Nicanor (in
Greek
Nικάνωρ; died 330 BC), son of
Parmenion, was a distinguished officer in the
service of
Alexander the Great.
He is first mentioned at the passage of the
Danube river, in the expedition of Alexander against
the
Getae, 335 BC, on which occasion he led
the
phalanx. But during the
expedition into Asia he appears to have uniformly held the chief
command of the body of troops called the
Hypaspists (υπασπισται) or foot-guards, numbering
three units of 1.000 men. As his brother
Philotas did that of the εταιρoι, or horse-guards.
We find
him mentioned, as holding this post, in the three great battles of
the Granicus, of Issus
, and of Gaugamela. He afterwards
accompanied Alexander with a part of the troops under his command,
during the rapid march of the king in pursuit of the king
Darius III Codomannus (330 BC); which
was probably his last service, as he died of disease shortly
afterwards, during the advance of Alexander into
Bactria. His death at this juncture was considered a
fortunate event, as it prevented him from participating either in
the designs or the fate of his brother
Philotas.
References
Notes
Arrian, Anabasis Alexandri, i. 4
Arrian, i. 14, ii. 8, iii. 11, 21, 25; Curtius Rufus, Historiae Alexandri Magni, iii. 24, iv. 50, v. 37, vi. 22; Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca, xvii. 57