
The death of Alexander the Great and subsequent related events have been the subjects of debates. According to a Babylonian astronomical diary, Alexander died in the palace of Nebuchadnezzar II in Babylon between the evening of 10 June and the evening of 11 June 323 BC, at the age of 32.

Macedonians and local residents wept at the news of the death, while Achaemenid subjects were forced to shave their heads. The mother of Darius III, Sisygambis, having learned of Alexander's death, became depressed and killed herself later. Historians vary in their assessments of primary sources about Alexander's death, which has resulted in different views about its cause and circumstances.
Background
In February 323 BC, Alexander ordered his armies to prepare for the march to Babylon. According to Arrian, after crossing the Tigris Alexander was met by Chaldeans, who advised him not to enter the city because their deity Bel had warned them that to do so at that time would be fatal for Alexander. The Chaldeans also warned Alexander against marching westwards as he would then look to the setting sun, a symbol of decline. It was suggested that he enter Babylon via the Royal Gate, in the western wall, where he would face to the east. Alexander followed this advice, but the route turned out to be unfavorable because of swampy terrain. According to Jona Lendering, "it seems that in May 323" the Babylonian astrologers tried to avert the misfortune by substituting Alexander with an ordinary person on the Babylonian throne, who would take the brunt of the omen. The Greeks, however, did not understand that ritual.
Prophecy of Calanus
Calanus was likely to be a Hindu Naga sadhu, whom Greeks called gymnosophists. He had accompanied the Greek army back from Punjab, upon request by Alexander. He was 73 years of age at that time. However, when Persian weather and travel fatigue weakened him, he informed Alexander that he would rather die than live disabled. He decided to take his life by self-immolation. Alexander tried to dissuade him from doing so but upon the insistence of Calanus, Alexander relented and the job of building a pyre was entrusted to Ptolemy. The place where this incident took place was Susa in 323 BC. Calanus is mentioned also by Alexander's admiral, Nearchus and Chares of Mytilene. He did not flinch as he burnt to the astonishment of those who watched. Before immolating himself alive on the pyre, his last words to Alexander were "We shall meet in Babylon". Thus he is said to have prophesied the death of Alexander in Babylon. At the time of the death of Calanus, Alexander, however, did not have any plan to go to Babylon. No one understood the meaning of his words "We shall meet in Babylon". It was only after Alexander fell sick and died in Babylon, that the Greeks came to realize what Calanus intended to convey.
Causes
According to historical accounts, Alexander's body began to decompose six days after his death. Proposed causes of Alexander's death include alcoholic liver disease, fever, and strychnine poisoning, but little data support those versions. According to the University of Maryland School of Medicine report of 1998, Alexander probably died of typhoid fever (which, along with malaria, was common in ancient Babylon). In the week before his death, historical accounts mention chills, sweats, exhaustion and high fever, typical symptoms of infectious diseases, including typhoid fever. According to David W. Oldach from the University of Maryland Medical Center, Alexander also had "severe abdominal pain, causing him to cry out in agony". The associated account, however, comes from the unreliable Alexander Romance. According to Andrew N. Williams and Robert Arnott, in his last days Alexander was unable to speak, which was due to a previous injury to his neck during the Siege of Cyropolis.
Other popular theories contend that Alexander either died of malaria or was poisoned. Other retrodiagnoses include noninfectious diseases as well. According to author Andrew Chugg, there is evidence Alexander died of malaria, having contracted it two weeks before the onset of illness while sailing in the marshes to inspect flood defences. Chugg based his argument on the Ephemerides (Journal) compiled by Alexander's secretary, Eumenes of Cardia. Chugg also showed in a paper in the Ancient History Bulletin that the Ephemerides are probably authentic. Chugg further noted that Arrian states that Alexander "No longer had any rest from the fever" halfway through his fatal illness. This is evidence that the fever had initially been intermittent, which is the signature fever curve of Plasmodium falciparum (the expected malarial parasite, given Alexander's travel history and the severity of the illness), thus enhancing the likelihood of malaria. The malaria version was also supported by Paul Cartledge.[citation needed]
Throughout the centuries suspicions of possible poisoning have fallen on a number of alleged perpetrators, including one of Alexander's wives, his generals, his illegitimate half-brother or the royal cup-bearer. The poisoning version is featured particularly in the politically motivated Liber de Morte Testamentoque Alexandri (The Book On the Death and Testament of Alexander), which tries to discredit the family of Antipater. It was argued that the book was compiled in Polyperchon's circle, not before c. 317 BC. This theory was also advanced by Justin in his Historia Philippicae et Totius Mundi Origines et Terrae Situs where he stated that Antipater murdered Alexander by feeding him a poison so strong that it "could be conveyed [only] in the hoof of a horse.".
In Alexander the Great: The Death of a God, Paul C. Doherty claimed that Alexander was poisoned with arsenic by his possibly illegitimate half-brother Ptolemy I Soter. However, this was disputed by New Zealand National Poisons Centre toxicologist Dr. Leo Schep, who discounted arsenic poisoning and instead suggested that he could have been poisoned by a wine made from the plant Veratrum album, known as white hellebore. This poisonous plant can produce prolonged poisoning symptoms that match the course of events as described in the Alexander Romance, and was known to the Ancient Greeks. The article was published in the peer-reviewed medical journal Clinical Toxicology and suggested that if Alexander was poisoned, Veratrum album offers the most plausible cause. This theory is supported by the writings of the Ancient Greek historian Diodorus, who had recorded Alexander becoming "stricken with pain after drinking a large bowl of wine" at a banquet hosted by one of his officers, Medius of Larissa. However, historian Robin Lane Fox has argued that allegations of poisoning are "technically implasuible" given the length of time between Alexander's first reported symptoms and his death. "The poisons of herbalists were swift and irremediable, whether hemlocks, hellebores or belladonnas, and except as an explanation of mysterious illness, a slow poison met no need in the poison-chests of ancient Greece. If Alexander had been poisoned, he should surely have been given a massive dose which was absolutely certain to kill him at once. And yet Diaries, pamphlets and official calendars insist that twelve days elapsed between Medius's fateful banquet and the death of the king."
Epidemiologist John Marr and Charles Calisher put forward the West Nile fever as the possible cause of Alexander's death. This version was deemed "fairly compelling" by University of Rhode Island epidemiologist Thomas Mather, who nonetheless noted that the West Nile virus tends to kill the elderly or those with weakened immune systems. The version of Marr and Calisher was also criticized by Burke A. Cunha from Winthrop University Hospital. According to analysis of other authors in response to Marr and Calisher, the West Nile virus could not have infected humans before the 8th century AD.
Other causes that have been put forward include acute pancreatitis provoked by "heavy alcohol consumption and a very rich meal",acute endocarditis,schistosomiasis brought on by Schistosoma haematobium,porphyria, and Guillain-Barré syndrome.Fritz Schachermeyr proposed leukemia and malaria. When Alexander's symptoms were entered into databases of the Global Infectious Disease Epidemiology Network, influenza gained the highest probability (41.2%) on the list of differential diagnoses. However, according to Cunha, the symptoms and course of Alexander's disease are inconsistent with influenza, as well as with malaria, schistosomiasis, and poisoning in particular.
Another theory moves away from disease and hypothesizes that Alexander's death was related to a congenital scoliotic syndrome. It has been discussed that Alexander had structural neck deformities and oculomotor deficits, which could be associated with Klippel–Feil syndrome, a rare congenital scoliotic disorder. His physical deformities and symptoms leading up to his death are what lead experts to believe this. Some believe that as Alexander fell ill in his final days, he suffered from progressive epidural spinal cord compression, which left him quadriplegic. However, this hypothesis cannot be proven without a full analysis of Alexander's body.
Some have speculated that he suffered from Guillain-Barré syndrome, which typhoid fever can lead to when complicated with other maladies. He may have contracted this disease from a Helicobacter pylori infection after his lung wound during the siege of Multan, where it was common at the time. Proponents say this would explain why Alexander's body reportedly did not decompose for 6 days following his 'death' as he may well have been still alive but in a deep coma.
Body preservation
One ancient account reports that the planning and construction of an appropriate funerary cart to convey the body out from Babylon took two years from the time of Alexander's death. It is not known exactly how the body was preserved for about two years before it was moved from Babylon. In 1889, E. A. Wallis Budge suggested that the body was submerged in a vat of honey, while Plutarch reported treatment by Egyptian embalmers.
Egyptian and Chaldean embalmers who arrived on 16 June are said to have attested to Alexander's lifelike appearance. This was interpreted as a complication of typhoid fever, known as ascending paralysis, which causes a person to appear dead prior to death.
Tomb
On its way back to Macedonia, the funerary cart with Alexander's body was met in Syria by one of Alexander's generals, the future ruler Ptolemy I Soter. In late 322 or early 321 BC Ptolemy diverted the body to Egypt where it was interred in Memphis. In the late 4th or early 3rd century BC Alexander's body was transferred from the Memphis tomb to Alexandria for reburial (by Ptolemy Philadelphus in c. 280 BC, according to Pausanias). Later Ptolemy Philopator placed Alexander's body in Alexandria's communal mausoleum. Shortly after the death of Cleopatra, Alexander's tomb was visited by Augustus, who is said to have placed flowers on the tomb and a golden diadem upon Alexander's head. By the 4th century AD, the location of Alexander's body was no longer known; later authors, such as Ibn Abd al-Hakam, Al-Masudi and Leo Africanus, report having seen Alexander's tomb. Leo Africanus in 1491 and George Sandys in 1611 reportedly saw the tomb in Alexandria. According to one legend, the body lies in a crypt beneath an early Christian church.
See also
- List of unsolved deaths
- Ptolemaic cult of Alexander the Great
Notes
- "A contemporary account of the death of Alexander". Livius.org. Retrieved Nov 5, 2019.
- Freeman, Philip (2011). Alexander the Great. Simon and Schuster. p. 320. ISBN 978-1-4165-9280-8.
- Chugg, Andrew (2007). The Quest for the Tomb of Alexander the Great. Lulu.com. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-9556790-0-1.
- Jona Lendering. "Death in Babylon". Livius.org. Archived from the original on August 2, 2016. Retrieved Aug 22, 2011.
- "Alexander and the Chaldaeans". Livius.org. Archived from the original on April 27, 2016. Retrieved Aug 22, 2011.
- Alexander the Great. Robin Lane Fox. 1973. pp. 416, 470–471. ISBN 9780713905007.
- Yādnāmah-ʾi Panjumīn Kungrih-ʾi Bayn al-Milalī-i Bāstānshināsī va Hunar-i Īrān. Ministry of Culture and Arts, Iran. Vizārat-i Farhang va Hunar. 1972. p. 224.
- Warner, Arthur George; Warner, Edmond (2001). The Sháhnáma of Firdausí. Psychology Press. p. 61. ISBN 9780415245432.
- Warraq, Ibn (2007). Defending the West: a critique of Edward Said's Orientalism Front Cover. Prometheus Books. p. 108. ISBN 9781591024842.
- Algra, Keimpe, ed. (1999). The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy. Cambridge University Press. p. 243. ISBN 9780521250283.
- Borruso, Silvano (2007). History of Philosophy. Paulines Publications Africa. p. 50. ISBN 9789966082008.
- National Geographic, Volume 133. 1968. p. 64.
- The philosophical books of Cicero. Duckworth. 1989. p. 186. ISBN 9780715622148.
- Cunha BA (March 2004). "The death of Alexander the Great: malaria or typhoid fever". Infect. Dis. Clin. North Am. 18 (1). Infectious Disease Clinics of North America 2004 Mar;18(1):53–63: 53–63. doi:10.1016/S0891-5520(03)00090-4. PMID 15081504.
- "INTESTINAL BUG LIKELY KILLED ALEXANDER THE GREAT". University of Maryland Medical Center. Retrieved Aug 21, 2011.
- Carlos G. Musso. "MEGAS ALEXANDROS (Alexander The Great ): His Death Remains a Medical Mystery". Humane Medicine Health Care. Retrieved Aug 21, 2011.
- "A Stone at the Siege of Cyropolis and the Death of Alexander the Great".
- John S. Marr; Charles H. Calisher (2004). "Alexander the Great and West Nile Virus Encephalitis". Emerging Infectious Diseases. 10 (7). CDC: 1328–1333. doi:10.3201/eid1007.040039. PMC 3323347. PMID 15338538.
- The Quest for the Tomb of Alexander the Great, A. M. Chugg, AMC Publications, 3rd Edition, January 2020, Chapter 1 (pages28-45).
- Aelian, Varia Historia 3.23 (a recognised fragment of the Ephemerides which is attributed to Eumenes in Aelian's text).
- A. M. Chugg, "The Journal of Alexander the Great", Ancient History Bulletin 19.3–4 (2005) 155–175.
- Arrian, Anabasis Alexandrou 7.25.4.
- Robert Sallares, Malaria and Rome, OUP 2002, p.11.
- "Disease, not conflict, ended the reign of Alexander the Great". The Independent on Sunday. Retrieved Aug 21, 2011.
- John Atkinson; Elsie Truter; Etienne Truter (Jan 1, 2009). "Alexander's last days: malaria and mind games?". Acta Classica. Retrieved Aug 21, 2011.
- Justin. "Preface". Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus. Translated by Watson, John.
- Schep LJ, Slaughter RJ, Vale JA, Wheatley P (January 2014). "Was the death of Alexander the Great due to poisoning? Was it Veratrum album?". Clinical Toxicology. 52 (1): 72–7. doi:10.3109/15563650.2013.870341. PMID 24369045. S2CID 20804486.
- Bennett-Smith, Meredith (14 January 2014). "Was Alexander The Great Poisoned By Toxic Wine?". The Huffington Post. Retrieved 15 January 2014.
- Wolfe, Sarah (13 January 2014). "Alexander the Great was killed by toxic wine, says scientist". Public Radio International. Retrieved 5 March 2018.
- "Nature-Alexander the Great". GIDEON. Retrieved Aug 21, 2011.
- Cunha, Burke A. (July 2004). "Alexander the Great and West Nile virus encephalitis". Emerging Infectious Diseases. 10 (7): 1328–1329, author reply 1332–1333. doi:10.3201/eid1007.040039. ISSN 1080-6040. PMC 3323347. PMID 15338538.
- Sbarounis CN (June 1997). "Did Alexander the Great die of acute pancreatitis?". J. Clin. Gastroenterol. 24 (4). Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology 1997 Jun;24(4):294-6: 294–6. doi:10.1097/00004836-199706000-00031. PMID 9252868.
- Owen Jarus (4 February 2019). "Why Alexander the Great May Have Been Declared Dead Prematurely (It's Pretty Gruesome)". Live Science. Retrieved Nov 3, 2021.
- Ashrafian pg. 138
- Ashrafian, pg.139
- Ashrafian, pg. 140
- George K. York, David A. Steinberg, "Commentary. The Diseases of Alexander the Great", Journal of the History of the Neurosciences, Vol. 13, 2004, pg. 154
- Meyer, Jean-Arcady (2023). The Rise and Fall of the Library of Alexandria. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 356.
- Emerging Infectious Diseases Volume 9, Issues 7–12, Part 2. Rutgers University. 2003. p. 1600.
- Hall, Katherine (2018). "Did Alexander the Great Die from Guillain-Barré Syndrome?". Ancient History Bulletin. 32 (3–4).
- Robert S. Bianchi. "Hunting Alexander's Tomb". Archaeology.org. Retrieved Aug 21, 2011.
- Aufderheide, Arthur (2003). The scientific study of mummies. Cambridge University Press. pp. 261–262. ISBN 0-521-81826-5.
- Madden, Richard (1851). The Shrines and Sepulchres of the Old and New World. Newby. pp. 137–138.
- "Alexander's death riddle is 'solved'". BBC. June 11, 1998. Retrieved Aug 21, 2011.
References
- Hutan Ashrafian, "The Death of Alexander the Great — A Spinal Twist of Fate", Journal of the History of the Neurosciences, Vol. 13, 2004
Further reading
- Doherty, Paul C. (2004). The Death of Alexander the Great: What-or Who-Really Killed the Young Conqueror of the Known World?. New York City: Carroll & Graf Publishers. ISBN 978-1-84529-156-3.
- Everitt, Anthony (2021). Alexander the Great: His Life and His Mysterious Death. New York City: Random House. ISBN 978-0425286531.
- Grant, David (2022). The Last Will and Testament of Alexander the Great: The Truth Behind the Death That Changed the Graeco-persian World Forever. Barnsley: Pen and Sword Books. ISBN 978-1526771261.
The death of Alexander the Great and subsequent related events have been the subjects of debates According to a Babylonian astronomical diary Alexander died in the palace of Nebuchadnezzar II in Babylon between the evening of 10 June and the evening of 11 June 323 BC at the age of 32 Dying Alexander copy of a 2nd century BC sculpture National Art Museum of Azerbaijan Macedonians and local residents wept at the news of the death while Achaemenid subjects were forced to shave their heads The mother of Darius III Sisygambis having learned of Alexander s death became depressed and killed herself later Historians vary in their assessments of primary sources about Alexander s death which has resulted in different views about its cause and circumstances BackgroundWith an effort he looked at them as they passed In February 323 BC Alexander ordered his armies to prepare for the march to Babylon According to Arrian after crossing the Tigris Alexander was met by Chaldeans who advised him not to enter the city because their deity Bel had warned them that to do so at that time would be fatal for Alexander The Chaldeans also warned Alexander against marching westwards as he would then look to the setting sun a symbol of decline It was suggested that he enter Babylon via the Royal Gate in the western wall where he would face to the east Alexander followed this advice but the route turned out to be unfavorable because of swampy terrain According to Jona Lendering it seems that in May 323 the Babylonian astrologers tried to avert the misfortune by substituting Alexander with an ordinary person on the Babylonian throne who would take the brunt of the omen The Greeks however did not understand that ritual Prophecy of Calanus Calanus was likely to be a Hindu Naga sadhu whom Greeks called gymnosophists He had accompanied the Greek army back from Punjab upon request by Alexander He was 73 years of age at that time However when Persian weather and travel fatigue weakened him he informed Alexander that he would rather die than live disabled He decided to take his life by self immolation Alexander tried to dissuade him from doing so but upon the insistence of Calanus Alexander relented and the job of building a pyre was entrusted to Ptolemy The place where this incident took place was Susa in 323 BC Calanus is mentioned also by Alexander s admiral Nearchus and Chares of Mytilene He did not flinch as he burnt to the astonishment of those who watched Before immolating himself alive on the pyre his last words to Alexander were We shall meet in Babylon Thus he is said to have prophesied the death of Alexander in Babylon At the time of the death of Calanus Alexander however did not have any plan to go to Babylon No one understood the meaning of his words We shall meet in Babylon It was only after Alexander fell sick and died in Babylon that the Greeks came to realize what Calanus intended to convey CausesThe poisoning of Alexander depicted in the 15th century romance The History of Alexander s Battles J1 version NLW MS Pen 481D According to historical accounts Alexander s body began to decompose six days after his death Proposed causes of Alexander s death include alcoholic liver disease fever and strychnine poisoning but little data support those versions According to the University of Maryland School of Medicine report of 1998 Alexander probably died of typhoid fever which along with malaria was common in ancient Babylon In the week before his death historical accounts mention chills sweats exhaustion and high fever typical symptoms of infectious diseases including typhoid fever According to David W Oldach from the University of Maryland Medical Center Alexander also had severe abdominal pain causing him to cry out in agony The associated account however comes from the unreliable Alexander Romance According to Andrew N Williams and Robert Arnott in his last days Alexander was unable to speak which was due to a previous injury to his neck during the Siege of Cyropolis Other popular theories contend that Alexander either died of malaria or was poisoned Other retrodiagnoses include noninfectious diseases as well According to author Andrew Chugg there is evidence Alexander died of malaria having contracted it two weeks before the onset of illness while sailing in the marshes to inspect flood defences Chugg based his argument on the Ephemerides Journal compiled by Alexander s secretary Eumenes of Cardia Chugg also showed in a paper in the Ancient History Bulletin that the Ephemerides are probably authentic Chugg further noted that Arrian states that Alexander No longer had any rest from the fever halfway through his fatal illness This is evidence that the fever had initially been intermittent which is the signature fever curve of Plasmodium falciparum the expected malarial parasite given Alexander s travel history and the severity of the illness thus enhancing the likelihood of malaria The malaria version was also supported by Paul Cartledge citation needed Throughout the centuries suspicions of possible poisoning have fallen on a number of alleged perpetrators including one of Alexander s wives his generals his illegitimate half brother or the royal cup bearer The poisoning version is featured particularly in the politically motivated Liber de Morte Testamentoque Alexandri The Book On the Death and Testament of Alexander which tries to discredit the family of Antipater It was argued that the book was compiled in Polyperchon s circle not before c 317 BC This theory was also advanced by Justin in his Historia Philippicae et Totius Mundi Origines et Terrae Situs where he stated that Antipater murdered Alexander by feeding him a poison so strong that it could be conveyed only in the hoof of a horse In Alexander the Great The Death of a God Paul C Doherty claimed that Alexander was poisoned with arsenic by his possibly illegitimate half brother Ptolemy I Soter However this was disputed by New Zealand National Poisons Centre toxicologist Dr Leo Schep who discounted arsenic poisoning and instead suggested that he could have been poisoned by a wine made from the plant Veratrum album known as white hellebore This poisonous plant can produce prolonged poisoning symptoms that match the course of events as described in the Alexander Romance and was known to the Ancient Greeks The article was published in the peer reviewed medical journal Clinical Toxicology and suggested that if Alexander was poisoned Veratrum album offers the most plausible cause This theory is supported by the writings of the Ancient Greek historian Diodorus who had recorded Alexander becoming stricken with pain after drinking a large bowl of wine at a banquet hosted by one of his officers Medius of Larissa However historian Robin Lane Fox has argued that allegations of poisoning are technically implasuible given the length of time between Alexander s first reported symptoms and his death The poisons of herbalists were swift and irremediable whether hemlocks hellebores or belladonnas and except as an explanation of mysterious illness a slow poison met no need in the poison chests of ancient Greece If Alexander had been poisoned he should surely have been given a massive dose which was absolutely certain to kill him at once And yet Diaries pamphlets and official calendars insist that twelve days elapsed between Medius s fateful banquet and the death of the king The Funeral of Iskandar Folio from a Shahnama Persian Book of Kings Stories of Alexander s life and death detailed throughout his reign as ruler over the Persian empire Epidemiologist John Marr and Charles Calisher put forward the West Nile fever as the possible cause of Alexander s death This version was deemed fairly compelling by University of Rhode Island epidemiologist Thomas Mather who nonetheless noted that the West Nile virus tends to kill the elderly or those with weakened immune systems The version of Marr and Calisher was also criticized by Burke A Cunha from Winthrop University Hospital According to analysis of other authors in response to Marr and Calisher the West Nile virus could not have infected humans before the 8th century AD Other causes that have been put forward include acute pancreatitis provoked by heavy alcohol consumption and a very rich meal acute endocarditis schistosomiasis brought on by Schistosoma haematobium porphyria and Guillain Barre syndrome Fritz Schachermeyr proposed leukemia and malaria When Alexander s symptoms were entered into databases of the Global Infectious Disease Epidemiology Network influenza gained the highest probability 41 2 on the list of differential diagnoses However according to Cunha the symptoms and course of Alexander s disease are inconsistent with influenza as well as with malaria schistosomiasis and poisoning in particular Another theory moves away from disease and hypothesizes that Alexander s death was related to a congenital scoliotic syndrome It has been discussed that Alexander had structural neck deformities and oculomotor deficits which could be associated with Klippel Feil syndrome a rare congenital scoliotic disorder His physical deformities and symptoms leading up to his death are what lead experts to believe this Some believe that as Alexander fell ill in his final days he suffered from progressive epidural spinal cord compression which left him quadriplegic However this hypothesis cannot be proven without a full analysis of Alexander s body Some have speculated that he suffered from Guillain Barre syndrome which typhoid fever can lead to when complicated with other maladies He may have contracted this disease from a Helicobacter pylori infection after his lung wound during the siege of Multan where it was common at the time Proponents say this would explain why Alexander s body reportedly did not decompose for 6 days following his death as he may well have been still alive but in a deep coma Body preservationFuneral of Iskander Alexander pallbearers carry his coffin draped with brocaded silk and his turban at one end In Nizami s version Iskandar fell ill and died near Babylon Because it was believed he had been poisoned no antidotes could revive him One ancient account reports that the planning and construction of an appropriate funerary cart to convey the body out from Babylon took two years from the time of Alexander s death It is not known exactly how the body was preserved for about two years before it was moved from Babylon In 1889 E A Wallis Budge suggested that the body was submerged in a vat of honey while Plutarch reported treatment by Egyptian embalmers Egyptian and Chaldean embalmers who arrived on 16 June are said to have attested to Alexander s lifelike appearance This was interpreted as a complication of typhoid fever known as ascending paralysis which causes a person to appear dead prior to death TombOn its way back to Macedonia the funerary cart with Alexander s body was met in Syria by one of Alexander s generals the future ruler Ptolemy I Soter In late 322 or early 321 BC Ptolemy diverted the body to Egypt where it was interred in Memphis In the late 4th or early 3rd century BC Alexander s body was transferred from the Memphis tomb to Alexandria for reburial by Ptolemy Philadelphus in c 280 BC according to Pausanias Later Ptolemy Philopator placed Alexander s body in Alexandria s communal mausoleum Shortly after the death of Cleopatra Alexander s tomb was visited by Augustus who is said to have placed flowers on the tomb and a golden diadem upon Alexander s head By the 4th century AD the location of Alexander s body was no longer known later authors such as Ibn Abd al Hakam Al Masudi and Leo Africanus report having seen Alexander s tomb Leo Africanus in 1491 and George Sandys in 1611 reportedly saw the tomb in Alexandria According to one legend the body lies in a crypt beneath an early Christian church See alsoList of unsolved deaths Ptolemaic cult of Alexander the GreatNotes A contemporary account of the death of Alexander Livius org Retrieved Nov 5 2019 Freeman Philip 2011 Alexander the Great Simon and Schuster p 320 ISBN 978 1 4165 9280 8 Chugg Andrew 2007 The Quest for the Tomb of Alexander the Great Lulu com p 25 ISBN 978 0 9556790 0 1 Jona Lendering Death in Babylon Livius org Archived from the original on August 2 2016 Retrieved Aug 22 2011 Alexander and the Chaldaeans Livius org Archived from the original on April 27 2016 Retrieved Aug 22 2011 Alexander the Great Robin Lane Fox 1973 pp 416 470 471 ISBN 9780713905007 Yadnamah ʾi Panjumin Kungrih ʾi Bayn al Milali i Bastanshinasi va Hunar i iran Ministry of Culture and Arts Iran Vizarat i Farhang va Hunar 1972 p 224 Warner Arthur George Warner Edmond 2001 The Shahnama of Firdausi Psychology Press p 61 ISBN 9780415245432 Warraq Ibn 2007 Defending the West a critique of Edward Said s Orientalism Front Cover Prometheus Books p 108 ISBN 9781591024842 Algra Keimpe ed 1999 The Cambridge History of Hellenistic Philosophy Cambridge University Press p 243 ISBN 9780521250283 Borruso Silvano 2007 History of Philosophy Paulines Publications Africa p 50 ISBN 9789966082008 National Geographic Volume 133 1968 p 64 The philosophical books of Cicero Duckworth 1989 p 186 ISBN 9780715622148 Cunha BA March 2004 The death of Alexander the Great malaria or typhoid fever Infect Dis Clin North Am 18 1 Infectious Disease Clinics of North America 2004 Mar 18 1 53 63 53 63 doi 10 1016 S0891 5520 03 00090 4 PMID 15081504 INTESTINAL BUG LIKELY KILLED ALEXANDER THE GREAT University of Maryland Medical Center Retrieved Aug 21 2011 Carlos G Musso MEGAS ALEXANDROS Alexander The Great His Death Remains a Medical Mystery Humane Medicine Health Care Retrieved Aug 21 2011 A Stone at the Siege of Cyropolis and the Death of Alexander the Great John S Marr Charles H Calisher 2004 Alexander the Great and West Nile Virus Encephalitis Emerging Infectious Diseases 10 7 CDC 1328 1333 doi 10 3201 eid1007 040039 PMC 3323347 PMID 15338538 The Quest for the Tomb of Alexander the Great A M Chugg AMC Publications 3rd Edition January 2020 Chapter 1 pages28 45 Aelian Varia Historia 3 23 a recognised fragment of the Ephemerides which is attributed to Eumenes in Aelian s text A M Chugg The Journal of Alexander the Great Ancient History Bulletin 19 3 4 2005 155 175 Arrian Anabasis Alexandrou 7 25 4 Robert Sallares Malaria and Rome OUP 2002 p 11 Disease not conflict ended the reign of Alexander the Great The Independent on Sunday Retrieved Aug 21 2011 John Atkinson Elsie Truter Etienne Truter Jan 1 2009 Alexander s last days malaria and mind games Acta Classica Retrieved Aug 21 2011 Justin Preface Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus Translated by Watson John Schep LJ Slaughter RJ Vale JA Wheatley P January 2014 Was the death of Alexander the Great due to poisoning Was it Veratrum album Clinical Toxicology 52 1 72 7 doi 10 3109 15563650 2013 870341 PMID 24369045 S2CID 20804486 Bennett Smith Meredith 14 January 2014 Was Alexander The Great Poisoned By Toxic Wine The Huffington Post Retrieved 15 January 2014 Wolfe Sarah 13 January 2014 Alexander the Great was killed by toxic wine says scientist Public Radio International Retrieved 5 March 2018 Nature Alexander the Great GIDEON Retrieved Aug 21 2011 Cunha Burke A July 2004 Alexander the Great and West Nile virus encephalitis Emerging Infectious Diseases 10 7 1328 1329 author reply 1332 1333 doi 10 3201 eid1007 040039 ISSN 1080 6040 PMC 3323347 PMID 15338538 Sbarounis CN June 1997 Did Alexander the Great die of acute pancreatitis J Clin Gastroenterol 24 4 Journal of Clinical Gastroenterology 1997 Jun 24 4 294 6 294 6 doi 10 1097 00004836 199706000 00031 PMID 9252868 Owen Jarus 4 February 2019 Why Alexander the Great May Have Been Declared Dead Prematurely It s Pretty Gruesome Live Science Retrieved Nov 3 2021 Ashrafian pg 138 Ashrafian pg 139 Ashrafian pg 140 George K York David A Steinberg Commentary The Diseases of Alexander the Great Journal of the History of the Neurosciences Vol 13 2004 pg 154 Meyer Jean Arcady 2023 The Rise and Fall of the Library of Alexandria Cambridge Scholars Publishing p 356 Emerging Infectious Diseases Volume 9 Issues 7 12 Part 2 Rutgers University 2003 p 1600 Hall Katherine 2018 Did Alexander the Great Die from Guillain Barre Syndrome Ancient History Bulletin 32 3 4 Robert S Bianchi Hunting Alexander s Tomb Archaeology org Retrieved Aug 21 2011 Aufderheide Arthur 2003 The scientific study of mummies Cambridge University Press pp 261 262 ISBN 0 521 81826 5 Madden Richard 1851 The Shrines and Sepulchres of the Old and New World Newby pp 137 138 Alexander s death riddle is solved BBC June 11 1998 Retrieved Aug 21 2011 ReferencesHutan Ashrafian The Death of Alexander the Great A Spinal Twist of Fate Journal of the History of the Neurosciences Vol 13 2004Further readingDoherty Paul C 2004 The Death of Alexander the Great What or Who Really Killed the Young Conqueror of the Known World New York City Carroll amp Graf Publishers ISBN 978 1 84529 156 3 Everitt Anthony 2021 Alexander the Great His Life and His Mysterious Death New York City Random House ISBN 978 0425286531 Grant David 2022 The Last Will and Testament of Alexander the Great The Truth Behind the Death That Changed the Graeco persian World Forever Barnsley Pen and Sword Books ISBN 978 1526771261