Wars of Alexander the Great
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Wars of Alexander the Great
Summary
Wars of Alexander the Great is a wars of individual sovereign[1]. It draws 4,273 Wikipedia views per month (wars_of_individual_sovereign category, ranking #1 of 1).[2]
Key Facts
- Wars of Alexander the Great's instance of is recorded as wars of individual sovereign[3].
- Wars of Alexander the Great's instance of is recorded as series of wars[4].
- Wars of Alexander the Great took place at Ancient Greece[5].
- Wars of Alexander the Great's is a list of is recorded as war[6].
- Wars of Alexander the Great comprises Siege of Gaza[7].
- Wars of Alexander the Great began on 336 BC[8].
- Wars of Alexander the Great ended on 323 BC[9].
- A participant in Wars of Alexander the Great was Alexander the Great[10].
- Among those involved in Wars of Alexander the Great was Macedonia[11].
- Among those involved in Wars of Alexander the Great was League of Corinth[12].
- Among those involved in Wars of Alexander the Great was Achaemenid Empire[13].
- Among those involved in Wars of Alexander the Great was Pauravas[14].
- Among those involved in Wars of Alexander the Great was Thracians[15].
- A participant in Wars of Alexander the Great was Illyrians[16].
- Among those involved in Wars of Alexander the Great was Sogdia[17].
- Among those involved in Wars of Alexander the Great was Uxii[18].
- Wars of Alexander the Great's topic's main category is recorded as Category:Wars of Alexander the Great[19].
- Wars of Alexander the Great's facet of is recorded as Alexander the Great[20].
Body
When and Where
Wars of Alexander the Great began on 336 BC[8]. It ended on 323 BC[9]. It took place at Ancient Greece[5].
Context
Recorded instance of include wars of individual sovereign[3] and series of wars[4].
Participants
Recorded participant include Alexander the Great[10], Macedonia[11], League of Corinth[12], Achaemenid Empire[13], Pauravas[14], and Thracians[15].
Why It Matters
Wars of Alexander the Great draws 4,273 Wikipedia views per month (wars_of_individual_sovereign category, ranking #1 of 1).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 18 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[21] It is known by 21 alternative names across languages and contexts.[22]