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The Anabasis of Alexander
or, The History of the Wars and Conquests of Alexander the Great

The Anabasis of Alexander or, The History of the Wars and Conquests of Alexander the Great

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THE
ANABASIS OF ALEXANDER;

OR,

The History of the Wars and Conquests of Alexander the Great.

LITERALLY TRANSLATED, WITH A COMMENTARY,
FROM THE GREEK OF ARRIAN THE NICOMEDIAN
,

BY
E. J. CHINNOCK, M.A., LL.B., LONDON,
Rector of Dumfries Academy.

London:

HODDER AND STOUGHTON,
27, PATERNOSTER ROW.
MDCCCLXXXIV.


Butler & Tanner,
The Selwood Printing Works,
Frome, and London.


PREFACE.

When I began this Translation, more than two years ago, I had no intention of publishing it; but as the work progressed, it occurred to me that Arrian is an Author deserving of more attention from the English-speaking races than he has yet received. No edition of his works has, so far as I am aware, ever appeared in England, though on the Continent many have been published. In the following Translation I have tried to give as literal a rendering of the Greek text as I could without transgressing the idioms of our own language. My theory of the duty of a Translator is, to give the ipsissima verba of his Author as nearly as possible, and not put into his mouth words which he never used, under the mistaken notion of improving his diction or his way of stating his case. It is a comparatively easy thing to give a paraphrase of a foreign work, presenting the general drift of the original; but no one, unless he has himself tried it, can understand the difficulty of translating a classical Author correctly without omission or mutilation.

In the Commentary which I have compiled, continual reference has been made to the other extant authorities on the history of Alexander, such as Diodorus, Plutarch, Curtius, Justin, and Aelian; so that I think I may safely assert that, taking the Translation and the Notes together, the book forms a complete history of Alexander’s reign. Much geographical and other material has also been gathered from Herodotus, Strabo, Pliny, and Ammianus; and the allusions to the places which are also mentioned in the Old Testament are given from the Hebrew.

As Arrian lived in the second century of the present era, and nearly five hundred years after Demosthenes, it is not to be expected that he wrote classical Greek. There are, however, at least a dozen valuable Greek authors of this century whose works are still extant, and of these it is a safe statement to make, that Arrian is the best of them all, with the single exception of Lucian. I have noticed as many of his deviations from Attic Greek constructions as I thought suitable to a work of this kind. A complete index of Proper Names has been added, and the quantities of the vowels marked for the aid of the English Reader. In the multiplicity of references which I have put into the Notes, I should be sanguine if I imagined that no errors will be found; but if such occur, I must plead as an excuse the pressure of work which a teacher in a large school experiences, leaving him very little energy for literary labour.

E. J. C.

DUMFRIES,
  December, 1883.


CONTENTS.

PAGE

Life and Writings of Arrian

1

Arrian’s Preface

6


BOOK I.
CHAP.

I. Death of Philip and Accession of Alexander.—His Wars with the Thracians

8

II. Battle with the Triballians

12

III. Alexander at the Danube and in the Country of the Getae

14

IV. Alexander destroys the City of the Getae.—The Ambassadors of the Celts

16

V. Revolt of Clitus and Glaucias

18

VI. Defeat of Clitus and Glaucias

22

VII. Revolt of Thebes (September, B.C. 335)

25

VIII. Fall of Thebes

28

IX. Destruction of Thebes

31

X. Alexander’s Dealings with Athens

34

XI. Alexander crosses the Hellespont and visits Troy

36

XII. Alexander at the Tomb of Achilles.—Memnon’s advice Rejected by the Persian Generals

38

XIII. Battle of the Granicus (B.C. 334)

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