Comissatio Alexandri Persepoli celebrata
Comissatio a Thaïde meretrice Graeca suasa est anno 331/330 a.C.n. quo tempore Alexander cum amicis iuxta Persepolin cenabat. Hac comissatione incendium in palatium regum Persarum illatum esse fertur.
Fortuna
recensereDe hac comissatione scripsit Ioannes Dryden anno 1697 carmen cui titulus est "Alexander's Feast, or the Power of Musick: an Ode wrote in Honour of St. Cecilia", musica ab Ieremia Clarke composita. Rursus et sub eodem titulo musicam anno 1736 composuit Georgius Fridericus Handelius (eodem textu Ioannis Dryden ope Newburgh Hamilton accommodato). E carmine Dryden saepe citatur versus None but the brave deserves the fair, a principio de Alexandro et Thaide dictus.
Fontes
recensere- Arrianus, Anabasis Alexandri 3.18.11-12
- Clitarchus, Historiae Alexandri (FGrHist 137 F 11) apud Athenaei Deipnosophistas 576d
- Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica 17.72
- Plutarchus, "Vita Alexandri" 38
- Q. Curtius Rufus, Historiae 5.7
Bibliographia
recensere- "Thais" in Helmut Berve, Das Alexanderreich auf prosopographischer Grundlage (Monaci: Beck, 1926) i.359 (vol. 2 p. 175)
- Eugene N. Borza, "Fire from Heaven: Alexander at Persepolis" in Classical Philology vol. 67 (1972) pp. 233-245 JSTOR
- Eugene N. Borza, "The symposium at Alexander's court" in Αρχαία Μακεδονία = Ancient Macedonia III (Thessalonicae, 1983) pp. 45-55
- Philip Bosman, "Two conceptions of court at Persepolis" in Frances Pownall et al., edd., The courts of Philip II and Alexander the Great (Berolini: De Gruyter, 2022) pp. 169-186
- N. G. L. Hammond, "The Archaeological and Literary Evidence for the Burning of the Persepolis Palace" in Classical Quarterly 2a ser. vol. 42 (1992) pp. 358-364 JSTOR
- Christian San José Campos, "Alexander the Great in Persepolis" in Karanos vol. 4 (2021) pp. 13-33
- Heleen Sancisi-Weerdenburg, "Alexander and Persepolis" in Alexander the Great: Reality and Myth (Romae: "L'Erma" di Bretschneider, 1993) pp. 177-188
Nexus externi
recensere- De incendio Persepolitano apud LacusCurtius
- Anthony Wright, "Why did Alexander burn Persepolis?"