Alexander the Great was born in Pella in 356 BC. He was the son of King Philip II of Macedonia and the student of the great Greek Philosopher Aristotle. He had his first military victory when he was only 16-years-old. Despite his obvious strengths as a king's son, Philip and Alexander had a falling out when Philip chose a new wife of Macedonian birth. There was talk of producing a "legitimate" heir. This angered Alexander and he and his mother were exiled. Nonetheless, Alexander became king when his father was assassinated during his daughter's wedding. He was 20-years-old. By the time he was 26-years-old, he had conquered the Persian Empire.
Because of Alexander's great success in life, brought about by his tenacity and daring, he was greatly revered in death. This is how we know where his tomb was in certain places at certain times. There are records of such people as Julius Caesar, Cleopatra and Caligula (who may have had his breastplate stolen out of his sarcophagus) visiting his tomb. We also know that Alexander the Great's body may have been placed in a golden sarcophagus. There is mention of it in descriptions of his body being moved to Memphis. There is further mention of it after it had been moved.
Either Ptolemy or his son Philadelphus moved Alexander's body to a new tomb in Alexandria. No description of this tomb exists. The tomb in Alexandria was replaced by another in Alexandria by Ptolemy Philopator around 215 BC. Philopator had a mausoleum erected in the center of Alexandria. In it, he placed some of his ancestors and Alexander the Great. There is record of Alexander the Great's golden sarcophagus being melted down and sold in 89 BC. It was replaced by a glass sarcophagus.
The last definite record we have of the tomb of Alexander the Great dates to roughly 215 AD, when Caracella visited the tomb. War came to Alexandria during the 3rd century. The city was attacked and ransacked repeatedly over the course of many years. It is possible that the tomb of Alexander the Great was destroyed, partially destroyed and/or robbed at this time. If the tomb remained standing after these events, as some accounts suggest, then it is likely that it was destroyed during the famous earthquake and tsunami that struck Alexandria in 365 AD. If, by some chance, the tomb or the corpse survived the tsunami, it is likely that the tomb was lost around 400 BC when the Christians began demanding that pagans cease to worship false gods. As Alexander the Great was worshipped in his death, he would have been a prime candidate for destruction. If the revered king's body and tomb were still intact at this time, they may not have stood a chance against the Christians.
After this time period, there is no reference to the location of Alexander the Great's tomb. To this day, no trace of any of his three tombs has been found, as far as we know. Nor has his sarcophagus, body or any of the relics supposedly buried with him been found. If his tomb had been looted, we may stand a chance of finding these things elsewhere than Alexandria. If it was destroyed by the massive tsunami that presumably took other treasures with it, chances are we will never find any trace of it.
The general consensus, and most likely truth, is that the final resting place of Alexander the Great was in Alexandria, Egypt. There have been claims that Alexander's tomb may be found elsewhere and that there is evidence for such. However, the evidence that it was in Alexandria when it either was destroyed or looted beyond recognition is overwhelming by comparison. Nonetheless, we must conclude at this point that the fate of the tomb of Alexander the Great is unknowable as it stands.
Sources
Chugg, Andrew, The Tomb of Alexander, retrieved 8/11/10, alexanderstomb.com/main/index.html
Alexander the Great, retrieved 8/11/10, historyofmacedonia.org/AncientMacedonia/AlexandertheGreat.html
Published by Shelly Barclay
Shelly Barclay writes on a variety of topics from animal facts to mysteries in history. Her main focus is military and political history. She is the Boston History Examiner, Military History Examiner and the... View profile
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10 Comments
Post a CommentHi, Jason. He was 33-years-old. Thank you for noticing that typo.
Was he 23 (like you said in the first paragraph), or 26 (like you said in the end of the 2nd paragraph) when he died?
I was thinking he was 30 years old when he died, but then I remembered that was the Emperor Nero. Classical knowledge is very interesting to me..:) You never fail to write such intelligent things. Alexander survived many battles only to die from something like 'swamp fever.' He was killed by a microbe.
I had no idea he was so young when he died. Thanks for the history lesson.
INteresting read,I didn't know his body had been moved so much. Probably unlikely that his remains will be found.
Great research. Alexander is indeed a fascinating character. How amazing to achieve so much when so young, but also he was too naive to realise how much he neglected his homeland. So much history lies in Alexandria, not the least the great library that burned down, and caused so many manuscripts that might have explained our past to be lost.
Interesting history. I don't understand the constant concern over remains of people who are dead and gone, however.
I didn't even know Alexander the Great had a tomb! I also didn't know he died so young
He wanted to be, Bill. That was his request. However, his family and officers fought over where to bury him and he was eventually taken to Egypt.
I always thought that he was cremated.