The fullest surviving account of Bagoas is given in the Latin Historiae Alexandri Magni, "Histories of Alexander the Great"' by Quintus Curtius Rufus, a first century Roman historian, and in a 1468 French translations of the same, Livre des fais d'Alexandre le grant.[6] Rufus focuses on the degeneration of Alexander, and illustrates this with an account of the machinations of his eunuch, Bagoas. Bagoas is described as "in the flower of his youth,"[7] and was used first by Darius III and was given to Alexander by Nabarzanes. In this account, Alexander takes Bagoas as a lover and the enuch gains influence with him. The Persian satrap Orxines earns the enmity of Bagoas by refusing to pay him respect in court, claiming it is not Persian custom to pay respect to men used as women, and refers to Bagoas as a whore. Bagoas thus manouevres to have Orxines accused of plundering the tomb of Cyrus the Great, and the satrap is executed for this crime. In his final words, Orxines decries the state of affairs by which the enuch is now the king. In so doing he points to the influence Bagoas had gained over Alexander.[8]
Bagoas' kiss
According to Plutarch,[9] Bagoas, Alexander's favourite, won a dancing contest after the Macedonian crossing of the Gedrosian Desert. Bagoas came and sat beside Alexander, still in his performer's costume. The Macedonian troops, with whom Bagoas was very popular, applauded and demanded that Alexander should kiss Bagoas, and he did so.[4][10]
He appears in Les Conquêtes d'AlexandrebyRoger Peyrefitte. Peyrefitte's Bagoas rides to battle by the side of Darius.[b]
He is played by Francisco Bosch in the Oliver Stone film Alexander (2004), which is based in part on Renault's writings, and contain's the dancing scene, although a love scene was cut from the film.[8]
He is also a major character in Jo Graham's novel Stealing Fire, part of her Numinous World series.[11]
Notes
^"Bagoas, an Eunuch, who was in the flower of his Youth, and had been familiarly us'd by Darius formerly, and was now by Alexander..."Rufus 1714, p. 331, Book VI, Chapter V
^Un jeune cavalier de seize ans, d’une radieuse beauté, paré d’or et de perles, portait l’insigne royal, une aigle d’or aux ailes déployées, fixée sur une pique d’argent: c’était Bagoas, l’eunuque et mignon favori de Darius. - A young rider of sixteen, of radiant beauty, adorned with gold and pearls, wore the royal insignia, a golden eagle with outstretched wings, fixed on a silver pike: it was Bagoas, the eunuch and favourite mignon of Darius.[12]
Peyrefitte, Roger (1979). Les conquêtes d'Alexandre (in French). A. Michel. ISBN978-2-226-00878-7. Un jeune cavalier de seize ans, d'une radieuse beauté, paré d'or et de perles, portait l'insigne royal, une aigle d'or aux ailes déployées, fixée sur une pique d'argent: c'était Bagoas, l'eunuque et mignon favori de Darius.
"Bagoas Pleads on Behalf of Nabarzanes," illuminated parchment by the Master of the Jardin de vertueuse consolation, in the collection of the J. Paul Getty Museum