Indeed he did. Menandros is the great unknown hero, if you ask me, that the world forgot. But that is another story altogether.
If I had to choose I would reply with 2, as for the life of me I cannot choose...
1. Seleukos, for fully realizing Alexandros ambition of joining peoples, by marrying a Persian woman, and leading his son to do the same. He, like Alexander was more of a uniter than a divider-he started from scratch and ended up with an empire.
2. Menandros, for basically going up until modern day Bangladesh, then detouring back to the coast towards Baryghaza. (or so some scholars claim... another unknown, basically.

He too started from scratch. When he assumed the kingdom IndoGreeks were being defeated at all fronts by the Baktrians, and Taxila had been destroyed. He managed to reverse that and become ... well, Menandros.
Now, back to the IndoGreeks, here are some parts of their daily lives that would be exactly the same if they lived in Athens,
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Now, for some Buddhist imagery...
The Halo around the head is said to have influenced Early Christian depictions of the Saints- We Orthodox still paint them like that
and as for Buddhists retaining some Greek characteristics (other than clothing) well, I don't know the following pic reminds me of something...
...
It was that syncretism that allowed IndoGreeks, while a tiny minority to hold sway over such great expanses in India. An Indian epic speaks of their kingdom controlling 40.000 villlages. It wasn't to last of course, but their historical presence (at total years, NOT territory controlled, as that ebbed and flowed) was a little less than that of the British. 200 BCE-10 BCE.
190 years.
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