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Philip II, Tetradrachm (silver coin replica) 359 - 336 BC.
OBV: Laureated head
of Zeus r..
R: King, wearing kausia, riding horse pacing l., his r. hand raised,
ΦΙΛΙΠ-ΠΟΥ behind and before the
king, the sun or radiated head of Helios above exergual line.
Original worth c. Euro 1300.
The choice of types on
the coinage of kings of Macedon is interesting. For his silver Philip
chose Zeus, a bearded like himself, while his son chose Heracles, son of
Zeus, and depicted as beardless, like Alexander.
From Wikipedia,
the free encyclopedia:
Philip II of Macedon
(382 BC–336
BC; Greek:
ΦΙΛΙΠΠΟΣ) was the King
of Macedon from 359
BC until his death. He was the father of Alexander
the Great (Alexander III of Macedon) and Philip
III of Macedon.
Born in Pella,
Philip was the youngest son of King
Amyntas III and Queen
Eurydice. In his youth (ca. 368
BC–365
BC) Philip was a hostage in Thebes,
the leading city of Greece
at that time. During his captivity in Thebes, Philip received a military
and diplomatic education from Epaminondas,
was involved in a pederastic
relationship with Pelopidas
and lived with Pammenes,
who was an enthusiastic advocate of the Sacred
Band of Thebes. In 364
BC, Philip returned to Macedonia.
The deaths of Philip's elder brothers, King
Alexander II and Perdiccas
III, allowed him to take the throne in 359
BC. Originally appointed regent
for his infant nephew Amyntas
IV, who was the son of Perdiccas III, Philip managed to take the
kingdom for himself that same year.
Philip's military skills
and expansionist vision of Macedonian greatness brought him early
success. The hill tribes were broken by a single battle in 358
BC, and Philip established his authority inland as far as Lake
Ohrid. In 357
BC, he took the Athenian
colony of Amphipolis,
which commanded the gold
mines of Mount
Pangaion. That same year Philip married the Epirote
princess Olympias,
who was the daughter of the king of the Molossians.
In 355 BC,
Philip conquered the town of Crenides
and changed its name to Philippi.
Philip also attacked Abdera
and Maronea,
on the Thracian sea-board. He took Methone
in 354 BC,
a town which had belonged to Athens. During the siege of Methone, Philip
lost an eye.
Not until his armies were
opposed by Athens at Thermopylae
in 352 BC
did Philip face any serious resistance. Philip did not attempt to
advance into central Greece because the Athenians had occupied
Thermopylae. Also in 352 BC, the Macedonian army won a complete victory
over the Phocians
at the Battle
of Crocus Field. This battle made Philip tagus
of Thessaly,
and he claimed as his own Magnesia,
with the important harbour of Pagasae.
Hostilities with Athens
did not yet take place, but Athens was threatened by the Macedonian
party which Philip's gold created in Euboea.
From 352 to 346
BC, Philip did not again come south. He was active in completing the
subjugation of the Balkan
hill-country to the west and north, and in reducing the Greek cities of
the coast as far as the Hebrus (Maritza).
For the chief of these coastal cities, Olynthus,
Philip continued to profess friendship until its neighboring cities were
in his hands.
In 349
BC, Philip started the siege of Olynthus.
Olynthus at first allied itself with Philip, but later shifted its
allegiance to Athens. The Athenians did nothing to help Olynthus. Philip
finally took Olynthus in 348
BC and razed the city to the ground. In 346 BC, he intervened
effectively in the war between Thebes and the Phocians, but his wars
with Athens continued intermittently.
Macedonia and the regions
adjoining it having now been securely consolidated, Philip celebrated
his Olympic
games at Dium.
In 347 BC,
Philip advanced to the conquest of the eastern districts about the
Hebrus, and compelled the submission of the Thracian
prince Cersobleptes.
Meanwhile, Athens had made overtures for peace, and when Philip, in 346
BC, again moved south, peace was sworn in Thessaly.
With key Greek city-states in submission, Philip turned to Sparta; he
sent them a message, "You are advised to submit without further
delay, for if I bring my army into your land, I will destroy your farms,
slay your people, and raze your city." Their reply, "If."
Philip and Alexander would both leave them alone. Later, the Macedonian
arms were carried across Epirus
to the Adriatic
Sea. In 342
BC, Philip led a great military expedition north against the Scythians.
In 340
BC, Philip started the siege of Perinthus.
Philip began another siege in 339
BC of the city of Byzantium.
After unsuccessful sieges of both cities, Philip's influence all over
Greece was compromised. However, Philip successfully reasserted his
authority in the Aegean by defeating an alliance of Thebans and
Athenians at the Battle
of Chaeronea in 338
BC. He erected a memorial of a marble lion to the Sacred
Band of Thebes for their bravery that still stands today. Philip
created and led the League
of Corinth in 337
BC. Members of the League agreed never to wage war against each
other, unless it was to suppress revolution.
Philip was elected as leader (hegemon)
of the army of invasion against the Persian
Empire. In 336
BC, when the invasion of Persia was in its very early stage, Philip
was assassinated by an ex-lover named Pausanias.
Primary sources on
Philip's assassination
According to Aristotle
(Politics) and Diodorus
Siculus (Diodorus), According to Diodorus (16.93.1-94.4),
Pausanias had been a lover of Philip, but became jealous when Philip
turned his attention to a younger man. His taunting of the new lover
caused the youth to throw away his life, which turned his friend,
Attalus, against Pausanias. Attalus took his revenge by inviting
Pausanias to dinner, getting him drunk, then subjecting him to sexual
assault.
When Pausanias complained
to Philip the king felt unable to chastise Attalus, as he was about to
send him to Asia with Parmenion, to establish a bridgehead for his
planned invasion. He was also preparing to marry Attalus’ niece,
Cleopatra/Eurydice (Diodorus mistakenly says that she was Attalus’
aunt). So he tried to mollify Pausanias, and elevated him within the
bodyguard. Pausanias' desire for revenge seems to have turned towards
the man who had failed to avenge his damaged honour; so he planned to
kill Philip. (The details are basically the same in Justin 9.4.)
Whether this was
sufficient motive for murdering the king, it is the only motive that the
sources give us for Pausanias’ dissatisfaction; although it is
possible that his anger with Philip made him a pliable tool for
others—and suspicion fell on Olympias and Alexander from an early
date. (Valerius Maximus does provide another explanation for the murder;
but it is extremely suspect as the same story occurs in at least two
other places in the history of Alexander, let alone in those of other
persons.)
On November
8, 1977,
Greek archaeologist Manolis
Andronikos found, among other royal tombs, the unopened tomb of
Philip II at Vergina
in the prefecture of Pieria.
The finds from this tomb were later included in the traveling exhibit The
Search for Alexander displayed at four cities in the United
States from 1980
to 1982.
The find was of course disputed, but disputations relied on
contradictions between "the body" or "skeleton" of
Philip II and reliable historical accounts of his life (and injuries).
However, interestingly, no body or skeleton were ever found. All that
remains of Philip II is ash, contained in a magnificent golden larnax,
decorated with the Vergina
sun, within his stone sarcophagus. |