
Sacrilege in the Sanctuary: Thucydidean Perspectives on the
... Reading The Peloponnesian War in the summer of 2010 was my first exposure to Thucydides. I devoured the text greedily, both because I enjoyed the tale he had to tell about what he considered the greatest war in the Greek-speaking world, and also because I had finally stumbled upon the topic I wished ...
... Reading The Peloponnesian War in the summer of 2010 was my first exposure to Thucydides. I devoured the text greedily, both because I enjoyed the tale he had to tell about what he considered the greatest war in the Greek-speaking world, and also because I had finally stumbled upon the topic I wished ...
HISTORY OF SPARTA
... was quite content to allow Athens to carry the risk of continuing the war with Persia while an opposing faction deeply resented Athens' challenge to their Greek supremacy. [45] In later Classical times, Sparta along with Athens, Thebes, and Persia had been the main powers fighting for supremacy agai ...
... was quite content to allow Athens to carry the risk of continuing the war with Persia while an opposing faction deeply resented Athens' challenge to their Greek supremacy. [45] In later Classical times, Sparta along with Athens, Thebes, and Persia had been the main powers fighting for supremacy agai ...
Thucydides: The Reinvention of History
... words, “case studies” of events in Thucydides’s history (227). The Athenian historian’s challenges to contemporary opinions begin on his opening pages, from his claim that the present war was greater than those fought against Trojans and Persians, his economic explanation for the length of the Troja ...
... words, “case studies” of events in Thucydides’s history (227). The Athenian historian’s challenges to contemporary opinions begin on his opening pages, from his claim that the present war was greater than those fought against Trojans and Persians, his economic explanation for the length of the Troja ...
The Devil is in the Details: A study of how Ancient
... the past become the past? History is influenced in so many ways based on who is telling it and from which source the historian chooses to examine. Moreover, this determines what aspect of a history is considered the “starting point.” With so many different historians, stories, and angles from which ...
... the past become the past? History is influenced in so many ways based on who is telling it and from which source the historian chooses to examine. Moreover, this determines what aspect of a history is considered the “starting point.” With so many different historians, stories, and angles from which ...
Pericles - Assets - Cambridge University Press
... Pericles was the most famous leader of the most famous ancient Greek democracy – and also extremely controversial in his own time and ever since. Was he a brutal imperialist ready to oppress other Greeks, or a clear-eyed defender of Athens’ need for power to survive in a relentlessly hostile world? ...
... Pericles was the most famous leader of the most famous ancient Greek democracy – and also extremely controversial in his own time and ever since. Was he a brutal imperialist ready to oppress other Greeks, or a clear-eyed defender of Athens’ need for power to survive in a relentlessly hostile world? ...
KTEMA ES AEI - McGill University
... gradual mobilization in an effort to match those of the Athenians, he postulated that time would be on the side of the Spartans in their attempts to restore the balance of power. There is no further mention of a direct threat to Sparta either, as Archidamus states that despite delaying war, Sparta s ...
... gradual mobilization in an effort to match those of the Athenians, he postulated that time would be on the side of the Spartans in their attempts to restore the balance of power. There is no further mention of a direct threat to Sparta either, as Archidamus states that despite delaying war, Sparta s ...
Sleepwalkers in Athens: Power, Norms, and Ambiguity in Thucydides
... In the overall framework of the approaches to the evolution of norms, in which ideas as well as actors play key roles at different stages (Florini 1996: 363-389), Thucydides has his own place and contribution. The main point of this paper is that Thucydides’ own account of the outbreak of the great ...
... In the overall framework of the approaches to the evolution of norms, in which ideas as well as actors play key roles at different stages (Florini 1996: 363-389), Thucydides has his own place and contribution. The main point of this paper is that Thucydides’ own account of the outbreak of the great ...
Perdikkas and the Outbreak of the Peloponnesian War
... empire in the north Aegean. 2o Any disruption, however, was minimal at this time. Methoneis absent from the tribute lists of 443/2 and may very well have been under the control of Perdikkas. Two other cities, Gale and Chedrolos, which had paid in the past, are missing from the list as well. Whether ...
... empire in the north Aegean. 2o Any disruption, however, was minimal at this time. Methoneis absent from the tribute lists of 443/2 and may very well have been under the control of Perdikkas. Two other cities, Gale and Chedrolos, which had paid in the past, are missing from the list as well. Whether ...
The Golden Age of Pericles
... other small city states that supported democracy 2. Peloponnesian League : Sparta and other city states that supported an oligarchy. ...
... other small city states that supported democracy 2. Peloponnesian League : Sparta and other city states that supported an oligarchy. ...
The Golden Age of Pericles
... other small city states that supported democracy 2. Peloponnesian League : Sparta and other city states that supported an oligarchy. ...
... other small city states that supported democracy 2. Peloponnesian League : Sparta and other city states that supported an oligarchy. ...
The Spartans “at Sea”
... In the case of the Ionians and Aeolians, for example, the Spartans rejected their envoys but still sent men in a penteconter to Phocaea ostensibly to learn about Cyrus’ activities in Ionia (I, 152, 2). Herodotus reports that the Spartan envoy who was then sent to Sardis proclaimed that the Lacedaemo ...
... In the case of the Ionians and Aeolians, for example, the Spartans rejected their envoys but still sent men in a penteconter to Phocaea ostensibly to learn about Cyrus’ activities in Ionia (I, 152, 2). Herodotus reports that the Spartan envoy who was then sent to Sardis proclaimed that the Lacedaemo ...
Utilizing Athenian History in the De Corona
... specifically with Persia, and their recent conflict with Philip of Macedon, as well as compare himself to famous statesmen such as Themistocles. By doing so, Demosthenes is able to defend his actions taken against Philip, particularly the Battle of Chaeronea. However, he must be cautious about how h ...
... specifically with Persia, and their recent conflict with Philip of Macedon, as well as compare himself to famous statesmen such as Themistocles. By doing so, Demosthenes is able to defend his actions taken against Philip, particularly the Battle of Chaeronea. However, he must be cautious about how h ...
Ancient Greek History: Supplemental Readings
... (1) Livius.org always presents possibilities (and opinions) that give a broader view of the events than many textbooks do. It also includes a lot of details that are interesting, but don’t get caught up in them if we haven’t touched on them in class. ii) http://www.livius.org/pb-pem/peloponnesian_wa ...
... (1) Livius.org always presents possibilities (and opinions) that give a broader view of the events than many textbooks do. It also includes a lot of details that are interesting, but don’t get caught up in them if we haven’t touched on them in class. ii) http://www.livius.org/pb-pem/peloponnesian_wa ...
Greek history from original sources
... your own knowledge in your answers. Gods. The Council and People decided, in the prytany of the tribe Oineis, when Spoudias was Secretary and [-]on was President, on the proposal of Kleinias: that the Council and the magistrates in the cities and the Inspectors (episkopoi) should look after the coll ...
... your own knowledge in your answers. Gods. The Council and People decided, in the prytany of the tribe Oineis, when Spoudias was Secretary and [-]on was President, on the proposal of Kleinias: that the Council and the magistrates in the cities and the Inspectors (episkopoi) should look after the coll ...
Name - cloudfront.net
... What did Socrates use with his to students to get them to question their own beliefs and assumptions? ...
... What did Socrates use with his to students to get them to question their own beliefs and assumptions? ...
Greece-Essay 4-Peloponnesian War-11.08.14
... Your introduction should include a hook, a strong thesis statement, and two supporting details. The introduction should identify the most significant ideals or values from Pericles’ Funeral Oration. Your ...
... Your introduction should include a hook, a strong thesis statement, and two supporting details. The introduction should identify the most significant ideals or values from Pericles’ Funeral Oration. Your ...
History - Manchester eScholar - The University of Manchester
... 3 Embassies to which Thucydides makes no reference are attested by inscriptions, cf. R. Meiggs and D. Lewis, Greek Historical Inscriptions (1969), 65.50-1. ...
... 3 Embassies to which Thucydides makes no reference are attested by inscriptions, cf. R. Meiggs and D. Lewis, Greek Historical Inscriptions (1969), 65.50-1. ...
Piraeus - The University of Texas at Austin
... • Athenians move into the Long and Phaleric Walls in 431, Peloponnesian War begins • Plague enters Athens from the Piraeus in 430, things begin to go downhill for Athens • After Pericles’ death (429), fleet misused and Athenians loses the War in 404 • Long Walls torn down and Spartan control enforce ...
... • Athenians move into the Long and Phaleric Walls in 431, Peloponnesian War begins • Plague enters Athens from the Piraeus in 430, things begin to go downhill for Athens • After Pericles’ death (429), fleet misused and Athenians loses the War in 404 • Long Walls torn down and Spartan control enforce ...
Thucydides on Athens` Democratic Advantage in the Archidamian War
... the war and his account of complex and effective Athenian military operations in the early years of the war. Thucydides’ narrative demonstrates that democratic Athens had grown to a position of greatness in the Greek world because the Athenians proved capable of identifying and consistently capturin ...
... the war and his account of complex and effective Athenian military operations in the early years of the war. Thucydides’ narrative demonstrates that democratic Athens had grown to a position of greatness in the Greek world because the Athenians proved capable of identifying and consistently capturin ...
How Can International Relations Theorists Benefit from Reading
... Fear is a defensive motive, based on the desire for self-preservation; however, honor and self-interest, desires for recognition and gain, are fundamentally competitive and acquisitive. These three motives are paralleled in Pericles’ “Last Speech” as safety, glory, and wealth (2.63-64). Athenian imp ...
... Fear is a defensive motive, based on the desire for self-preservation; however, honor and self-interest, desires for recognition and gain, are fundamentally competitive and acquisitive. These three motives are paralleled in Pericles’ “Last Speech” as safety, glory, and wealth (2.63-64). Athenian imp ...
Thucydides 1, 97, 2 : the "arche of the Athenians" and - E
... easily than the rest, they had revolted ...' 7 In their notes ad loc, Goodhart and Classen-Steup assume that Thucydides is referring to the foundation of the Delian League; Tucker comments: 'The leadership of Athens gradually tightened into command from B.C. 479' (H. C. Goodhart, The Eighth Book of ...
... easily than the rest, they had revolted ...' 7 In their notes ad loc, Goodhart and Classen-Steup assume that Thucydides is referring to the foundation of the Delian League; Tucker comments: 'The leadership of Athens gradually tightened into command from B.C. 479' (H. C. Goodhart, The Eighth Book of ...
The Revival of Athens in the History of Political Thought*
... complex than the theory .7 Other ancient writers such as Xenophon and Demosthenes, though providing important historical materials, are far less important than Plato and Thucydides in the modern theorization of the decline of Athens .8 Two versions of the theory developed from the adaptation of the ...
... complex than the theory .7 Other ancient writers such as Xenophon and Demosthenes, though providing important historical materials, are far less important than Plato and Thucydides in the modern theorization of the decline of Athens .8 Two versions of the theory developed from the adaptation of the ...
File
... Editors Note: Democracy had its beginnings in Athens around 500 B.C. Athens and its ally, king-led Sparta, defeated the Persians at different times over the next 20 years. The golden years of democracy in Athens followed for the next 70 to 80 years. But tension between the Athenian democracy and the ...
... Editors Note: Democracy had its beginnings in Athens around 500 B.C. Athens and its ally, king-led Sparta, defeated the Persians at different times over the next 20 years. The golden years of democracy in Athens followed for the next 70 to 80 years. But tension between the Athenian democracy and the ...
Week 7: The Persians Wars
... suzerainty extends to the northern border of Thessaly, the most northerly Greek states. 492/1 Miltiades put on trial for having ruled as a tyrant in the Chersonese. 491 Athens appeals to Sparta over suspected medism of Aegina; Cleomenes forces Aegina, a Peloponnesian ally, to furnish hostages to riv ...
... suzerainty extends to the northern border of Thessaly, the most northerly Greek states. 492/1 Miltiades put on trial for having ruled as a tyrant in the Chersonese. 491 Athens appeals to Sparta over suspected medism of Aegina; Cleomenes forces Aegina, a Peloponnesian ally, to furnish hostages to riv ...
Thrasybulus

Thrasybulus (/ˌθræsɨˈbjuːləs/; Greek: Θρασύβουλος, ""brave-willed""; c. 440 – 388 BC) was an Athenian general and democratic leader. In 411 BC, in the wake of an oligarchic coup at Athens, the pro-democracy sailors at Samos elected him as a general, making him a primary leader of the successful democratic resistance to that coup. As general, he was responsible for recalling the controversial nobleman Alcibiades from exile, and the two worked together extensively over the next several years. In 411 and 410, Thrasybulus commanded along with Alcibiades and others at several critical Athenian naval victories.After Athens' defeat in the Peloponnesian War, Thrasybulus led the democratic resistance to the new oligarchic government, known as the Thirty Tyrants, which the victorious Spartans imposed on Athens. In 404 BC, he commanded a small force of exiles that invaded Attica and, in successive battles, defeated first a Spartan garrison and then the forces of the oligarchy. In the wake of these victories, democracy was re-established at Athens. As a leader of this revived democracy in the 4th century BC, Thrasybulus advocated a policy of resistance to Sparta and sought to restore Athens' imperial power. He was killed in 388 BC while leading an Athenian naval force during the Corinthian War.