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See also: brother of See also: Mentor (q.v.), with whom he entered the services of the rebellious satrap Artabazus of See also: Phrygia, who married his See also: sister
.
Mentor after the See also: conquest of See also: Egypt See also: rose high in the favour of the See also: king, and
See also: Memnon, who had taken See also: refuge with Artabazus at the Macedonian See also: court, became a zealous adherent of the Persian king; he assisted Mentor in subduing the rebellious satraps and dynasts in See also: Asia Minor, and succeedei him as general of the Persian troops
.
In the pseudo-Aristotelian Oeconomica, ii
.
28, stories are told of his methods of obtaining See also: money ,and evading his obligations; thus he extorted a large sum of money from the conquered inhabitants of See also: Lampsacus and cheated his soldiers out of a See also: part of their pay
.
He owned a large territory in eastern Troas (See also: Arrian i
.
17, 8; See also: Strabo xiii
.
587)
.
He gained some successes against See also: Philip II. of Macedon in 336 (Diod. xvii
.
6; Polyaen. v
.
44, 4, 5) and commanded the Persian army against
See also: Alexander's invasion
.
Convinced that it was impossible to meet Alexander in a pitched
See also: battle, his See also: plan was to See also: lay waste the country and retire into the interior, meanwhile organizing resistance on See also: sea (where the Persians were far See also: superior to the Macedonians) and carrying the war into See also: Greece
.
But his advice was overridden by the Persian satraps, who forced him to fight at the Granicus
.
After his defeat he tried to organize the maritime war and occupied the See also: Greek islands, but in the beginnipg of 333 he See also: fell See also: ill and died (Arrian i1
.
1, I)
.
(ED
.
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