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Polyperchon (394 - 303 BC) was a Macedonian general who served under Philip II and Alexander the Great, accompanying Alexander throughout his long journeys. After the return to Babylon, Polyperchon was sent back to Macedon with Craterus, but had only reached Cilicia by the time of Alexander's death in 323 BC. Polyperchon and Craterus continued on to Greece, helping Antipater to defeat the Greek rebellion in the Lamian War. Polyperchon remained in Macedon, and following the First War of the Diadochi, Polyperchon remained home as Regent of Macedon while Antipater travelled to Asia Minor to assert his regency over the whole Empire. Upon Antipater's death in 319, Polyperchon was appointed Regent and Supreme Commander of the entire Empire, but soon fell into conflict with Antipater's son Cassander, who was to have been his chief lieutenant. The two soon fell into civil war - soon a full-fledged civil war among all the successors of Alexander, with Polyperchon allying with Eumenes against Cassander, Antigonus and Ptolemy. Although initially successful, especially in securing control of the Greek cities, whose freedom he proclaimed, Polyperchon's fleet was destroyed by Antigonus in 318, and Cassander secured control of Athens the next year. Shortly thereafter, Polyperchon was driven from Macedon by Cassander, who took control of the weakling king Philip Arrhidaeus and his wife Eurydice. Polyperchon fled to Epirus, where he joined Alexander's mother Olympias, widow Roxana, and infant son Alexander IV. Polyperchon formed an alliance with Olympias and King Aeacides of Epirus, and Olympias led an army in invading Macedon. She was initially successful, defeating and capturing the army of King Philip, whom she had murdered, but soon Cassander returned from campaigning in the Peloponnesus and captured and murdered her in 316, taking Roxana and the boy king into his custody. Polyperchon now fled to the Peloponnesus, where he still controlled a few strongpoints, and allied himself to Antigonus, who had by now fallen out with his former allies. Allied with Antigonus, Polyperchon soon controlled much of the Peloponnesus, including Corinth and Sicyon. Following the peace treaty of 311 between Antigonus and his enemies, and the murder of the boy-king Alexander and his mother, Polyperchon retained these areas, and when war again broke out between Antigonus and the others, he sent Alexander's bastard son Heracles to Polyperchon as a bargaining chip to use against Cassander. Polyperchon, however, decided to break with Antigonus, and murdered the boy in 309. Polyperchon retained control of the Peloponnesus until his death a few years later, but played no further role in politics.
Reference - Peter Green, Alexander to Actium (University of California Press, 1990) pp. 17-20
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