Compare And Contrast The Empires Of Ancient Egypt, Philip II, And Augustus

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Ancient Egypt, Persia, Macedon, and Rome are all known for having prominent leaders that had enormous influence during their time in power. Specifically, Hatshepsut, Darius, Philip II, and Augustus in their respective empires all carefully tailored their personal image to their citizens and to the public in order to rule in a specific way. For Darius, it was essential that his image was one that instilled fear and commanded respect. For Hatshepsut, Philip II, and Augustus, there was a want for a more level-headed and stable image that was reflected through their stability and unification efforts of their respective empires. Essentially, all of these leaders tailored their image to reflect the ideology that they ruled with, or more accurately …show more content…

For Philip more specifically, he has a reputation for being a generous and skilled ruler, who was revolutionary in military leadership as well as a proficient negotiator. A large part of Philip’s success is due to his diplomacy and how well he kept relations stable. This was in part due to his gift-giving to other kings throughout his rule, as well as the marrying off of his daughters to other kings to help secure relations. Most importantly, Philip II successfully became a large threat to many Greek city-states, and even took Athens, which at the time was a large super power. When examining his representations, he is viewed to have fallen short in successes compared to Alexander the Great, but still did great work as a unifier of Macedonia. Compared to the Macedonian empire, the Roman empire had an innumerable number of leaders who carefully crafted their image either adverse or in support of their rules. Distinctively Augustus, previously known as Octavion, masterfully crafted his own image to showcase the parts of his rule he thought most important to his memory, even if the image he created did not exactly align with his ruling ideology. Augustus, son of Caesar, started as one of three in the triumvirate with Mark Antony and Lepidus, which was rather short lived, quickly giving way to Augustus as the sole ruler of Rome from 27 BCE until 14