Callisthenes' best-known work was an account of Alexander's expedition up to the time of Callisthenes’ own execution.
Deeds of Alexander or
Praxeis Alexandrou (330 BCE) was biographical-style series of works detailing the campaign of Alexander the Great. Although copies of the work do not survive today, some knowledge of it can be inferred from references by other authors. The book was intended as propaganda and glorified Alexander the Great’s military achievements and claims to divinity as the son of
Zeus. According to Polybius, much of Callisthenes' military accounts were over-glorified to the point of impossibility.
Polybius claims that Callisthenes’ descriptions of Alexander’s military are impossible and would not fit in the locations, such as the country outside of
Cilicia, that Callisthenes describes. It contained many references to
Homer’s Iliad and also described locations in the
Iliad that Alexander had visited. It applauded Alexander as a standard for Greek masculinity; and condemned the Persians as weak and effeminate. In addition to his work on Alexander the Great, he also authored another major work, a 10 book long historical anthology of Greece.
Hellenica covered the periods from the
Peace of Antalcidas (387 BCE) to the start of the
Phocian war (357 BCE). His other works include; the list of winners from the Pythian games that he co-authored with Aristotle, writings on astronomy including a description of the
Great Comet of 371 BC, a work covering the
first Sacred war of 600 BCE titled
On the Sacred War, a tribute
Hermias to Atarneaus and Assos who were killed by Persians, a book on witty sayings, a
Diakosmos Battle Order which covers ships in Homers
Iliad, and a
Periplus covering the
Black Sea. Valerius's translation was completely superseded by that of
Leo, archpriest of Naples in the 10th century, the so-called
Historia de Preliis. ==References==