of Alexander III with the inscription 'of Alexander';
Archaeological Museum of Amphipolis Prophesied conqueror King Philip II had a dream in which he took a
wax seal and sealed up the womb of his wife. The seal bore the image of a lion. The seer
Aristander interpreted this to mean that
Olympias was pregnant, since men do not seal up what is empty, and that she would bring forth a son who would be bold and lion-like. After Philip took Potidaea in 356 BC, he received word that his horse had just won at the Olympic games, and that
Parmenion had defeated the Illyrians. Then he got word of the birth of Alexander. The seers told him that a son whose birth coincided with three victories would always be victorious. When the young Alexander tamed the steed
Bucephalus, his father noted that Macedonia would not be large enough for him.
Apocryphal letters •
Leon of Pella wrote the work
On the Gods in Egypt on the basis of an apocryphal letter sent from Alexander to his mother Olympias
. • The
Epistola Alexandri ad Aristotelem, described as being a letter sent from Alexander to his mentor
Aristotle, concerning his adventures in India.
Plutarch Many Alexander legends are found in the writings of the Greek historian
Plutarch, such as that Alexander was born in the same day that the
Temple of Artemis at Ephesus was burnt down, during which the god Artemis was too preoccupied with his birth to pay the requisite attention needed to save her burning temple. Later in life when Alexander offered to pay for the temples reconstruction, he was informed that it was not appropriate for gods to dedicate offerings to other gods. In another anecdote, it was said that the priestess of the Temple of Apollo in Delphi exclaimed to him "You are invincible o young!"
In Thessalonica In medieval
Thessalonica, the largest city in the region of
Macedonia, a popular legend arose among the inhabitants of the city connecting Alexander with the sculptures of a Roman-era portico of the city known as
Las Incantadas ("the enchanted ones"), which had been erected long after his death. According to the legend, a Thracian king once visited Alexander, and his queen fell in love with him. They arranged to meet at night next to the portico, but the king learnt of this, and had his magician bewitch the portico so that everyone who passed near would be petrified. Alexander was notified not to go by his tutor
Aristotle, but the queen and her attendants were not as lucky, and they turned all into sculptures. The king and his magician arrived later to see their work, and they were petrified too. A popular Greek legend has it that Thessalonike became a
mermaid who lived in the
Aegean after the
death of Alexander the Great. The legend states that Alexander, in his quest for the Fountain of Immortality, retrieved with great exertion a flask of immortal water. In some versions of the story, he used the water to wash his sister's hair, making her immortal; in others, he forgot to tell her the contents of the flask and so used it to water a wild onion plant. When Alexander died his grief-stricken sister attempted to end her life by jumping into the sea. Instead of drowning, however, she became a mermaid who passes judgment on mariners throughout the centuries and across the seven seas. To the sailors who encounter her, she always poses the same question: "Is king Alexander alive?" (Greek:
Ζει ο βασιλεύς Αλέξανδρος;), to which the correct answer would be "He lives and reigns and conquers the world" (Greek:
Ζει και βασιλεύει, και τον κόσμο κυριεύει!). Given this answer, she would allow the ship and her crew to sail safely away in calm seas. Any other answer would transform her into the raging
Gorgon, bent on sending the ship and every sailor on board to the bottom of the sea.
Claudius Aelianus Claudius Aelianus in the
Characteristics of Animals wrote that
Scythians say that there were horned donkeys, and their horns were holding water from the river
Styx. Adding that Sopater brought one of these horns to Alexander, then Alexander set up the horn as a votive offering at
Delphi, with an inscription beneath it. ==Jewish tradition==