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Head of Alexander There are five principle historical sources from which we gain virtually all our knowledge concerning Alexander’s life and reign. THE ANCIENT SOURCES All literary evidence concerning Alexander’s life rests fundamentally upon five biographical and historical accounts, in addition to one ancient romance. They are: A.
Diodorus Siculus, a Greek of the mid-first century B.C.
who composed forty books of history of which fifteen survive. Book 17 deals entirely with Alexander. B.
Quintus Curtius Rufus, a Latin author of the mid-first century
A.D., whose ten book history of Alexander comprises his only extant work. C.
Plutarch, a classical Greek historian, whose Life of Alexander was composed in the
second century A.D. D.
Justin, a
second century A.D. short account of Alexander, an epitome of an earlier history by one Pompeius
Trogus. E.
Lucius Flavius Arrianus (Arrian) whose Anabasis of Alexander was written
mid-second century A.D. comprising the most complete and accurate account. In addition there is one ancient romance: The Alexander Romance. This work exists only in its fourth century A.D. form, and reflects a classical romantic tradition concerning Alexander. Little of the romance is serious history.
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