Alexander

Alexander
/al'ig zan"deuhr, -zahn"-/, n.
2. Also, Alexandros. Class. Myth. Homeric name for Paris.
3. Franz /frants, franz, frahnts/, 1891-1964, U.S. psychoanalyst, born in Hungary.
4. Grover Cleveland, 1887-1950, U.S. baseball player.
5. Sir Harold R. L. G. (Alexander of Tunis), 1891-1969, English field marshal.
6. Samuel, 1859-1938, British philosopher.
7. William, 1726-83, general in the American Revolution.
8. a male given name: from a Greek word meaning "defender of men."

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(as used in expressions)
Agassiz Alexander Emmanuel Rodolphe
Alexander Harold Rupert Leofric George Alexander 1st Earl
Alexander Nevsky Saint
Archipenko Alexander
Bach Alexander baron von
Bell Alexander Graham
Calder Alexander Stirling
Cartwright Alexander Joy
Cockburn Sir Alexander James Edmund 10th Baronet
Crowe Sir Eyre Alexander Barby Wichart
Dubcek Alexander
Fleming Sir Alexander
Galt Sir Alexander Tilloch
Gardner Alexander
Archibald Alexander Leach
Haley Alexander Palmer
Hamilton Alexander
Jackson Alexander Young
Alexander Liholiho
Korda Sir Alexander
Macdonald Sir John Alexander
MacDowell Edward Alexander
Edward Alexander McDowell
Cornelius Alexander McGillicuddy
Mackenzie Alexander
Mackenzie Sir Alexander
Macmillan Daniel and Alexander
McGillivray Alexander
Milne Alan Alexander
Mundell Robert Alexander
Olav Alexander Edward Christian Frederik
Palmer Alexander Mitchell
Pope Alexander
Richards Isaac Vivian Alexander
Schuller Gunther Alexander
Schumann Robert Alexander
Sienkiewicz Henryk Adam Alexander Pius
Simon Herbert Alexander
Stephens Alexander Hamilton
Stirling William Alexander 1st earl of
Ustinov Sir Peter Alexander
Watson Watt Sir Robert Alexander
Willem Alexander Paul Frederik Lodewijk
Wilson Alexander
Woollcott Alexander Humphreys
William Alexander Abbott
Alexander Frederick
Humboldt Friedrich Wilhelm Heinrich Alexander Freiherr baron von
Jesse Woodson James and Alexander Franklin James
Marcus Aurelius Severus Alexander

* * *

▪ Byzantine emperor
born c. 870
died June 6, 913, Constantinople

      sole Byzantine emperor from May 11, 912, and third son of the emperor Basil I. He founded the Macedonian dynasty and caused the renewal of warfare between Bulgaria and the Byzantine Empire.

      Alexander was crowned co-emperor with his brother Leo VI in 879 after the death of their elder brother, Constantine, but he remained inactive in state affairs until after Leo's death in May 912. Sending Leo VI's fourth wife, Zoe, to a nunnery, he replaced Leo's advisers and reinstated the deposed patriarch, Nicholas Mysticus. Alexander's refusal to pay the annual tribute owed to the Bulgars by the treaty of 896 precipitated war with Symeon, their powerful and aggressive king. Alexander declared his nephew, Leo's young son, later Constantine VII, his heir to the Byzantine throne and was co-regent with him for several months.

▪ king of Greece
born July 20, 1893, Athens
died Oct. 25, 1920, Tatoi Palace, near Athens

      king of Greece from 1917 to 1920.

      The second son of King Constantine (ruled 1913–17 and 1920–22) and Queen Sophia, Alexander became king (June 12, 1917) when his father was forced by the Allies of World War I to abdicate and thereby allow his country to join them in the war. Shortly after Alexander's accession to the throne, Eleuthérios Venizélos (Venizélos, Eleuthérios) became premier of Greece, dominating Alexander and the government. Venizélos made Greece a participant in the war and subsequently attained a series of diplomatic triumphs at the peace conference, gaining the territories of Smyrna and eastern and western Thrace from Turkey and Bulgaria (treaties of Sèvres and Neuilly, 1920 and 1919) and presenting Alexander with the prospect of expanding Greece's frontiers farther into Anatolia. Before Alexander was able to pursue that objective, however, he was bitten by a pet monkey and died from blood poisoning.

▪ king of Poland
Polish in full  Aleksander Jagiellończyk  
born Aug. 5, 1461, Kraków, Pol.
died Aug. 19, 1506, Vilnius, Lith.

      king of Poland (1501–06) of the Jagiellonian dynasty, successor to his brother John Albert (John I Albert) (Jan Olbracht).

      Alexander carried on the hopeless struggle of the crown against the growing power of the Polish senate and nobles, who deprived him of financial control and curtailed his prerogative. For want of funds, Alexander was unable to assist the grand master of the Order of the Sword against Muscovite aggression or to prevent Ivan III from ravaging Lithuania with the Tatars. The utmost that the king could do was to garrison Smolensk and several other fortresses in his keep and to employ his wife, Helena, Ivan's daughter, to mediate a truce between his father-in-law and himself. Only the death of Stephen, the great ruler of Moldavia, enabled Poland still to hold its own on the Danube. The liberality of Pope Julius II, who granted Alexander much-needed financial help, enabled the Polish king to restrain somewhat the arrogance of the Teutonic Knights in the Prussian provinces.

▪ king of Serbia
Serbo-Croatian in full  Aleksandar Obrenović  
born Aug. 14 [Aug. 2, Old Style], 1876, Belgrade, Serbia
died June 11 [May 29], 1903, Belgrade

      king of Serbia (1889–1903), whose unpopular authoritarian reign resulted not only in his assassination but also in the end of the Obrenović dynasty.

      The only child of Prince (later King) Milan (reigned 1868–89) and his consort, Natalie, Alexander ascended the Serbian throne on March 6 (Feb. 22), 1889, after his father had abdicated and named a regency council for the youthful Alexander. On April 13 (April 1), 1893, Alexander dismissed the regency council and assumed active control of the government.

      Initially well received, Alexander soon alienated a large segment of his supporters by excluding the popular pro-Russian Radical Party from his cabinets, abolishing (1894) the liberal constitution of 1889 in favour of the 1869 constitution (which limited the legislature's powers), frequently changing his cabinet ministers, and bringing his pro-Austrian father (who had been living abroad since 1889) back to Serbia to become commander in chief of the armed forces (1897). When the press voiced its bitter opposition to Alexander's policies and authoritarian manner, the king, urged by his father, restricted the freedoms of the press and of association. An unsuccessful attempt on Milan's life (1899) brought more repressive measures, which particularly curtailed the activities of the Radicals.

      Alexander's prestige reached a low point in 1900, when, despite the strong objections of his father and other political advisers, he declared his intention to marry his mistress, Draga Mašin, née Lunjevica, the widow of a Bohemian engineer, a former lady-in-waiting to Alexander's mother, and a woman 10 years his senior with a dubious reputation. Alexander's entire cabinet resigned in protest.

      The scandal forced Alexander to grant a more liberal constitution (1901) and to create a senate as the second house in the legislature. During his reign he also improved his state's economy, reformed the army, and tried to improve Serbia's international position by encouraging the revival of the Balkan alliances that were originally negotiated between 1865 and 1868 by King Michael (Mihailo Obrenović; reigned 1860–68).

      But Alexander also made a mockery of constitutional government by suspending the constitution for a few hours when he wanted to make unconstitutional changes (1903). He also seemed on the verge of proclaiming Draga's brother as heir to the throne. Consequently, with opposition to Alexander mounting, the country generally welcomed the coup d'état by the military conspirators who invaded the royal palace and murdered Alexander, Draga, and some members of the court.

▪ prince of Serbia
Serbo-Croatian in full  Aleksandar Karaðorðevići,  Karaðorðevići also spelled  Karageorgević,  or  Karadjordjević  
born September 29 [October 11, New Style], 1806, Topola, Serbia
died April 22 [May 4], 1885, Temesvár, Banat, Austria-Hungary

      prince of Serbia from 1842 to 1858.

      The third son of Karadjordje (Karageorge, or Karaðorðe), who had led the movement to win Serb autonomy from the Ottoman Turks (1804–13), Alexander lived in exile until 1842, when the Skupština (Serb parliament) elected him prince of Serbia. Assuming the throne despite Russian challenges to his election and Turkish refusals to make his office hereditary, Alexander allowed his administration to be dominated by an oligarchy consisting of an elite group of senators. In an effort to modernize the Serb bureaucracy, it attempted to improve the principality's educational, legal, and judicial systems, as well as to foster the use of money and credit in Serbia's economy. Although Alexander and his senator-advisers were well intentioned, their innovations, which were quickly undermined by corruption and abuse, stimulated widespread discontent in Serbia's traditional peasant society. In addition, the new intelligentsia, created to provide trained personnel for the reformed bureaucracy, constituted another centre of opposition that encouraged emulation of western European parliamentary government, rather than the simple adoption of bureaucratic reforms.

      Alexander responded to a revolt of the Serbs of south Hungary against the Hungarians in 1848 by refusing to support the revolutionary movement but allowing volunteers to cross the border. He later succumbed to Austrian demands that Serbia refrain from aiding Russia and again maintain neutrality during the Crimean War (1853–56). Thus, he lost the support of the many Serbs who advocated pan-Slavism.

      Although he overthrew some of the main oligarchs in 1857, the Skupština, which met the following year, insisted that he abdicate. Alexander reluctantly agreed and spent the remainder of his life in exile.

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Universalium. 2010.

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