(Redirected from Alexander of Epirus)'Alexander I of Epirus' (ca.
370 BC - ca.
331 BC), also known as 'Alexander Molossus' was a king of
Epirus (
350 BC-
331 BC) of the
Aeacid dynasty.
He was the son of
Neoptolemus and brother of
Olympias, the mother of
Alexander the Great. He came at an early age to the court of
Philip II of Macedon, and after the Grecian fashion became the object of his attachment. Philip in requital made him king of Epirus, after dethroning his uncle
Arymbas. When Olympias was repudiated by her husband,
337 BC, she went to her brother, and endeavoured to induce him to make war on Philip.
Philip, however, declined the contest, and formed a second alliance with Alexander I by giving him his daughter (Alexander I's niece)
Cleopatra in marriage (
336 BC). At the wedding Philip was assassinated by
Pausanias of Orestis. In
334 BC, Alexander I, at the request of the Greek colony of
Taras (in
Magna Graecia), crossed over into
Italy, to aid them in battle against several
Italic tribes, the
Lucanians and
Bruttii. After a victory over the
Samnites and Lucanians near
Paestum,
332 BC, he made a treaty with the
Romans. Success still followed his arms. He took
Heraclea from the Lucanians, and
Terina and
Sipontum from the Bruttii. Through the treachery of some Lucanian exiles, he was compelled to engage under unfavourable circumstances near
Pandosia, on the banks of the Acheron, and was killed by the hand of one of the exiles, as he was crossing the river. He left a son, Neoptolemus, and a daughter, Cadmea.
References
★
Justin, ''Epitome of Pompeius Trogus'', viii.6, ix.6, xii.2
★
Livy, ''
Ab urbe condita'', viii.3, 17, 24
★
Aulus Gellius, ''Noctes Atticae'', xvii.21
External links
★
Livius,
Alexander of Molossis by Jona Lendering
★
Alexander of Epirus on
A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1870) - text in public domain