Egypt serves as the ideal starting point for anyone aiming to study the institutions of Alexander the Greats successors. No other Hellenistic kingdom is as fortunate in possessing so many sources, particularly in the military field. The surviving documents provide profound insights into the army, extending even to the individual commanders and their soldiers. It is this army, heir to Macedonian traditions, that is described in detail in The Armies of Ptolemaic Egypt.The organisation of the Ptolemaic army is described in detail over its centuries of existence, comparing theory with empirical data. The evolution of this organisation, reflecting the challenges of the time, becomes clear. One striking aspect of the Ptolemaic army is the modernity of its organisation. It was a far cry from the pyramidal structures described by contemporary tacticians, particularly Asclepiodotus in his Tactica. The situation is surprisingly reminiscent of seventeenth-century Europe.The Armies of Ptolemaic Egypt is enriched by numerous illustrations, mainly based on statuettes, frescoes and painted stelae, revealing the Ptolemaic soldier as he appeared from the third to the first century BCE.
The Armies of Ptolemaic Egypt provides a detailed account of the organisation and evolution of the Ptolemaic army, drawing on numerous contemporary sources and richly illustrated, it reveals the Ptolemaic soldier as he appeared from the third to the first century BCE.