From Babylon to Antioch: Three Centuries of Seleucid Imperial Power
The Hegemony of the Anchor traces the rise and fall of the Seleucid Empire, one of antiquity's most ambitious yet least understood imperial projects. From Seleucus's daring return to Babylon with eight hundred soldiers in 312 BC to Pompey's quiet dissolution of the dynasty in 63 BC, this comprehensive history examines how a Macedonian military elite governed territories stretching from the Mediterranean to Central Asia for nearly three centuries. The book moves beyond traditional military narrative to analyze the administrative systems that made such vast governance possible, the economic networks that sustained professional armies and magnificent courts, and the complex cultural negotiations between Greek settlers and indigenous populations. Particular attention is devoted to the dynasty's sophisticated approaches to religious tolerance, the revolutionary development of the military colony system, and the ultimately fatal collision with Roman power at Magnesia in 190 BC. The final chapters examine the human cost of the terminal civil wars and assess the empire's enduring legacy in urbanization, administrative practice, and the creation of Koine Greek as the linguistic foundation for Christian scripture and Byzantine scholarship. This is the story of how Eastern and Western civilizations first truly combined, creating institutional and cultural models that would shape Mediterranean and Asian history long after the dynasty's political extinction.
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History