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The Partition of Babylon designates the attribution of the territories by Alexander the Great between his generals, soon after his death in 323 BCE. The partition was a result of a compromise, essentially brokered by Eumenes, following a conflict of opinion between the party of Meleager, who wished to give full power to Philip III of Macedon, and the party of Perdiccas, who wished to wait for the birth of the heir of Alexander (the future Alexander IV of Macedon) to give him the throne under the control of a regent. Under the agreement, Philip III became king, but Perdiccas, as a regent, ruled. Perdiccas, as regent, managed the repartition of the territories between the former generals and satraps of Alexander. Meleager and about 300 of his partisans were eliminated by Perdiccas soon after.
| King | Philip III of Macedon |
|---|---|
| Regent | Perdiccas |
| Commander in Chief | Seleucus |
| Chief of the guards | Cassander |
| Egypt | Ptolemy |
| Syria | Laomedon of Mytilene |
| Cilicia | Philotas |
| Illyria | Philo |
| Media | divided between |
| Susiana | Antigenes |
| Phrygia | divided between |
| Lycia & Pamphylia | Nearchus |
| Caria | Cassander |
| Lydia | Menander |
| Thrace | Lysimachus |
| Cappadocia & Paphlagonia | Eumenes |
| Punjab | Taxiles |
| Indian colonies | Peithon, son of Agenor |
| Paropamisia | Extarches |
| Arachosia Gedrosia |
Sibyrtius |
| Drancae Arci |
Stasanor |
| Bactria | Amyntas |
| Sogdia | Scythaeus |
| Parthia | Nicanor |
| Hyrcania | Philip |
| Armenia | Phrataphernes |
| Persia | Tlepolemus |
| Babylonia | Peucestas |
| Pelasgia | Archon |
| Mesopotamia | Arcesilaus |
Justin describes in detail how the various territories were distributed:
This partition was followed by a second one, the Partition of Triparadisus, in 321 BCE[citation needed].
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