by Dr. Potitsa Grigorakou-Parnassos
The
ancient Macedonians followed Alexander all the way to India and assisted
him to build his
empire which survived -divided into smaller ones- for
three centuries after his death (in 323 B.C.) These three post-Alexander
centuries are called by scholars as the German Droysen,
Hellenistic
Era,
to distinguish it from the Greek classical period.
Excavations of archeological sites in
Asia, from Syria all the way to Afghanistan, Uzbekistan and India, bring
recently to light the post-Alexander world.
As reported by ancient historians and
proved now by the archeologists, the Hellenistic era is characterized by
"the spread of the Greek civilization to the Orient", as Tarn said,
achieved by the Macedonian successors of Alexander and resulting from
two main factors: the many Greek cities built by Alexander and his
successors and the ecumenism of the Greek language. What was the force
that propelled it??
The excavations also demonstrate the
influence of the Greek culture on the arts and civilizations
of Asia and vice versa.
The findings reveal also that the elements
of the Greek civilization were voluntarily adopted by the
local people for many centuries after the Greeks left Asia, as for
example the Kushan art and
especially the Gandhara art, named by the
French specialists, Graeco-Buddhist.
After many years of excavations and studies, only
recently, the last 15 years, have we begun to
realize how
historically important are the archeological findings in
Asia, especially those done by
the French archeologists,
who keep excavating systematically since the beginning of 1900. Today
those who are mostly known are Professors Paul Bernard,
Pierre Leriche, Osmund Bopearachchi, Jean Yves Empereur, Edward
Rtveladze and several others of different countries,
Mrs Souvaltzi
among them, who operate excavations in Asia and Egypt.
The seed of Hellenic civilization brought about a sort of
renaissance in Asia that changed the cultural identity of the Asian
world. The archeologists have lighten up the persistent use of the
Greek language in Asia that made the civilization
universal for many centuries (ten in the Middle
East), till Islam arrived and beyond.
Professor Mostafa El-Abbadi of the University of
Alexandria writes in his book "The Ancient
Library of Alexandria" (UNESCO, Paris 1992) that more
than a century after the Arab conquest,
Damascus and Alexandria continued to use the Greek as the
official state language (from 331
B.C. to 750
A.D.). This remarkable persistence was mainly due to the post-Alexander
Macedonian
kings and little reference is made to this.
According to Plutarch, Alexander built seventy cities
named "Alexandria", (picture No1
- map
of
Alexander's expedition and the main Alexandrias)
nine of which were in Bactria (today's
Afghanistan, south Uzbekistan, Tadzikistan and Pakistan)
at the East end of his kingdom. Originally they were built as
fortresses, but some of them were developed later as great commercial
and cultural centers spreading the Greek civilization to the peoples of
Asia. Many
more cities were built later by King Seleucus 1st
the Nikator, an Alexander's general who
established the
Seleucid Empire in
Asia after Alexander's death, and by an other general,
Ptolemy and his heirs in his kingdom in Egypt (total, about 200 Greek
cities). (Picture
No 2 -
Map).
Some of them are known well, a few only by
name, and others have been excavated without the archeologists knowing
their names.
Certain cities became large commercial and cultural
centers in the long east-west routes in Asia,
later known as the Silk Road, and greatly affected their
surrounding territories. The many stretched routes, created to
facilitate communications between cities (picture No 3- map),
increased the commercial and cultural exchanges between various
people from the Mediterranean to India, making the Greek language a
necessary tool of communication among people and a channel for spreading
the Greek civilization.
Other Greek settlers migrated to the new cities, bringing
with them knowledge, new ways of life
and Greek art. Many indigenous people who were Hellenized
also contributed to the perpetuation
of the Greek culture. A good example is the architect
Apollodor from Damascus who built the Rome's Forum. Other examples of
Greek influence on local cities are: the Arab city of Petra with
Greek architecture, the Aramaic city of Palmyra of the
roman period, with Greek architecture and
Greek official
language (Pictures No 4-Petra
&
No 5-
Palmyra).
The most important characteristic of the Greek
civilization in Asia, which was disseminated by the
Hellenistic cities, was the fact that it did not replace
or abolish the local civilizations. Preserving their own culture, the
people of the Orient adopted the Greek civilization to a degree that was
desirable or necessary for their intellectual or commercial exchanges.
The presence of large theaters excavated in the Hellenistic and
Greco-Roman cities for instance, (Picture No
6 - Theater in Gerasa)
show that the local people understood Greek and the Greek plays,
since there were no translations at those times. Also many local cities
had adopted Greek as their
official written
language, example the coin of
Petra
(Picture No 7).
The
universality of the Greek language also helped the spread of
Christianity later.
The best known Greek cities in the Middle East are:
Alexandria of Egypt, rich capital of the Ptolemy's kingdom (the most
important commercial and cultural center of the Hellenic world, where
Alexander was buried, as Dr Souvaltzi developed and where the two
cultures, Greek and Egyptian melted) (Pictures
No 8 - Alexandria in
3D & No 9 - Venus-lsis) Other important Greek cities
are Ephesus,
Antioch (the "Paris" of the Middle East according to Gibbon, both cities
rich, glamorous and illuminated at
night), Dion, Pella, Edessa, Veria, Laodiceia, Doura-Europos,
Philippoupolis (today Aman), Apamea, Chalkis, Herakleia etc. Many of them have
names of cities in Macedonia, or of other Greek cities, of
Greek gods or of king's family. The
Greek language in these cities was used until the arrival of
Islam and
beyond.
The Greek presence was so strong, especially in Syria
-where so many Hellenistic cities had
been built-that Strabon calls it "small Macedonia" in his
description, as Professor Leriche
mentioned. Some of these cities are excavated by him
personally.
During the Roman period that followed the Hellenistic
Era, the cities continued to maintain their
Hellenistic identity, some of them became rich, and
exhibited grandiose architecture with graceful
Corinthian
pillars, wide streets and beautiful mosaics.
(Pictures No 10 - Columns of Apamea,
No 11-Mosaics
of Zeugma, No 12 - Colums
of
Gerasa).
The second great center of Hellenistic civilization was
Bactria, in Central Asia. The Greco-Bactrian
and Indo-Greek kingdoms developed there, with forty Greek kings
ruling the
region in succession, as far deep inside India, for three centuries. The
Greek kings (Picture No 13)
established some Greek
cities and introduced the Greek coins in these areas (some of the attic
type) with Greek gods on the rear. Thousands of coins were discovered
showing the Greek cultural
influence, the high level of civilization, the wealth of the area and
the Hellenic influence on the cultural and economic life of the local
people, as Professor Bopearachchi reported in his taped speech.
Ex. a Kushan coin (1st a), with Greek inscription and Greek
goddess on the rear. (Picture No 14).
Ai Khanum in north Afghanistan, near the Tatzikistan
border, is the only Hellenistic city excavated
almost entirely, by the French archeological expedition,
under the supervision of the Academician, Professor Paul Bernard. Its
Greek name is not known. It is an impressive and very characteristic
city that furnished archeological precious information relative to the
Oriental Hellenistic cities. (Picture
No 15 - Ai Khanum,
No 16 - Theatre, No 17 - mosaics with Verghina's sun, a
Macedonian symbol).
Built on the strategic passage to
Tatzikistan, Ai Khanum is an example of genuine, solid
Hellenistic city with Greek architecture and institutions, a huge
majestic structure with the
characteristic central avenue, an Acropolis, Temple of
Zeus, Palace, Theatre, Gymnasium dedicated to Hercules, Library, public
fountains, statues, Greek pillars, and philosophical
epigrams carved on the city's monuments, based on Delphic
maxims. The city cleverly blended
the local elements with the Hellenic civilization.
The
Kushan Empire of local people, who replaced later the Graeco-Bactrian
kingdoms in the region, adopted the Greek alphabet and elements of the
Greek art and themes. (Pictures Kushan
art:
No 18
- Ring with Athena,
No 19 - Venus of Kushan,
No 20 - Dionysos and Ariadne and
No - 21 - Kushan
writing).
Also the Graeco-Buddhist Art of Gandhara, that followed, showing statues
of Buddha with the face of Apollo, (Pictures
No 22 - Buddha with
Apollo's features and Greek chiton, No 23 Buddha
with (No 24) Hercules and
(No 25) Alexander on his sides,
Photos and restoration of Prof. Z. Tarzi),
all of these arts prove the
liking of the local artists for Hellenistic civilization that lasted
five
centuries after the Greeks left the area. Unfortunately, the Ai Khanum
archeological site, like so many other sites and museums, have
been plundered during the last few years.
The grand epoch in Asia and Egypt, named Hellenistic
Era or Hellenism of the Orient as French Professor
Sclumberger called it, with its special civilization, was created by the
power, resiliency
and spirit of the Hellenic civilization that was easily
and peacefully amalgamated with the Asian and Egyptian ones. A
remarkable result of this amalgamation was a new art, the Hellenistic
Art whose creation was the Greco-Buddhist Art of Gandhara, expressing
the Buddhist theme with
Hellenic style. (Picture No
26 - head of a Kore
from Uzbekistan with Praxitelian plasticity).
The spread of the Greek civilization in the Orient by the
Macedonians demonstrates their Greek
cultural identity, the proof of which lies in the
excavated cities in Asia and also in the strong
memories of Alexander the Greek and the Greek
civilization, which are still alive in Central Asia,
especially among people in Afghanistan, Pakistan and
Uzbekistan. Example this recent Afghan currency with a Graeco-Bactrian
king's emblem and Greek inscription EYKPATIΔOY
MEΓAΛOY
BAΣIΛEΩΣ
(Picture No
27).
Some populations in the region still wear the Kausia, the
Macedonian hat, revere Greece and the
Greek culture and claim they are of Alexander's descent.!
Even Marco Polo reports it in his book
in 1200.
The Hellenistic Era would not have occurred had not been
for the contribution of Alexander's Macedonians, who were Greeks. The
Seleucids, the Ptolemies have worked to establish it. The
force that
propelled it was Hellenism, a concept expressed by Droysen, wrapped
within a single word: Hellenismus.
If Alexander and his Macedonians were not possessed by the power of
Greek
pride, there would have been no Hellenistic Era, no matter how many
experts from other Greek cities-states followed the Macedonians to the
depths of
Asia.
The expressed view that the Hellenistic civilization was
spread by the other Greeks and not by the
Macedonians cannot be correct. Despite the fighting among
the post-Alexander kingdoms, their solid Hellenism remained intact.
There was not a single voice in or for any other language than Greek.
Despite Demosthenes's rhetoric, the pan-Hellenic spirit followed the
Macedonians to the Orient. In Ai Khanum they lived with philosophical
Delphic maxims while in Luxor in Egypt they carved their names on the
columns, all of them in Greek.
Some people in Central Asia still think of Alexander the
Greek and his Greeks from Macedonia
who brought to them the Hellenic civilization. Some towns
in Uzbekistan add the name Iskenderia
(Alexandria) to
their own (Odil Saidikramov, "Uzbekistan"), proud of having been on
Alexander's way
to
India and of having received elements of the Greek
culture which they still greatly respect.
They say Hair for hello, the Greek word Haire, among many
others used in these regions.
In Asia the Greek civilization spread by the Macedonians
enriched, influenced the local cultures and blended with them. It is a
great achievement and besides, it proves the Greek cultural identity
of the ancient Macedonians.—