History of the Hellenistic Kingdoms

Experience our digital history of the Hellenistic Kingdoms with WisdomMaps!
Perspective
The Hellenistic period spans Mediterranean history from the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC to the emergence of the Roman Empire after Octavian’s victory in the Battle of Actium in 31 BCE and the conquest of Ptolemaic Egypt a year later. The Greek word “Hellas” was the ancient name of Greece, and that gives us the word “Hellenistic”, which refers to the influence of Greek culture in the areas that had been conquered by Alexander the Great several hundred years earlier.
During the Hellenistic period, Greek influence dominated the trade, politics, and cultures of the Mediterranean world and most of West and Central Asia, even parts of India. It fostered prosperity and progress in many of the arts, including astrology, exploration, literature, drama, architecture, music, mathematics, and philosophy, and in science as well. As with many periods of creativity amidst instability, it thrived as an era of decadence or degeneration. Its arts flourished with the advent of New Comedy, Alexandrian poetry, the compilation of the Septuagint, and philosophy was enriched by Stoicism, Epicureanism, and Pyrrhonism. Science was advanced by Euclid’s geometry and the many talents of the polymath Archimedes. Religion combined new gods such as the Greco-Egyptian Serapis with ancient eastern deities such as Attis and Cybele, and it blended Hellenistic culture with Buddhism in Bactria and Northwest India.
After Alexander the Great’s invasion of the Persian Empire in 330 BC and its downfall shortly thereafter, Hellenistic kingdoms were created throughout south-west Asia (the Seleucid Empire and Kingdom of Pergamon), north-east Africa (Egypt’s Kingdom of the Ptolemies) and South Asia (the Greco-Bactrian and Indo-Greek Kingdoms of Central Asia). A new wave of Greek colonization seeded Greek cities and kingdoms throughout Asia and Africa, and Greek culture and language spread as far as India. The indigenous cultures of the Hellenistic kingdoms adopted local practices where expedient, and Hellenistic culture became a fusion of the ancient Greek world with the cultures of Western Asian, Northeastern Africa, and Southwestern Asia.
That said, here’s our assortment… please enjoy! When you’re done perusing a map, just close it, and you’ll be back here.
Index
Hellenistic Kingdoms Index | Society: Class War • Communities • Education • Sexuality • Women | Culture: Arts • Architecture • Buildings • Secularization | Historiography: Polybius : Writings | Learning | Literature: Drama • Poetry • Prose | Minor Arts | Music | Philosophy: Epicureanism: Epicurus | Skepticism: Carneades • Lyceum • Pyrrho | Stoicism: Zeno of Citium | Scholarship: Libraries • Joshua Ben Sirach | Science and Technology: Anatomy • Astronomy: Aristarchus • Hipparchus | Botany | Geography | Mathematics: Apollonius • Euclid | Mechanical Engineering: Archimedes • Ctesebius | Medicine: Magic • Schools | Physiology | Sculpture: Centers • Statuary | Religion: Mystery Religions • Philosophy | Power: Chaos • Antigonus II • Leagues • Revolution in Sparta | Rhodes | Roman Conquest: Governance • Greece • Hannibal • Illyria | Economy: Agriculture • Industry • Labor • Trade: Goods | Egypt: Society • Alexandria: Layout • Library of Alexandria • Musaeum • Population | Egypt: Religion • Power | Judea: Society • Culture • Religion • Power: Antiochus IV • Maccabean Dynasty | Pergamon: Power | Seleucia: Society • Power • Antiochus III • Antiochus IV • Capitals • Progression • Seleucus • Economy