The life of Demetrius (337â283 BCE) serves as a through-line to the forty years following the death of Alexander the Great (323â282 BCE), a time of unparalleled turbulence and instability in the ancient world. With no monarch able to take Alexanderâs place, his empire fragmented into five pieces.
Capitalizing on good looks, youth, and sexual prowess, Demetrius sought to weld those pieces together and recover the dream of a single world state, with a new Alexanderâhimselfâat its head. He succeeded temporarily, but in crucial, colossal engagementsâa massive invasion of Egypt, a siege of Rhodes that went on a full year, and the Battle of Ipsusâhe came up just short. He ended his career in a rash invasion of Asia and became the target of a desperate manhunt only to be captured and destroyed by his own son-in-law.
James Romm is an author, a reviewer, and the James H. Ottaway Jr. Professor of Classics at Bard College. His reviews and essays appear regularly in the Wall Street Journal and the New York Review of Books.