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Philip II and Alexander the Great: Father and Son ... - Historia Antigua

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276 NOTES TO PAGES 114–115<br />

9. On <strong>the</strong> naming of cities after women in Hellenistic age, see Carney<br />

1988a: 134–42; on <strong>the</strong> founding of Thessalonica, see L<strong>and</strong>ucci Gattinoni<br />

2003a: 97–99.<br />

10. On <strong>the</strong> Macedonians’ nostalgia for <strong>Philip</strong> <strong>II</strong>, see <strong>the</strong> anecdote<br />

mentioned at Plut. Demetr. 42.6–7.<br />

11. On this see Diod. 17.117.4; 18.1.4. On <strong>the</strong> epitaphios ag ōn in general<br />

in Greek tradition, see L<strong>and</strong>ucci Gattinoni 2007: 155–70.<br />

12. On this see L<strong>and</strong>ucci Gattinoni 2008, commentary on 18.1.4–5.<br />

13. See Diyllus, FGrH 73 F 1: K άσσανδρος, θάψας τὸν βασιλέα καὶ τὴν<br />

βασίλισσαν ἐν Αἰγαῖς, μονομαχίας ἀγῶνα ἔθηκεν, εἰς ὅν κατέβησαν<br />

τέσσαρες τῶν στρατιωτῶν . See also Palagia 2000: 197 n.138. On Diyllus<br />

see <strong>the</strong> brief notes at Tuplin 2007: 162–64.<br />

14. See Andronicos 1984, which remains <strong>the</strong> basic reference work on<br />

excavation fi ndings.<br />

15. On <strong>the</strong> royal tombs under <strong>the</strong> <strong>Great</strong> Tumulus at Vergina-Aigai, see<br />

now Borza <strong>and</strong> Palagia 2007: 81–125. For general bibliography, see also<br />

L<strong>and</strong>ucci Gattinoni 2003a: 44–45, n. 94–95. Note also Lavenne 1999:<br />

71–74, 2000: 11–19, <strong>and</strong> Antikas 2002: 46–49, who identify <strong>the</strong> dead man<br />

in Tomb <strong>II</strong> as <strong>Philip</strong> <strong>II</strong>.<br />

16. See Carney 2000a: 234.<br />

17. Borza <strong>and</strong> Palagia 2007: 118.<br />

18. On Tomb I see also Carney 1992b: 1–11.<br />

19. It is noteworthy that I reached <strong>the</strong> same conclusion in 2003 (L<strong>and</strong>ucci<br />

Gattinoni 2003a: 44–56), but Borza <strong>and</strong> Palagia 2007: 81–125 cite<br />

nei<strong>the</strong>r my book, nor <strong>the</strong> paper of <strong>the</strong> Italian scholars A. M. Prestianni<br />

<strong>and</strong> B. Tripodi, who in 1980 identifi ed <strong>the</strong> deceased in Tomb <strong>II</strong> with<br />

<strong>Philip</strong> <strong>II</strong>I Arrhidaeus <strong>and</strong> his wife Eurydice (Prestianni Giallombardo<br />

<strong>and</strong> Tripodi 1980: 989–1001).<br />

20. See L<strong>and</strong>ucci Gattinoni 2003a: 49–50.<br />

21. See Green 1982: 148–49; Andronicos 1984: 228; Musgrave 1991: 5;<br />

<strong>the</strong> issue is also discussed, without defi nitive conclusion, in Carney<br />

2000a: 241.<br />

22. This episode is recounted only in Arr. Succ. 1.22–23 within its<br />

correct chronological context, but it is indirectly recalled at Diod. 19.52.5,<br />

which, in discussing Cynna’s burial, hints at <strong>the</strong> role of Alcetas in her<br />

death (on Cynna, see Heckel 1983–84: 193–200; Simonetti Agostinetti<br />

1993: 60–66; Carney 2000a: 69–70; 129–31; Heckel 2006: 100–01).<br />

23. Diod. 19.52.5; on <strong>the</strong> funerals for <strong>Philip</strong> <strong>II</strong>I Arrhidaeus <strong>and</strong> his wife<br />

Eurydice, see also Diyllus, FGrH 73 F 1.<br />

24. See, for example, Lehmann 1980: 530 n. 41: “Evidently Cynna was<br />

buried elsewhere.”<br />

25. See Adams 1991: 30–31, whose opinion is reaffi rmed at Borza<br />

1991: 39.

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