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ALEXANDER THE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V01, Page 567 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ALEXANDER THE  -PAPHLAGONIAN, a celebrated impostor and worker of false oracles, was born at Abonouteichos (see
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INEBOLI) in
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Paphlagonia in the early
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part of the 2nd century A.D . The vivid narrative of his career given by Lucian might be taken as fictitious but for the corroboration of certain coins of the emperors
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Lucius
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Venus and
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Marcus Aurelius (J . H . Eckhel, Doctrina Nummorum veterum, ii. pp . 383, 384) and of a-statue of Alexander, said by
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Athenagoras (Apology, c . 26) to have stood in the forum of Parium . After a period of instruction in
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medicine by a doctor who also, according. to Lucian, was an impostor, he succeeded in establishing an oracle of Aesculapius at his native
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town . Having circulated a prophecy that the son of Apollo was to be born again, he contrived that there should be found in the
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foundations of the temple to Aesculapius, then in course of construction at Abonouteichos, an egg in which a small live snake had been placed . In an age of superstition no
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people had so
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great a reputation for credulity as the Paphlagonians, and Alexander had little difficulty in convincing them of the second coming of the
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god under the name of Glycon . A large tame snake with a false human head, wound round Alexander's
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body as he sat in a shrine in the temple, gave " autophones or oracles unasked, but the usual methods practised were those of the numerous oracle-mongers of the time, of which Lucian gives a• detailed account, the opening of sealed inquiries by heated needles, a neat plan of
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forging broken
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seals, and the giving of vague or meaningless replies to difficult questions, coupled with a lucrative blackmailing of those whose inquiries were compromising . The reputation of the oracle, which was in origin medical, spread, and with it grew Alexander's skilled plans of organized deception . He set up an " intelligence bureau" in Rome, instituted mysteries like those of
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Eleusis, from which his particular enemies the Christians and Epicureans were alike excluded as " profane," and celebrated a mystic
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marriage between himself and the moon .

During the

plague of A.D . 166 a verse from the oracle was used as an amulet and was inscribed over' the doors of houses as a
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protection, and an oracle was sent, at Marcus Aurelius' request, by Alexander to the
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Roman army on the Danube during the war with the Marcomanni, declaring that victory would follow on the throwing of two lions alive into the
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river . The result was a great disaster, and Alexander had recourse to the old quibble of the Delphic oracle to
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Croesus for an explanation . Lucian's own close investigations into Alexander's methods of fraud led to a serious attempt on his
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life . The whole account gives a graphic description of the inner working of one among the many new oracles that were springing up at this period . Alexander had remarkable beauty and the striking personality of the successful charlatan, and must have been a man of considerable intellectual abilities and power of organization . His income is said by Lucian - to have reached an enormous figure . He died of gangrene of the leg in his seventieth
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year . See Lucian, 'AaefavSpos it il/sv56navres;
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Samuel Dill, Roman Society from
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Nero to Marcus Aurelius (1904) ; and F . Gregorovius, The Emperor Hadrian, trans. by M . E . Robinson (1898) .

End of Article: ALEXANDER THE
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