Bullheaded Black Remembers Alexander

The Story of Alexander the Great's Invasion of the Middle East

Fiction & Literature, Historical
Cover of the book Bullheaded Black Remembers Alexander by J. L. Taylor, Trafford Publishing
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: J. L. Taylor ISBN: 9781412225519
Publisher: Trafford Publishing Publication: June 2, 2006
Imprint: Trafford Publishing Language: English
Author: J. L. Taylor
ISBN: 9781412225519
Publisher: Trafford Publishing
Publication: June 2, 2006
Imprint: Trafford Publishing
Language: English

Before there was Islam, there was Alexander. Before there was Christianity, there was Alexander. This is the story of Alexander the Great's invasion of the Middle East and of his astonishing effort to unite the civilized world under a central government designed to promote peace and international trade. This is the story of one man's courageous determination to advance freedom of religion and racial equality in Egypt, Mesopotamia [Iraq today], Asia Minor [Turkey], Persia [Iran], and Bactria [Afghanistan].

Why let Bucehpalus, or Oxhead (the horse Alexander rode during the ten years of the conquest) tell this story? Because by using the famous stallion (or Bullheaded Black, as I call him) as the narrator, it allows me to cut the story to the bone, to cover the main facts of Alexander's life, but also to inject a little common sense, or horse sense, if you will, about the major influences upon Alexander's ideas and motivations: the obvious influence, for example, of his father and mother, and the less obvious influence of Aristotle, who was his personal tutor for three or four years when Alexander was a teenager.

This is a basic story: basic biography, basic world history, and basic geography. This is also the story of Alexander's idea for a better world. His dream perished with him in Babylon, when he unexpectedly died in 323BC at the tender age of 33. In fact, a comprehensive dream like his, incorporating religious freedom and racial equality, did not flower profusely again until 1776 in America, and did not shoot promising tendrils forward again in Iraq and Afghanistan until the United States of America's preemptive strikes in the 21st Century. What would Alexander say to us today about disputes over religion and the various gods of the world's great faiths? Read this book! You will be surprised!


View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Before there was Islam, there was Alexander. Before there was Christianity, there was Alexander. This is the story of Alexander the Great's invasion of the Middle East and of his astonishing effort to unite the civilized world under a central government designed to promote peace and international trade. This is the story of one man's courageous determination to advance freedom of religion and racial equality in Egypt, Mesopotamia [Iraq today], Asia Minor [Turkey], Persia [Iran], and Bactria [Afghanistan].

Why let Bucehpalus, or Oxhead (the horse Alexander rode during the ten years of the conquest) tell this story? Because by using the famous stallion (or Bullheaded Black, as I call him) as the narrator, it allows me to cut the story to the bone, to cover the main facts of Alexander's life, but also to inject a little common sense, or horse sense, if you will, about the major influences upon Alexander's ideas and motivations: the obvious influence, for example, of his father and mother, and the less obvious influence of Aristotle, who was his personal tutor for three or four years when Alexander was a teenager.

This is a basic story: basic biography, basic world history, and basic geography. This is also the story of Alexander's idea for a better world. His dream perished with him in Babylon, when he unexpectedly died in 323BC at the tender age of 33. In fact, a comprehensive dream like his, incorporating religious freedom and racial equality, did not flower profusely again until 1776 in America, and did not shoot promising tendrils forward again in Iraq and Afghanistan until the United States of America's preemptive strikes in the 21st Century. What would Alexander say to us today about disputes over religion and the various gods of the world's great faiths? Read this book! You will be surprised!


More books from Trafford Publishing

Cover of the book An American Woman’S Life in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book I Ordered My Future Yesterday by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book Smoke, Mirrors, and Chains by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book In Defense of Lifting up Jesus: Will You Stand in the Gap with Me? by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book Tears of Sindhu by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book Justice or Just Us . . . You Decide by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book The Left Hook by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book Promise Ring: the Circle of Eternal Return by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book Gotcha by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book This Burning Desire by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book The Rise and Fall of a Great Nation by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book Issues by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book "Shirley and Pipsi...In Their Own Words" by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book Toward a Healthy Tomorrow by J. L. Taylor
Cover of the book Build on a Dream by J. L. Taylor
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy