Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2013
Alexander the Great was one of the central figures of ancient history as it was understood throughout the Middle Ages and into modern times. This article focuses on a significant change in the way in which he was represented after the arrival of humanist learning in England. While the medieval tradition, based on the Alexander Romance, generally made Alexander an unblemished knightly hero and a minister of God, in the fifteenth century a new way of thinking about him emerged that was influenced by the negative philosophical tradition represented by Seneca and Quintus Curtius. A central feature of such treatments was his cruelty: in earlier authors this was exemplified by the killings of the philosopher Callisthenes and of his childhood friend Cleitus. But in the Renaissance the judgement attached itself instead to the execution of Philotas, reflecting both a new critical approach to history and a new understanding of the legitimacy of kingly power.
I would like to acknowledge the benefit I have received from discussing the subjects of this article with my students at Exeter over the past five years, and from comments by the audiences when a version of this paper was given as a Classical Association lecture in Exeter in March 2012, as well as at the conference ‘Discovering the World of Alexander the Great’ at Naoussa, Greece, in November 2012.
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36 The reader will recognize the quotation from Juv. Sat. 10.365–6.
37 Ayres (n. 30), 13. Fortuna is the presiding deity of Quintus Curtius' history, but his Fortuna is rather different from the medieval concept: it is not a turning wheel but a mark of the steady favour of the gods. For Livy, his good fortune was most evident in that he never had to face a Roman army (see Morello, R., ‘Livy's Alexander Digression’, JRS 92 [2002], 62–85Google Scholar), while Plutarch, in his On the Virtue or Fortune of Alexander, argued that Alexander showed his greatness by triumphing even though Fortune was against him much of the time. Montaigne, ‘On the most excellent of men’, in Essays ii.36, ed. M. Screech (Harmondsworth, 1987), 853–5, makes the same point as Curtius.
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52 Ibid., v.353.
53 Ibid., v.369, quoting Sen. Q Nat. 6.23.2.
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55 Ibid., v.381.
56 See above, n. 38.
57 Nicholls and Williams (n. 22), 332.
58 Ralegh (n. 41), vii.900.