Alexander the Great
Alexander was striving to reach the end of the world, but he was forced to return at the urging of the leaders of the soldiers and because of the rebellion of the army, Alexander died in the city of Babylon in 323 BC, before he embarked on several new military campaigns that he planned, the first of which was the semi-opening of the Arabian island.
A
few years after his death, fierce civil wars broke out between his followers
that would tore his empire apart, and generated several states, each of which
was ruled by a caliph, and each of these kings was independent and owed
allegiance only to himself, and these were the leaders of the army that
remained alive Alexander and shared his campaigns in the past.
Alexander
arrived at the eastern gate of Egypt in the fall of 332 BC. He did not find any
resistance from the Persian garrison at the border, so he opened it easily.
Then he crossed the Nile and reached the capital, Memphis. The Egyptians
welcomed him as a victorious liberator, Alexander the Great
chose Alexandria to be the capital of his empire, guided by the guidance of his
spiritual teacher Homer.
Some people confuse the Macedonian Alexander known in Western history with Dhul-Qarnayn, whose experience God Almighty told in the Holy Qur’an. Alexander the Macedonian ruled Greece nearly three centuries before Christ, peace be upon him, and he was a pagan religion, and his minister was the famous philosopher Aristotle, As for Dhul-Qarnayn, he was centuries before the Macedonian, and he was a believer and it is believed that he ruled Arab.
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