Monday, May 25, 2026

The King Who Became Persian [Was it Alexander]

 The King Who Became Persian

Victory changed Alexander.

At first, he had led as a Macedonian hero—simple, disciplined, relentless.

But now, he sat on golden thrones in Persian palaces.

He dressed like the kings he had defeated.
He demanded the court rituals of the East.
He surrounded himself with luxury and ceremony.

To the Persians, this made him their rightful king.
To the Greeks, it felt like betrayal.

Was he still one of them?
Or had he become something else?

Alexander believed he was creating a new kind of ruler—one who belonged to both worlds.

But his own men struggled to follow him into this vision.

Empires can be conquered by force.
But identities cannot.

Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Susa Weddings

 The Susa Weddings

Susa, the ancient Persian city where Alexander the Great held mass weddings in 324 BC to unite Macedonian and Persian cultures, is in modern-day Iran. It sits in the lower Zagros Mountains, approximately 250 km east of the Tigris River, specifically on the site of the modern city of Shush in Khuzestan

Several years later, Alexander carried this policy still further in one of the most remarkable ceremonies of his reign—the mass marriages at Susa.

Here, in 324 BC, he arranged for ninety Macedonian officers to marry Persian noblewomen. The ceremony was conducted with great splendour, combining elements of both Greek and Persian tradition. It was intended as a public declaration of unity.

On this occasion, Alexander himself took additional wives.

One was Stateira, the daughter of the defeated Persian king. By this union, Alexander strengthened his claim as successor to the Persian throne. At the same time, he also married Parysatis, thus connecting himself with another branch of the royal house.

These marriages were not acts of mere personal desire. They were political measures, designed to bind the Macedonian conquerors and the Persian nobility into a single ruling class.

For a moment, it seemed as though Alexander’s vision might succeed. Macedonians and Persians stood side by side, not as enemies, but as kindred.

Yet beneath the splendour, tensions remained. Many Macedonians viewed these unions with reluctance, and the deeper divisions between the two cultures could not easily be erased.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

The Wedding of Two Worlds

 The Wedding of Two Worlds

In a distant land of mountains and winds, Alexander first saw her.

Roxana.

She was the daughter of a Bactrian chief, captured during his campaigns. But the moment he saw her, the conqueror paused. Not out of strategy—but admiration.

Some said it was beauty.
Some said it was destiny.

He chose to marry her.

Not as a prisoner.
But as a queen.

Yet this was more than love—or desire.

It was a symbol.

A Macedonian king joining hands with an eastern princess.
A union of conqueror and conquered.

Later, at the grand Susa weddings, Alexander would go further still.

Stateira, daughter of the fallen Persian king, became his wife.
So too did Parysatis, linking him to another royal line.

Around them, ninety Macedonian officers married Persian noblewomen.

It was no ordinary ceremony.
It was a political vision made flesh.

A world where enemies became family.


Where bloodlines replaced battle lines.

But unity forced too quickly can be fragile.

Friday, May 22, 2026

Alexander's Marriage at Bactra

 Alexander's Marriage at Bactra

Alexander the Great married Roxana in 327 BC at a fortress in Bactria, an ancient region located in modern-day northern Afghanistan, specifically centred around the city of Balkh. Situated south of the Amu Darya (Oxus) River and north of the Hindu Kush mountains, this area was a key province of the Persian Empire.

During Alexander’s campaigns in Central Asia, Alexander encountered a princess whose fate would become closely tangled with his own.

Her name was Roxana, the daughter of a noble chief. She had been taken captive, as many others were in those campaigns, but her beauty and dignity distinguished her at once. According to several ancient writers, Alexander was deeply struck by her appearance and soon resolved to marry her.

The marriage, celebrated in 327 BC, was not merely an act of personal inclination. It carried a wider meaning.

By marrying a woman of the eastern nobility, Alexander gave visible form to his policy of union between conqueror and conquered. Roxana was no longer a captive, but a queen. Through her, Alexander linked himself to the lands he had controlled, not only by power, but by family.

To his Macedonian officers, this step was unusual, even unsettling. Their king, who had once embodied the ideals of Greek heroism, was now forming bonds with those they had long regarded as enemies.

Yet to Alexander, marriage was a step toward a broader vision—a blending of nations through ties of blood as well as allegiance.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

Alexander’s Dream of One World

 

Alexander’s Dream of One World

The fighting was over. Alexander had won a huge empire. But as he looked around, he realised something important.

The people in his empire were very different. They spoke different languages, believed in different gods, and lived in different ways. If they stayed divided, his empire would not last.

So, Alexander made a new plan. He didn’t want to rule separate people—he wanted to bring them together as one.

He ruled not one person, but many.

From the plains of Macedon to the deserts of Persia, languages shifted, gods changed, customs clashed. Victory had given him land—but not unity.

And Alexander, unlike many conquerors, understood this danger.

So, he chose a bold path:
not to rule over Persians and Greeks—but to bind them into one people.

He wore Persian robes.
He bowed to Persian gods.
He raised Persians into power beside Greeks.

His own generals murmured.
His soldiers grumbled.

But Alexander saw further than they did.

If he ruled only as a Greek king, his empire would fracture.
If he became something greater—something new—his empire might endure.

He was no longer just a conqueror.
He was attempting to become a bridge between worlds

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

136. The Kingdom of Sikander: A Memoir of Lost Heaven

 

136. The Kingdom of Sikander: A Memoir of Lost Heaven

*An Anecdote from the Valley*

Legend holds that the fair-skinned peoples of Kashmir, Gilgit, the Hunza Valley, and Baltistan are descendants of Alexander the Great’s soldiers. Readers of Rudyard Kipling’s *The Man Who Would Be King* — or viewers of the superb film adaptation — will recall how the local tribes awaited the return of Sikander, Alexander’s son. There may, in fact, be substance to this charming legend.

Alexander fought his way through the Khyber Pass and entered northern India via the Indus Valley in 327 BC. The following year, he won a major battle against the local king at Hydaspes, but his army refused to march any deeper into the subcontinent. Before returning to Persia, he left behind many thousands of his elite Macedonian troops, with orders to marry local women and establish Greek satrapies. In classical times, Macedonians and most Greeks were a fair-skinned, blue-eyed people — revealing their northern, even Germanic, roots. They were a far cry from today’s Hellenes, who are products of centuries of mixing with Ottoman Turks, Slavs, and other Balkan peoples.

Cut off from India and Afghanistan by the ramparts of the Karakoram and the Himalayas, the Greco-Kashmiri gene pool remained relatively isolated until modern times. The result is people who appear strikingly different from their neighbours — like marooned survivors from a lost shipwreck, beached and forgotten long ago on a strange, uncharted island.

Many natives of Hunza, Kashmir, the Swat Valley, and Chitral look distinctly Aryan. The Kafir Kalash — a little-known non-Muslim tribe with the curious custom of selecting the village’s strongest man to mate with all its virgins — appear as though they have followed this practice for centuries, perhaps to preserve their gene pool. Where did these fair-skinned people come from, if not from Alexander’s hoplites?

*The light-skinned peoples of Kashmir, Gilgit, the Hunza Valley, and Baltistan are descendants of the soldiers of Alexander the Great, the legend says. And maybe it is true. Maybe the Macedonians did stay, did marry, did build a kingdom in these impossible mountains. But if Sikander’s soldiers ever return to claim their inheritance, they will find only bones and bunkers — and a people who have forgotten how to live without war.*

*The kingdom in the clouds remains: still beautiful, still scarred. And no one is about to hand over heaven, of all places, to a hated enemy. *

Xxx

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Hindu Kush

Hindu Kush 

The name "Hindu Kush" refers to a major mountain range that historically marked the northwestern frontier of the Indian subcontinent. The most cited origin traces to 14th-century traveller Ibn Battuta, who described it as "Hindu-killer" due to the deaths of countless Hindu slaves from India who perished from cold and harsh conditions while being trafficked northward to Central Asia by Muslim traders and invaders. Ibn Battuta, crossing the passes around 1333 CE, noted that the extreme weather claimed so many Hindu captives en route to markets in Turkestan that the range earned its grim cross. This interpretation persists in local Afghan lore and popular accounts, linking it to the medieval slave trade during invasions by figures like Mahmud of Ghazni and Timur.

Some scholars propose "Hindu Koh," meaning "mountains of India" or "Hindu mountains," as a simpler geographic descriptor, with "Kush" as a variant of the Persian "Kuh" for mountain; Mughal emperor Akbar reportedly tried renaming it this way in 1586 to appease Hindu subjects.  The slave-death theory, however, remains the earliest documented and most widely referenced

In shadowed passes where the wild winds wail,
Hindu Kush stands, a graveyard etched in stone,
Where captive souls from India's sunlit vale
Met winter's bite, their final breaths a moan.
Named for the slaughter of the weary throng,
Slaves chained in torment, lost to icy wrong.

From Ibn Battuta's quill, the tale unfolds,
Of merchants marching north through frozen hell,
Where Hindu blood turned peaks to crimson gold,
And countless perished 'neath the mountain's spell.
No mercy in those heights, no gentle call,
Just echoes of the fallen, one and all.

Yet some whisper "Kuh," the mountain's tongue,
A boundary bold 'twixt realms of faith and fire,
Akbar sought to cloak its dirge unsung,
Renaming grief to soothe an empire's pyre.
But history's scar remains, unbowed, severe,
Hindu Kush whispers death through every year.

Ref:

[iranicaonline]

[sanskritimagazine+1youtubewikipedia+1]

[.youtubedharmapedia]