Kingship and Empire under the Achaemenids, Alexander the Great and the Early Seleucids
By (Author) Stephen Harrison
Edinburgh University Press
Edinburgh University Press
9th February 2026
United Kingdom
Hardback
344
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
This book offers the first systematic, comparative analysis of the ideology of kingship and empire under the Achaemenids, Alexander the Great and the early Seleucids. It explores key issues thematically such as legitimation, representations of empire and royal space. Through this method, Stephen Harrison breaks traditional periodisation offering new insights into long-term trends. The book challenges existing narratives about the relationship between the Achaemenids and their successors.
Rather than focusing on the mere facts of continuity and change, the study advocates for a more complex understanding of the Achaemenids' impact on monarchical ideology under Alexander and the Seleucids. Harrison's comparative approach brings the three empires into dialogue with one another and thus treats them all equally through this lens. The methodology highlights the uniqueness of particular strategies deployed by different rulers and isolate ideas which were distinctively 'Achaemenid', 'Alexandrine' or 'Seleucid' as opposed merely to identifying monarchical commonalities.
Stephen Harrison is a Lecturer in Ancient History at Swansea University. Before moving to Swansea in 2016, he completed his PhD at the University of Cambridge. He is the author of Alexander the Great: Lives and Legacies (Reaktion Books, 2025), and the co-editor (with Dylan James) of Theorising Comparative History for the Ancient Mediterranean: Asking New Questions of Old Evidence (Liverpool University Press, 2025).