Bagoas (courtier)

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File:Bagoas pleads on behalf of Nabarzanes (Google Art Project) fragment.jpg
Bagoas pleads on behalf of Nabarzanes, by Master of the Jardin de vertueuse consolation and assistant (Flemish, active 3rd quarter of 15th century). (1450–1475)

Bagoas (Template:Langx; Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "Lang".) was a eunuch in the court of the Persian Empire in the 4th century BC.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn Bagoas was a courtier of Darius IIITemplate:EfnTemplate:Sfn and later of Alexander the Great.Template:Sfn

Historiography

Bagoas is mentioned in three surviving sources and is distinct from Bagoas the Elder, who attempted to assassinate Darius III.Template:Sfn In Parallel Lives, he is only briefly mentioned during a dance competition, but in the Histories of Alexander the Great by Quintus Curtius Rufus he is given a more elaborate role in Alexander's court.Template:Sfn Only the elder Bagoas is elaborated upon in the source by Diodorus Siculus.Template:Sfn

Historian William Woodthorpe Tarn rejected the stories of Bagoas as fabricated in ancient times to defame Alexander, mainly referring to the Rufus's fairly fictionalized biography of Alexander that criticized the Macedonian's "degeneration" in embracing foreign Persian customs.Template:Sfn In 1958, Ernst Badian rejected Tarn's analysis, suggesting that Alexander was more of a ruthless dictator and that Tarn was blinded by bias.Template:Sfn Author Mary Renault also addressed Rufus's biased animosity towards Alexander, stating: "[Rufus's account of Alexander] is bent that way by recourse to Athenian anti-Macedonian agitprop, written by men who never set eyes on him, and bearing about as much relation to objective truth as one would expect to find in a History of the Jewish People commissioned by Adolf Hitler."Template:Sfn

Life

Dance competition

According to Plutarch,Template:Sfn Bagoas won a dancing contest after the crossing of the Gedrosian Desert and the Macedonian troops applauded and demanded that drunk Alexander kiss Bagoas, and he did so.Template:SfnTemplate:Sfn

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… one day after [Alexander] had drunk pretty hard, it is said, he went to see a prize of dancing contended for, in which his favourite Bagoas, having gained the victory, crossed the theatre in his dancing habit, and sat down close by him, which so pleased the Macedonians, that they made loud acclamations for him to kiss Bagoas, and never stopped clapping their hands and shouting till Alexander put his arms round him and kissed him.

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Rufus account

The fullest surviving account of Bagoas is given in the Latin Histories of Alexander the Great by Rufus, a first century Roman historian.Template:Sfn Rufus focuses on the degeneration of Alexander, and illustrates this with an account of the machinations of his eunuch, Bagoas. Bagoas is described as "in the flower of his youth,"Template:Sfn and was appointed first by Darius III and later given to Alexander by Nabarzanes. In this account, Bagoas weaponizes his inherited place in Alexander's court to destroy his enemies. The Persian satrap Orxines earns the enmity of Bagoas by refusing to pay him respect in court, claiming it is not Persian custom to pay respect to men used as women, and refers to Bagoas as a whore. Bagoas thus manoeuvres to have Orxines accused of plundering the tomb of Cyrus the Great, and the satrap is executed for this crime. In his final words, Orxines decries the state of affairs: "I had heard that women were once rulers in Asia but this really is something new – a eunuch a king!".Template:Sfn

In media

Notes

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References

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Sources

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External links