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  • (Geschiedenis) .Bron 1
    Olympias (Grieks: ???µp?a?) (circa 376 BC – 316 BC), ook wel Myrtali genoemd, was de moeder van Alexander de Grote en (enige tijd) vrouw van koning Philippus II van Macedonië.

    Olympias was de dochter van koning Neoptolemos I van Epirus. Volgens Plutarchus stamde ze via Neoptolemos af van Aeacus, de legendarische koning van Egina en grootvader van Achilles, een grote oorlogsheld in de oorlog om Troje.

    Het gebied waar Olympias vandaan kwam, werd beschouwd als barbaars, een opvatting die werd bevestigd doordat ze Dionysische rituelen uitvoerde.

    De overlevering vertelt ons dat ze waarschijnlijk een lichte huid en rood of lichtblond haar had. Ze stond bekend als jaloers en listig en was zeer beschermend tegenover Alexander.

    Over de rol van Olympias in het leven van Alexander bestaat onenigheid. Zo wordt er verhaald dat, toen koning Philippus zijn vrouw Olympias afstootte en in plaats van haar een andere vrouw nam, Alexander en Olympias na een fikse ruzie op het feestmaal bij de bruiloft in Epirus gingen wonen. Alexander koos er dus voor bij zijn moeder te gaan wonen. Deze keuze van Alexander wordt vaak gebruikt om aan te tonen dat Olympias haar zoon inderdaad manipuleerde en dat ze Alexander compleet in haar macht had. Anderen menen echter dat haar rol in het leven van Alexander maar beperkt was.

    Ook wordt er verhaald dat Olympias en Alexander meegedaan zouden hebben in een complot om Philippus te vermoorden, mogelijk als wraak voor de verstoting van Olympias. Er worden echter ook anderen aangewezen als mogelijke moordenaars, zekerheid omtrent dit punt bestaat dus absoluut niet.

    Olympias stierf kort na Alexander, die waarschijnlijk op 10 juni 323 voor Christus stierf. Ze zou vermoord zijn door Cassander
  • (Levens event) .Bron 2
    Olympias (Greek: ???µp???, pronounced [olympiás], c. 375–316 BC[2]) was a Greek princess of Epirus, daughter of king Neoptolemus I of Epirus, the fourth wife of the king of Macedonia, Philip II, and mother of Alexander the Great. She was a devout member of the orgiastic snake-worshiping cult of Dionysus, and it is suggested by the 1st century AD biographer, Plutarch, that she may have slept with snakes.[3]
    Contents
    Origin
    Olympias from "Promptuarii Iconum Insigniorum".

    Olympias was the daughter of Neoptolemus I, king of the Molossians, a tribe in Epirus, and sister of Alexander I. Her family belonged to the Aeacidae, a well-respected family of Epirus, which claimed descent from Neoptolemus, son of Achilles. Apparently, she was originally named Polyxena, as Plutarch mentions in his work Moralia, and changed her name to Myrtale prior to her marriage to Philip II of Macedon, as part of her initiation into an unknown mystery cult.[4]

    The name Olympias was the third of four names by which she was known, taking it probably as a recognition of Philip's victory in the Olympic Games of 356 BC, which coincided with Alexander's birth.[5][self-published source?] She was finally named Stratonice, which was likely an epithet attached to Olympias following her victory over Eurydice in 317 BC.[4]
    Marriage to Philip
    Zeus seduces Olympias. Fresco by Giulio Romano between 1526 and 1534, in Palazzo del Te, Mantua, Italy.

    When Neoptolemus I died in 360 BC, his brother Arymbas succeeded him on the Molossian throne. In 358 BC, Arymbas made a treaty with the new king of Macedonia, Philip II, and the Molossians became allies of the Macedonians. The alliance was cemented with a diplomatic marriage, when Arymbas' niece Olympias became Philip's wife in 357 BC and, consequently, queen consort of Macedonia. Philip had first fallen in love with Olympias when both were initiated into the mysteries of Cabeiri at the Sanctuary of the Great Gods, on the island of Samothrace.[6]
    Ruins of the Temple of Apollo.

    One year later, in 356 BC, Philip's race horse won in the Olympic Games; for this victory his wife, who was known then as Myrtale, received the name Olympias. In the summer of the same year, Olympias gave birth to her first child Alexander. In ancient Greece people believed that the birth of a great man was accompanied by portents. As Plutarch describes, the night before the consummation of their marriage Olympias dreamed that a thunderbolt fell upon her womb and a great fire was kindled, its flames dispersed all about and then were extinguished. After the marriage Philip dreamed that he put a seal upon his wife's womb, the device of which was the figure of a lion. Aristander's interpretation was that Olympias was pregnant of a son whose nature would be bold and lion-like.[7] Philip and Olympias also had a daughter, Cleopatra.

    Their marriage was very stormy, Philip's volatility and Olympias' jealous temper had led to a growing estrangement. Things got even worse in 337 BC, when Philip married to a noble Macedonian woman, Cleopatra, who was niece of Attalus and after the marriage changed her name to Eurydice. This caused great tensions between Philip, Olympias and Alexander. Olympias went into voluntary exile in Epirus, staying at the Molossian court of her brother Alexander I who was the king at the time, along with her son Alexander who sided with her.

    In 336 BC, Philip cemented his ties to Alexander I of Epirus by offering him the hand of his and Olympias' daughter Cleopatra in marriage, a fact that led Olympias to further isolation as she could no longer count on her brother's support. However, Philip was murdered by Pausanias, a member of Philip's somatophylakes, his personal bodyguard, while attending the wedding and Olympias, who returned to Macedonia, was suspected of having countenanced his assassination.
    Impact on politics
    This section called "Impact in politics" needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2011)
    Delphi Sarcophagus

    Olympias later ordered Eurydice and her child by Philip III to be murdered, in order to secure Alexander's position as king of Macedonia. During Alexander's campaigns, she regularly corresponded with him and may have confirmed her son's claim in Egypt that his father was not Philip but Zeus. The relationship between Olympias and Alexander was cordial, but her son kept her away from politics. However, she wielded great influence in Macedonia and caused troubles to Antipater, the regent of the kingdom. In 330 BC, she returned to Epirus and served as a regent to her cousin Aeacides in the Epirote state, as her brother Alexander I had died during a campaign in southern Italy.

    After Alexander the Great's death in Babylon in 323 BC, his wife Roxana bore him a posthumous son who was called Alexander IV. The latter, along with his uncle Philip III, half brother of Alexander the Great and mentally disabled, were subject to the regency of Perdiccas, who tried to strengthen his position by a marriage with Antipater's daughter Nicaea. At the same time, Olympias offered Perdiccas the hand of her daughter Cleopatra. Perdiccas chose Cleopatra, which angered Antipater; he invaded Macedon, deposed Perdiccas, and declared himself regent, only to die within the year.

    Polyperchon succeeded Antipater in 319 BC as regent, but the latter's son Cassander, who had captured Philip III, forced him out of Macedonia. Polyperchon fled to Epirus, taking Roxana and her son Alexander IV with him. At the beginning, Olympias had not been involved in this conflict, but soon she realized that in case of Cassander's rule, her grandson would definitely lose the crown. As a result, she allied with Polyperchon and united his army with the army of her cousin Aeacides to invade Macedonia and drive Cassander out from power in 317 BC.

    She captured and executed Philip III in October of that year, while many supporters of Cassander were massacred. Cassander besieged Olympias in Pydna and forced her to surrender, although Polyperchon and Aeacides tried to relieve her. One of the terms of the capitulation had been that Olympias's life would be saved but Cassander executed her, while Roxana and Alexander IV were killed in secret. She was brought to trial for the numerous and cruel executions of which she had been accused of; condemned without a hearing, she was put to death in 316 BC by the friends of those whom she had slain. Cassander is said to have denied her remains the rites of burial.
    Medals

    A medal bearing the name Olympias was found in 1902 at Abukir, Egypt,[1] and belongs to the Archaeological Museum of Thessaloniki.[dubious – discuss] The reverse shows a Nereid mounted on a fantastic sea creature. It had been suggested that the Olympias depicted on the medal was Queen Olympias, but this theory has been challenged. The name ?????????S is thought to refer to the Olympiads instead.[8]

    Archaeologists believe that these medals were awarded to the victors in the Olympic Games which survived during the Roman period in Macedonia cities such as Veria. These Games, known as the Alexandrian Olympics, were held in honour of the Roman emperors who visited the cities of Macedonia.
  • Een kind van Neoptolemos I der Molossiers
  • Deze gegevens zijn voor het laatst bijgewerkt op 30 november 2012.

Gezin van Olympias van Epirus

Zij is getrouwd met Philippus II van Macedonië.

Zij zijn getrouwdBron 3


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  1. http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympias
  2. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympias.htm
  3. http://nl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philippus_II_van_Macedoni%C3%AB

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Andre Bas, "Stamboom Bas", database, Genealogie Online (https://www.genealogieonline.nl/stamboom-bas/I6474.php : benaderd 10 juni 2024), "Olympias van Epirus".