Alexander’s "Policy of Fusion"—his attempt to blend Greek and Persian cultures—was a strategic failure in management. He forced his Macedonian elites to marry Persian noblewomen and adopted Eastern court rituals, such as proskynesis (prostration). This didn't create a unified culture; instead, it alienated his core Macedonian military base. By trying to be both a Macedonian King and a Persian King of Kings, he became a ruler who lacked the total loyalty of either group. Overextension and Logistics
Alexander the Great is often remembered for the sheer scale of his conquests, stretching from the Adriatic to the Indus. However, his death in 323 BCE revealed a fundamental truth: he was a brilliant general but a failing architect of state. The rapid collapse of his empire was not an accident of fate, but the logical conclusion of his governing philosophy. The Failure of Succession Alexander the great failure : the collapse of t...
The empire was a victim of its own momentum. Alexander’s constant push eastward ignored the basic needs of "imperial consolidation." He never stayed in one place long enough to build the infrastructure—laws, tax systems, or local governance—necessary to hold diverse satrapies together. His empire was held together by the personality of a conqueror, not the stability of a government. When the person vanished, the "state" vanished with him. Conclusion By trying to be both a Macedonian King