus et Shane Wallace.[8]
Annalia
recensereHae sunt annalia potiora:
Eventum | superior[9] | inferior[10] |
---|---|---|
Mors Alexandri Magni Babylone obita | 11 Iunii 323 | |
Partitio Babylone a Perdicca decreta | Aestate 323 | |
Bellum Lamiacum | Aestate 323—Octobri 322 | |
Primum bellum Diadochorum | Vere—aestate 321 | Vere 321—aestate 320 |
Perdiccae expeditio in Aegyptum | Iunio 321 | Iunio 320 |
Partitio Triparadisi ab Antipatro decreta | 321 | 320 |
Secundum bellum Diadochorum | 318—316 | Aestate 318—aestate 315 |
Mors Philippi(en) regis | Octobri 317 | |
Mors Eumenis et Olympiae | Vere 316 | Hieme 316/315 |
Partitio satrapiarum superiorum ab Antigono decreta | Vere 315 | |
Tertium bellum Diadochorum | 315—311 | 314—311 |
Proelium ad Gazam commissum | Vere 312 | Hieme 312/311 |
Quartum bellum Diadochorum |
Notae
recensere- ↑ "illa bella ... diadochorum, deinde Romanorum bella quae dicuntur civilia ..." (p. 54 apud Google Books); "Mundus qui post bella diadochorum exortus est ..." (p. 18 apud Google Books)
- ↑ "insulas Archipelagi bellis successorum Alexandri exhaustas ..." (p. 501 apud Google Books); "tam aperte describit bella successorum Alexandri magni ..." (p. 285 apud Google Books)
- ↑ Beloch (1904) pp. 187-201; Beloch (1927) pp. 235-249
- ↑ Bosworth (1992); Wheatley (1998); Wheatley (2007)
- ↑ Manni (1949)
- ↑ Errington (1970), praecipue pp. 75-77; Errington (1977); Anson (2006); Anson (2007)
- ↑ Stylianou (1994); Boiy (2007)
- ↑ Meeus (2012); Shane Wallace, "Defending the freedom of the Greeks: Antigonos, Telesphoros, and the Olympic games of 312 B.C." in Phoenix vol. 68 (2014) pp. 235-246 JSTOR
- ↑ Fontes potiores: Hauben (1977); Bosworth (1992); Meeus (2012)
- ↑ Fontes potiores: Errington (1977) p. 487; Meeus (2012)
Bibliographia
recensere- Generalia
- K. J. Beloch(de), Griechische Geschichte vol. 3 fasc. 2. Berolini, 1904
- K. J. Beloch(de), Griechische Geschichte vol. 4 fasc. 2. Berolini, 1927
- R. A. Billows, Antigonos the One-Eyed and the Creation of the Hellenistic State. Berkeleiae: Univeersity of California Press, 1990
- Pierre Briant, Antigone le Borgne: Les débuts de sa carrière et les problèmes de l'assemblée macédonienne (Annales littéraires de l'Université de Besançon, 152). Lutetiae, 1973 Textus
- Víctor Alonso Troncoso, Edward M. Anson, edd., After Alexander: The Time of the Diadochi (323-281 BC). Oxoniae: Oxbow Books, 2013
- De chronologia
- E. M. Anson, "Diodorus and the Date of Triparadeisus" in American Journal of Philology vol. 107 (1986) pp. 208-217 JSTOR
- E. M. Anson, "The Chronology of the Third Diadoch War" in Phoenix vol. 60 (2006) pp. 226–235
- E. M. Anson, "Early Hellenistic Chronology: The Cuneiform Evidence" in Waldemar Heckel, Lawrence Tritle, P. V. Wheatley, edd., Alexander’s Empire: Formulation to Decay (Claremont, 2007) pp. 193–198
- Tom Boiy, Between high and low: a chronology of the early Hellenistic period. Francoforti ad Moenum, 2007
- Tom Boiy, "Royal and satrapal armies in Babylonia during the Second Diadoch War: the ‘Chronicle of the Successors’ on the events during the seventh year of Philip Arrhidaeus (=317/316 BC)" in Journal of Hellenic studies vol. 130 (2010) pp. 1-13 JSTOR
- A. B. Bosworth, "Philip III Arrhidaeus and the Chronology of the Successors" in Chiron vol. 22 (1992) pp. 55–81
- A. B. Bosworth, The legacy of Alexander. Oxonii: Oxford University Press, 2002
- Leo Depuydt, "The Time of Death of Alexander the Great: 11 June 323 B.C. (–322), ca. 4:00–5:00 PM”" in Die Welt des Orients vol. 28 (1997) pp. 117-135 JSTOR
- R. M. Errington, "From Babylon to Triparadeisos, 323-320 B.C." in Journal of Hellenic studies vol. 90 (1970) pp. 49-77 JSTOR
- R. M. Errington, "Diodorus Siculus and the Chronology of the Early Diadochoi" in Hermes vol. 105 (1977) pp. 478–504 JSTOR
- Hans Hauben, "On the Chronology of the Years 313–311 B.C." in American Journal of Philology vol. 94 (1973) pp. 256–267
- Hans Hauben, "The first war of the Successors (321 B.C.); chronological and historical problems" in Ancient Society vol. 8 (1977) pp. 85-120 JSTOR
- Eugenio Manni, "Tre note di cronologia ellenistica" in Rendiconti della Classe di scienze morali, storiche e filologiche dell'Accademia dei Lincei vol. 8 (1949) pp. 53–85
- Alexander Meeus, "Diodorus and the chronology of the Third Diadoch War" in Phoenix vol. 66 (2012) pp. 74-96 JSTOR
- L. C. Smith, "The Chronology of Books XVIII–XX of Diodorus Siculus" in American Journal of Philology vol. 82 (1961) pp. 283-290 JSTOR
- P. J. Stylianou, "The Pax Macedonica and the Freedom of the Greeks of Asia (with an appendix on the chronology of the years 323-301)" in Epeteris tou Kentrou Epistemonikon Ereunon vol. 20 (1994) pp. 1-84
- Pat Wheatley, "The Chronology of the Third Diadoch War, 315–311 B.C." in Phoenix vol. 52 (1998) pp. 257–281 JSTOR
- Pat Wheatley, "An Introduction to the Chronological Problems in Early Diadoch Sources and Scholarship" in Waldemar Heckel, Lawrence Tritle, Pat Wheatley, edd., Alexander’s Empire: Formulation to Decay (Claremont, 2007) pp. 179–192
- Pat Wheatley, "Diadoch chronology after Philip Arrhidaeus: old and new evidence" in Pat Wheatley, Elizabeth Baynham, edd., East and west in the world empire of Alexander (Oxonii, 2015) pp. 241-268