And I saw him come close unto the ram
Though the distance between Greece and Persia was very great, and
many rivers and mountains in the way, which seemed impassable;
Alexander got over them all, and came up to Darius, and fought
several battles with him, and entirely defeated him, though
greatly inferior in number to him, as follows: and he was
moved with choler against him;
exceedingly embittered against him; exasperated and provoked to
the last degree, by the proud and scornful message he sent him;
calling himself king of kings, and akin to the gods, and
Alexander his servant; ordering his nobles to take Philip's
madding stripling, as he called him in contempt, and whip him
with children's rods, and clothe him in purple, and deliver him
bound to him; then sink his ships with the mariners, and
transport all his soldiers to the further part of the Red sea
F4: and smote the
ram;
in three battles, in each of which the Persians were smitten and
routed by the Grecians: first at the river Granicus, where
Alexander with thirty thousand foot, and five thousand horse, met
the Persians, though more than five times his number, being, as
Justin F5 says, six hundred thousand, and got
the victory over them; here twenty thousand of the Persian
footmen, and two hundred and fifty of their horse, were slain,
and not more than thirty nine of the Macedonians killed
F6: Plutarch F7 says,
it was reported that the Persians lost twenty thousand footmen,
and two thousand five hundred horse; and from Aristobulus he
says, that the Macedonians lost only thirty four men, of which
twelve were footmen: and Diodorus Siculus F8 relates
that the Persians lost more than ten thousand footmen, and not
less than two thousand horse, and more than twenty thousand were
taken: according to Justin F9, of Alexander's army there
only fell nine footmen, and a hundred and twenty horsemen: others
say, that, of the Macedonians, twenty five men of Alexander's own
troop fell in the first attack, about sixty other of the horsemen
were killed, and thirty of the footmen F11; so
different are the accounts of the slain in this battle; however,
the victory appears to be very great, whereby Sardis, with all
Darius's rich furniture, fell into the hands of Alexander, and
all the provinces of the lesser Asia submitted to him. The next
battle was fought at Issus its Cilicia, where Darius had an army,
according to Plutarch F12, consisting of six hundred thousand
men; according to Justin F13, four hundred thousand footmen, and
a hundred thousand horsemen, which was routed by Alexander; when
a hundred thousand of the Persian footmen, and ten thousand of
their horsemen, were slain; and only, on Alexander's side, five
hundred and four of the footmen wounded, thirty two wanting, and
a hundred and fifty of the horsemen killed F14: here
also the accounts vary; Plutarch F15 says above a hundred and ten
thousand of the Persians were slain: according to Diodorus
Siculus F16, there fell of them a hundred and
twenty thousand footmen, and not less than ten thousand horsemen;
and of the Macedonians three hundred footmen, and about a hundred
and fifty horsemen: according to Arrian F17, the
Persians lost ten thousand horsemen, and ninety thousand footmen:
according to Justin F18, sixty one thousand footmen, and
ten thousand horsemen, were slain, and forty thousand taken; and
of the Macedonians there fell one hundred and thirty footmen, and
one hundred and fifty horsemen; but, be it as it will, the
victory was exceeding great, whereby the camp of Darius, his
mother, wife, and children, and all his riches at Damascus, fell
into the hands of Alexander, with all Syria. The third and last
battle was fought near Arbela, or rather at Gaugamela in Assyria,
when Alexander with fifty thousand men beat Darius with an army
of eleven hundred thousand men; Plutarch F19 says
ten hundred thousand; forty thousand of which were slain, and of
the Macedonians only three hundred or less were wanting
F20; according to Arrian F21 thirty
thousand were slain; but Diodorus Siculus F23 says
ninety thousand: this was the decisive battle; after this Babylon
and Persepolis were taken by Alexander, and he became master of
the whole empire, which is intended in the next clause: and
brake his two horns;
conquered the Medes and Persians, the two kingdoms united in one
monarchy, but now destroyed; another monarchy, the Grecian, took
its place: and there was no power in the ram to stand
before him
there was no strength in tim whole empire sufficient to resist,
oppose, and stop him; though vast armies were collected together,
these were soon broken and routed, and Darius at the head of them
was forced to fly and make his escape in the best manner he
could; but he cast him down to the ground, and stamped upon
him:
not Darius personally, for he was slain by Bessus, one of his own
captains; but the Persian empire, it ceased to be, and was no
longer in the hands of the Persians, but was taken from them by
Alexander; and all the glory and majesty of it were defaced and
despised; the famous city and palace of Persepolis were burnt in
a drunken fit, at the instigation of Thais the harlot: and
there was none that could deliver the ram out of his
hand;
not his armies, nor his generals, nor his allies, nor his offers
to Alexander of his daughter in marriage, and part of his
kingdom; all were in vain, and to no purpose; he and his whole
empire fell into the conqueror's hands, and there was no remedy
against it. Josephus F24 says, that when Alexander was in
his way to Jerusalem, Jaddus, the high priest, met and
accompanied him into the city and temple, and showed him this
prophecy of Daniel, that some one of the Grecians should abolish
the empire of the Persians; and, thinking himself to be intended,
was greatly pleased. Gorionides F25 says the high priest, whom
he calls Ananias, said to Alexander, on showing him the prophecy,
thou art this he goat, and Darius is the ram; and thou shall
trample him to the ground, and take the kingdom out of his hand;
and he greatly strengthened the heart of the king.