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Ptolemy I ( 367– 283 BC; reigned 305– 283), founder of the Ptolemaic dynasty, son of Lagus , a Macedonian nobleman of Eordaea , was one of Alexander the Great's most trusted generals, and among the seven "body-guards" attached to his person.
He plays a principal part in the later campaigns of Alexander in Afghanistan and India. At the Susa marriage festival in 324, Alexander caused him to marry the Persian princess Artacama ; but there is no further mention of this Asiatic bride in the history of Ptolemy.
When Alexander died in 323, the resettlement of the empire at Babylon is said to have been made at Ptolemy's instigation. At any rate, he was now appointed satrap of EgyptJumhuriyat Misr al-Arabiyah ( In Detail) Official language Arabic Capital Cairo Largest City Cairo President Hosni Mubarak Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif Area Total % water Ranked 29th 1,001,450 km˛ 0. 6% Population Total (2003) Density Ranked 15th 74,718,797 under the nominal kings Philip ArrhidaeusPhilip III (Arrhidaeus (c. 352 BC December 25, 317 BC), king of Macedonia ( June 10, 323 BC December 25, 317 BC), was the feeble-minded son of Philip II of Macedonia by Philinna of Larissa, a Thessalian wife, and half-brother of Alexander the Great After and the young AlexanderAlexander IV of Macedon (lived 323 309 BC; titular King of Macedon, 323 309 BC), the posthumous son of Alexander the Great by his wife Roxana, a princess of Bactria, was born in 323 BC, a few months after his father's death and was immediately declared Ki.
He at once took a high hand in the province by killing CleomenesThere have been three kings of Sparta by the name Cleomenes Cleomenes I (c. 490) Exiled from Sparta. Helped Xerxes at the Battle of Thermopylae Cleomenes II (370-309 BC) Cleomenes III (236-219 BC)., the financial controller appointed by Alexander the Great; he also subjugated CyrenaicaCyrenaica was a Roman province on the northern coast of Africa between Egypt and Numidia; it had been formerly Greek. That area is now the eastern part of the Mediterranean coast of Libya. The province consisted classically of five cities, the Pentapolis—. He contrived to get possession of Alexander's body which was to be interred with great pomp by the imperial government and placed it temporarily in MemphisMemphis was the ancient capital of the Old Kingdom of Egypt from its foundation until around 1300 BC. The ruins are 19 km (12 mi. south of Cairo on the West Bank of the Nile. The city was founded around 3100 BC by Menes of Tanis, who united the two kingdo. This act led to an open rupture between Ptolemy and the imperial regent PerdiccasFor the minor kings of this name, see Perdiccas I, Perdiccas II, and Perdiccas III. Perdiccas (d. May-June 320 BC) was one of Alexander the Great's generals, son of Orontes, a descendant of the independent princes of the province of Orestis. Perdiccas dis. But Perdiccas perished in the attempt to invade Egypt ( 321Centuries: 5th century BC 4th century BC 3rd century BC Decades: 370s BC 360s BC 350s BC 340s BC 330s BC 320s BC 310s BC 300s BC 290s BC 280s BC 270s BC 326 BC 325 BC 324 BC 323 BC 322 BC 321 BC 320 BC 319 BC 318 BC 317 BC 316 BC Events At the Battle of t).
In the long wars between the different Macedonian chiefs which followed, Ptolemy's first object is to hold his position in Egypt securely, and secondly to possess the Cyrenaica, Cyprus and Palestine (Coele-Syria). His first occupation of Palestine was in 318, and he established at the same time a protectorate over the petty kings of Cyprus. When Antigonus, master of Asia in 315, showed dangerous ambitions, Ptolemy joined the coalition against him, and, on the outbreak of war, evacuated Palestine. In Cyprus, he fought the partisans of Antigonus and re-conquered the island ( 313). A revolt of Cyrene was crushed in the same year.
Silver coin depicting Ptolemy I (r. 305 - 283),
In 312, Ptolemy, with Seleucus, the fugitive satrap of Babylonia, invaded Palestine and beat Demetrius, the son of Antigonus, in the great Battle of Gaza . Again he occupied Palestine, and again a few months later, after Demetrius had won a battle over his general and Antigonus entered Syria in force, he evacuated it. In 311, a peace was concluded between the combatants, soon after which the surviving king Alexander was murdered in Macedonia, leaving the satrap of Egypt absolutely his own master.
The peace did not last long, and in 309 Ptolemy commanded a fleet in person which detached the coast towns of Lycia and Caria from Antigonus and crossed to Greece, where Ptolemy took possession of Corinth, Sicyon and Megara ( 308). In 306, a great fleet under Demetrius attacked Cyprus, and Ptolemy's brother, Menelaus, was defeated and captured in the decisive Battle of Salamis. The complete loss of Cyprus followed.
Antigonus and Demetrius now assumed the title of kings; Ptolemy, as well as Cassander, Lysimachus and Seleucus I Nicator, answered this challenge by doing the same.
In the winter of 306, Antigonus tried to follow up the victory of Cyprus by invading Egypt, but here Ptolemy was strong, and held the frontier successfully against him. Ptolemy led no further expedition against Antigonus overseas. To the Rhodians, besieged by Demetrius ( 305/ 304), he sent such help as won him divine honours in Rhodes and the surname of Soter ("saviour"). When the coalition was renewed against Antigonus in 302, Ptolemy joined it, and invaded Palestine a third time, whilst Antigonus was engaged with Lysimachus in Asia Minor. On a report that Antigonus had won a decisive victory, for a third time he evacuated the country. But when news came that Antigonus had been defeated and slain at the Battle of Ipsus in 301 by Lysimachus and Seleucus, Ptolemy occupied Palestine for the fourth time.
The other members of the coalition had assigned Palestine to Seleucus after what they regarded as Ptolemy's desertion, and for the next hundred years the question of its ownership becomes the standing ground of enmity between the Seleucid and Ptolemaic dynasties. Henceforth, Ptolemy seems to have mingled as little as possible in the broils of Asia Minor and Greece; his possessions in Greece he did not retain, but Cyprus he re-conquered in 295/ 294.
Cyrene, after a series of rebellions, was finally subjugated about 300 and placed under his stepson Magas.In 285 he abdicated in favour of one of his younger sons by Berenice, who bore his father's name of Ptolemy II; his eldest (legitimate) son, Ptolemy Ceraunus, whose mother, Eurydice, the daughter of Antipater, had been repudiated, fled to the court of Lysimachus.
Ptolemy I Soter died in 283 at the age of 84. Shrewd and cautious, he had a compact and well-ordered realm to show at the end of fifty years of wars. His name for bonhomie and liberality attached the floating soldier-class of Macedonians and Greeks to his service. Nor did he neglect conciliation of the natives. He was a ready patron of letters, and the great library, which was Alexandria's glory, owed to him its inception.
He wrote himself a history of Alexander's campaigns, distinguished by its straightforward honesty and sobriety. Although lost, it was a principle source for the surviving account by Arrian of Nicomedia.