Our knowledge of Alexander the Great is derived from the widely varying
accounts of five authors who wrote three and more centuries after his
death. The value of each account can be determined in detail only by
discovering the source from which it drew, section by section, whether
from a contemporary document, a memoir by a companion of Alexander, a
hostile critique or a romanticizing narrative. In this book the three
earliest accounts are studied in depth, and it becomes apparent that
each author used more than one source, and that only occasionally did
any two of them or all three use the same source for an incident or a
series of incidents. This book will be of value to ancient historians
and of interest also to those studying Alexander the Great.