Antigonus One-Eyed: The King Who Bet It All
He charged into battle half-blind—and risked the whole kingdom on one day’s fight.

Antigonus One-Eyed: The King Who Bet It All, public domain
One-Eyed, Unbowed
Antigonus Monophthalmus—literally, the One-Eyed—went into his last battle at nearly eighty, still commanding from horseback. Despite age and wounds, he refused to watch from behind. The man who outlived Alexander’s other generals put everything on the line at Ipsus.
The High Stakes of Power
After Alexander the Great's death, his empire splintered. Antigonus seized most of Asia and crowned himself king. But old rivals—Seleucus and Lysimachus—teamed up against him. Ipsus wasn’t just another battle: it was a winner-takes-all gamble for control of the east.
When the Dice Fall
Antigonus’ son led a stunning cavalry charge, but the father was left unprotected. An enemy elephant line cut him off. Antigonus fell, struck by a javelin. His defeat ended his dynasty’s imperial dreams—and redrew the map of the Hellenistic world for centuries.
Antigonus was nearly 80, missing an eye, and still led from the front at Ipsus. He gambled his dynasty’s fate on one last cavalry strike—and lost. The map of the post-Alexander world changed in an afternoon.