");
document.write("");
document.write("| ");
document.write(" |
");
document.write("");
document.write(" | ");
document.write("");
document.write("");
document.write("");
document.write("");
document.write(" ");
document.write(" | ");
document.write("");
document.write("Alexandros");
document.write("");
document.write("
For more than 2,300 years, historians, biographers, novelists, and, more recently, filmmakers have relegated Alexander the Great's lifelong love affair with another man, Hephastian Amyntor, a nobleman's son, to either a historical footnote or, apologetically, his 'possibly' being a bisexual who dabbled occasionally in male-to-male love. ");
document.write(" | ");
document.write("
| ");
document.write("");
document.write(" | ");
document.write("");
document.write(" | ");
document.write("");
document.write(" | ");
document.write("");
document.write(" | ");
document.write(" |
");
document.write("
");