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Although it’s certainly possible that Alexander’s body was salvaged from its tomb it’s unlikely
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  • 00:00

    On the evening of May 29, 323 BC, at Babylon, Alexander the Great attended a banquet.

  • 00:09

    The guests – all generals and potentates of the empire – drank freely in the usual

  • 00:14

    Macedonian way, toasting the king and each other with goblet after goblet of unmixed

  • 00:20

    wine.

  • 00:21

    Toward the end of the banquet, after yet another round of toasts, Alexander began to feel ill.

  • 00:27

    The next morning, he woke with a fever.

  • 00:31

    At first, Alexander ignored his illness, busying himself with preparations for his upcoming

  • 00:37

    expedition to Arabia.

  • 00:39

    But his fever worsened, until he could no longer get out of bed.

  • 00:44

    His voice failed.

  • 00:45

    He lapsed into unconsciousness.

  • 00:48

    On the tenth day after the banquet, Alexander breathed his last.

  • 00:53

    He was 32 years old.

  • 00:56

    Since becoming King of Macedon 12 years before, Alexander had conquered the largest empire

  • 01:01

    to that point in history.

  • 01:03

    He had burned Thebes and Persepolis.

  • 01:05

    He had defeated the gargantuan armies of the King of Kings, the horsemen of the steppes,

  • 01:12

    and the elephants of the Indian princes.

  • 01:14

    He had been acclaimed pharaoh.

  • 01:16

    He had declared himself a god.

  • 01:19

    And now, he was dead.

  • 01:22

    The initial reaction was shock, followed by a mad scramble for power.

  • 01:26

    Alexander’s embalmed body lay at Babylon for two years, as his former generals schemed

  • 01:33

    and squabbled.

  • 01:34

    At last, during a lull in the in-fighting, the king’s remains began the long recessional

  • 01:40

    to Macedon in a gargantuan carriage drawn by 64 mules in gilded harness.

  • 01:47

    In Syria, the carriage and its honor guard were diverted south by forces loyal to Ptolemy,

  • 01:52

    the general who had seized control of Egypt.

  • 01:56

    The king’s coffin was brought to Memphis, ancient capital of the pharaohs, while Ptolemy

  • 02:00

    built a suitably impressive mausoleum in Alexandria, the new Greek metropolis on the mouths of

  • 02:07

    Nile.

  • 02:08

    Alexander’s Mausoleum – which came to be known as the Soma – was part of the palace

  • 02:13

    complex Ptolemy and his successors built in the heart of Alexandria.

  • 02:18

    The interior was dominated by a sarcophagus of solid gold, later replaced – when one

  • 02:24

    of Ptolemy’s successors found himself strapped for cash – by a crystal casket.

  • 02:30

    There Alexander’s body remained, revered by the world, for centuries.

  • 02:35

    Augustus had the lid of the casket removed so that he could gaze upon the conqueror.

  • 02:41

    He laid flowers on the mummified torso, fitted a golden circlet on the head, and – according

  • 02:47

    to one source – managed to break the nose when he bent to kiss the withered cheeks.

  • 02:53

    Two and a half centuries later, Caracalla – whose hero-worship was so intense that

  • 02:59

    he believed himself to be Alexander reborn – visited the tomb with his retinue.

  • 03:04

    The lid was lifted again, and Caracalla saw his idol, face to nose-less face.

  • 03:11

    He draped his cloak over the wizened body, and let his golden rings fall, one by one,

  • 03:17

    into the crystal casket.

  • 03:20

    Caracalla is the last person known to have entered the tomb of Alexander.

  • 03:24

    In 272, during a catastrophic riot, fire swept over the whole palace quarter, destroying

  • 03:31

    most of it.

  • 03:33

    If Alexander’s tomb survived the flames, it may have perished a generation later, when

  • 03:37

    the armies of Diocletian sacked Alexandria.

  • 03:40

    A more literal wave of destruction followed in 365, when a tsunami came roaring over the

  • 03:47

    harbor, plucking ships from their moorings, battering down buildings, and burying most

  • 03:52

    of the city beneath a wall of water.

  • 03:56

    Speaking of water damage…

  • 03:58

    Do you have trouble with water in your house?

  • 04:02

    If your pipes or drains are clogged, and you live in or near Astoria, Queens, call Steve

  • 04:08

    at Woosh, and make it drain.

  • 04:10

    And since Steve, like Alexander, understands that speed is the essence of an effective

  • 04:17

    campaign, we now return to our topic.

  • 04:21

    Perhaps it was the tsunami that finally destroyed Alexander’s tomb.

  • 04:26

    Perhaps it was the sack, or the fire, or any of the countless episodes of urban unrest

  • 04:31

    that bloodied the streets of Alexandria in late antiquity.

  • 04:36

    One late fourth-century author implies that the tomb still existed in his time.

  • 04:41

    Another, however, rhetorically asks whether anyone knows where Alexander lies.

  • 04:47

    Whatever the cause, no source mentions the tomb after the end of the fourth century.

  • 04:53

    Many attempts have been made to locate Alexander’s tomb.

  • 04:57

    The sanest have focused on central Alexandria, where the palace quarter of the ancient city

  • 05:03

    is assumed to have stood.

  • 05:05

    Even here, however, practical difficulties make the search almost impossible.

  • 05:10

    A densely-populated city is not an easy place in which to dig; and any remains that still

  • 05:17

    exist have likely been damaged or destroyed by the deep foundations of modern buildings.

  • 05:22

    If the remains of Alexander’s tomb are ever found, they are not likely to be impressive.

  • 05:28

    The tomb would not have been allowed to sit as a ruin; its stone would have been carted

  • 05:34

    away for re-use, and the site built over.

  • 05:37

    Whatever may still survive of the tomb, Alexander’s body will almost certainly not be discovered

  • 05:43

    inside.

  • 05:44

    It was too famous, too talismanic to have been left in the rubble – or so, at least,

  • 05:52

    the best-known theory about the body’s fate suggests.

  • 05:56

    In 2004, British researcher Andrew Chugg made headlines by announcing that the body of Alexander

  • 06:03

    was in Venice.

  • 06:05

    Sometime in the fourth century, he claimed, the conqueror’s remains had been secretly

  • 06:09

    transferred from the Soma to the nearby Church of St. Mark.

  • 06:13

    There they remained for a half-millennium or so, until two merchants – mistaking Alexander

  • 06:18

    for St. Mark – brought them to Venice.

  • 06:22

    Although it’s certainly possible that Alexander’s body was salvaged from its tomb, it’s unlikely,

  • 06:28

    to say the least, that the remains of a pagan king with divine pretensions would have been

  • 06:33

    brought to Alexandria’s most important church.

  • 06:36

    And it’s even less likely that the conqueror’s body was ever mistaken for the evangelist’s.

  • 06:42

    These, after all, were very high-profile corpses.

  • 06:47

    Nobody even knows whether the body beneath the altar of St. Mark’s is the one that

  • 06:51

    was brought from Alexandria.

  • 06:53

    When the basilica was reconstructed in the eleventh century, that body was lost, and

  • 06:58

    only rediscovered – according to tradition – by miraculous intervention.

  • 07:03

    Whomever it once belonged to, the body currently identified as St. Mark has not fared well

  • 07:09

    over the centuries: by the time it were moved to its current location under the altar, little

  • 07:15

    remained but a damaged skull and a few shattered bones.

  • 07:18

    If Alexander’s body is anywhere, it is in Alexandria.

  • 07:23

    Perhaps it lies in some drowned catacomb.

  • 07:27

    Perhaps it was pulled apart by late antique relic seekers, and survives as anonymous bits

  • 07:33

    of bone in a hundred buried mansions.

  • 07:36

    But I prefer to imagine a dramatic end.

  • 07:40

    I imagine the walls of the mausoleum glowing with heat, the marble cracking and calcifying,

  • 07:46

    the sarcophagus melting into puddled glass.

  • 07:49

    Or I picture a wall of water exploding through the door, mirrored for an instant on the face

  • 07:54

    of the crystal coffin; and then, after a burst of elemental fury, the sea receding from an

  • 08:00

    empty room, the golden rings of the emperors scattered over the marble floor.

  • 08:06

    If you enjoyed this video, please consider supporting toldinstone on Patreon.

  • 08:10

    You might also enjoy my book, Naked Statues, Fat Gladiators, and War Elephants.

  • 08:16

    Thanks for watching.

All

The example sentences of PRETENSIONS in videos (1 in total of 1)

to to say verb, base form the determiner least adjective, superlative , that preposition or subordinating conjunction the determiner remains noun, plural of preposition or subordinating conjunction a determiner pagan noun, singular or mass king noun, singular or mass with preposition or subordinating conjunction divine adjective pretensions noun, plural would modal have verb, base form been verb, past participle

Use "pretensions" in a sentence | "pretensions" example sentences

How to use "pretensions" in a sentence?

  • and it was always without pretensions of loving or being loved although always in the hope of finding something that resembled love but without the problems of love.
    -Gabriel Garcia Marquez-
  • Nearly everywhere monarchs raised themselves further above the level of the greatest nobles and buttressed their new pretensions to respect and authority with cannons and taxation.
    -John Roberts-
  • Love is an artful arrangement of artless pretensions, whereby we labor to appear innocent in what we desire to be most cunning.
    -Norm MacDonald-
  • You showed me how insufficient were all my pretensions to please a woman worthy of being pleased.
    -Jane Austen-
  • Success plus Self-esteem equals Pretensions.
    -William James-
  • If you try to go beyond your interests just for the sake of pretensions or wealth, your art becomes less legitimate.
    -Vincent D'Onofrio-
  • When intimacy followed love in Italy there were no longer any vain pretensions between two lovers.
    -Stendhal-
  • Fighting battles is like courting girls: those who make the most pretensions and are boldest usually win.
    -Rutherford B. Hayes-

Definition and meaning of PRETENSIONS

What does "pretensions mean?"

/prəˈten(t)SH(ə)n/

noun
claim or assertion of claim to something.
other
Attempt to seem more important or intelligent.

What are synonyms of "pretensions"?
Some common synonyms of "pretensions" are:
  • aspiration,
  • claim,
  • assertion,
  • pretense,
  • profession,
  • purporting,
  • pretentiousness,
  • affectation,
  • affectedness,
  • ostentation,
  • ostentatiousness,
  • artificiality,
  • attitudinizing,
  • airs,
  • posing,

You can find detailed definitions of them on this page.