Readings in Greek history: sources and interpretations
Gespeichert in:
Hauptverfasser: | , |
---|---|
Format: | Buch |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York, NY [u.a.]
Oxford Univ. Press
2007
|
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | Publisher description Table of contents only Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Beschreibung: | Includes bibliographical references |
Beschreibung: | XIX, 314 S. Ill., Kt. |
ISBN: | 0195178246 0195178254 9780195178258 9780195178241 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a Readings in Greek history |b sources and interpretations |c D. Brendan Nagle ; Stanley M. Burstein |
264 | 1 | |a New York, NY [u.a.] |b Oxford Univ. Press |c 2007 | |
300 | |a XIX, 314 S. |b Ill., Kt. | ||
336 | |b txt |2 rdacontent | ||
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651 | 4 | |a Greece |x History |y To 146 B.C |v Sources |v Textbooks | |
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Datensatz im Suchindex
_version_ | 1804136672048185344 |
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adam_text | CONTENTS
List or Maps and Figures
xv
Introduction
xvii
1.
Tne
Origin ana Spread or
tne
Polis
System
1
A. Greece in
tne
Second Millennium B.C.
2
1.
The Mycenaean Kingdoms (ca.
1650-1150 b.c.) 2
2.
Mycenaean Relations with the
Hittites:
the Tawagalawas Letter (Selections)
6
B. Greek Definitions or
tne
Polis
7
1.
The Natural Origins of the
Polis:
Man Is by Nature a Political Animal
8
2.
The Nature of Citizenship: He Who Has the Right to Take Part in Deliberative or
Judicial Administration Is a Citizen
9
C. Greek Liie in the Eigktk Century B.C.
10
1.
Homer: The Shield of Achilles
10
2.
Hesiod s Works and Days
14
D. Colonization and the Expansion or
tne
Polis
System:
Tne
Case of
Cyrene
21
1.
Herodotus Account
21
2.
The Oath of the Colonists
24
E. Greeks and Non-Greeks in
tne
Greek Colonies:
Tne
Foundation or
Lampsacus
25
F. Greeks and Scythians in the Black Sea: Coexistence and
Interaction
26
G. Tne
Aristocratic
^Жаггіог
2,8
1.
The Warrior Ideal
28
2.
The Warrior and Society: The Drinking Song of Hybrias
29
H. Tne
Hoplite
Revolution
and tne
Citizen Soldier
29
1.
The Reality of Battle
29
2.
A Good Citizen: Tellus of Athens
30
3.
Only Farmers Can Be Good Citizens
32
I. Tne
Hoplite
Polis
:
Sparta
33
J.
Tke Role of
Àtkletics
40
1.
An Athletic Dynasty: The Diagorids of Rhodes
40
2.
Athletics and the
Polis: A
Philosophical Critique
42
2.
Tne Rise ana Fall of tne Greek Aristocracy in tne Arcnaic
Period
43
A. Aristocratic Privilege
44
1.
The Gortyn Code
44
2.
How a Boy Becomes a Man in Crete
45
B
.
Aspects of Aristocratic Lire at Its Peak
46
1.
A Fine Symposium: Xenophanes
46
2.
The Life of an Aristocrat: Alcaeus
47
3.
When You Are Repulsive to Boys and a Laughing Stock to Women : Mimnermus
on Old Age
47
4.
A Woman s View of Aristocratic Life: Sappho s To Anactoria
48
C. Heroic Atkletics: Tke Ckariot Race at Patroclus Funeral Games
49
D. Tke Aristocracy ana Its International Connections
53
1.
A Greek Officer in Egyptian Service
53
2.
Greek Mercenaries in the Egyptian Army
54
3.
The Life of a Soldier: An Order for Rations at
Arad
in the Kingdom of Judah
54
4.
An Aristocratic Exile: Antimenides of
Mityléně
54
5.
Sappho on Intermarriage Between Aristocrats
55
E. Tke Crisis of tke Aristocracy
55
1.
The Lament of Theognis
55
2.
Vulgar Upstarts: Artemon and Rhodopis
56
3.
The Crisis of the Aristocracy at Corinth: Cypselus and
Periander 57
4.
The Crisis of the Aristocracy at Athens: Solon
63
3.
Tke Persian Wars
67
A. Tke Persian Empire
69
1.
The King and His Subjects: The Cyrus Cylinder
69
2.
By the Grace of Ahurimazda I Am King : Persian Imperial Ideology
71
B. Tke Persian Wars
73
1.
How the Wars Began: The Problems of Aristagoras
73
2.
Aristagoras Seeks Help from Sparta
76
3.
Aristagoras at Athens
77
4.
The Battle of Marathon
78
C. Tne
Second Persian Invasion of
480
B.C.
81
1.
The Muddled Greek Response: It Was Plain That the Greater Number of the States
Would Take No Part in the War but Warmly Favored the Persians
81
2.
Themistocles and the Alliance of the Willing
82
3.
The Themistocles Decree
83
4.
Why Gelon of Syracuse Refused Help
84
5.
The Battle of Thermopylae
86
6.
Athens Evacuated
87
7.
The Great Debate: Fight at
Salamis
or Defend the Isthmus of Corinth?
87
8.
The Battle of Plataea
89
9.
Revenge for Thermopylae: The Humanity of
Pausanias
96
Life in
tlie
Polk
98
A. The Household: Family Relations
101
1.
What Is Sweeter Than Family?
101
2.
Do Parents Love Their Children More Than Children Love Their Parents?
103
3.
The Nature of Youth
104
4.
Husbands and Wives
105
5.
Mothers and Sons: My Mother Is a Trial
106
6.
Except for My Mother I Hate the Whole Female Sex
107
7.
Procne s Lament: The Sorrows of Young Women
109
B. Household Management
110
1.
Women s Work
110
2.
Where There Is No Wife Households Are Neither Orderly nor Prosperous 111
3.
Woman and Legal Affairs 111
4.
The Education of a Wife
113
5.
Managing Obstreperous Children
116
6.
The Short Sad Life of a Good Woman: The Epitaph of
Sokratea
of
Paros
117
C.
Slaves and Slavery
117
1.
The Best and Most Necessary Possessions
117
2.
We Have Mistresses for Our Pleasure : Sex and Slavery in the Oihos
118
3.
How to Become a Slave: Be in the Wrong Place at the Wrong Time
120
4.
The Slave Trade: A Eunuch s Revenge
121
D.
Tne
Polis and
tne
Household
123
1.
The Murder of Eratosthenes
123
2.
The Demos Must Be Pure: Athenian Laws on Pederasty
129
E. Religion in the Classical
Polis
131
1.
The Affair of the
Herms
131
2.
The Festivals: A Man Should Spend His Whole Life at Play
133
3.
Local
Festivals
135
4.
Athena Nike Priestess
136
5.
Personal Religion: Xenophon s Temple to Artemis
136
R
War and Warfare in tke
Polis
137
1.
The Spartan Army
137
2.
A Hoplite
Battle: Mantineia
138
G. The Place of Warfare in
tne
Polis:
Some Philosophical Reflections
142
1.
All States Are by Nature Fighting an Undeclared War with All Other
States
142
2.
Peace Is the End of War, Leisure of Work
143
5.
Tne
Peloponnesian War ana
tne
Military Revolution
145
A. The Rise of Athens
147
1.
The Golden Age: Looking at the Past
147
2.
For Without Equal Military Power It Is Impossible for Allies to Have Equal or
Similar Say in Policy-Making : The Reality of Athenian Power
148
3.
The Strategic Thinking of Themistocles
149
B. The Delian League
150
1.
They Had Enough of the Persian War: The Spartans and the Delian
League
150
2.
The Allies Brought All This on Themselves : From League to Empire
151
3.
Aristotle on the Organization of the Athenian Empire
152
C. The Athenian Empire
153
1.
The Logic of Possessing an Empire
153
2.
Athens and Her Subjects: The Case of Erythrae
160
3.
Imperial Ideology: Pericles Funeral Oration
161
4.
The Bloody Revolution at Corcyra: War Is a Hard Master
168
5.
Justice Enters the Discussion Only When the Parties Are Equal : The Melian
Dialogue
171
D. Opposition to the Peloponnesian War at Athens
177
1.
Prayer to Peace
178
2.
Lysistrata s Solution to War
178
E. Defeat and Hard Times: Athens After the Peloponnesian War
179
F. The Military Revolution
183
1.
Old and New Forms of Warfare
183
2.
Iphicrates: A Military Revolutionary
183
3.
A Stunning Reversal: Light Infantry Defeat Heavy Infantry at Lechaeum
185
4.
Mercenaries at War
187
5.
A Two-Edged Sword: Mercenary Troops and Their Employers
187
6.
The Need for Walls
188
6.
Intellectual Developments in
tne
Classical
Agfe:
Tne Pntfsig/Nomos
Debate
189
A. Tke Conventionalist Argument
191
1.
There Is No Natural Standard of Justice : An Overview from Plato
191
2.
Callicles Superman: Right Is the Advantage of the Stronger over the
Weaker
192
3.
Protagoras: Virtue Is Taught by Parents, Teachers, and the Laws
193
B. Tke Naturalist Argument
195
1. Antiphon:
Greeks and Barbarians Are the Same by Nature
195
2.
Sophocles, Empedocles, and Alcidamas: Universally Valid Norms Exist
196
3.
Aristotle: Intrinsically Evil Acts
196
4.
Making Fun of the Philosophers: Aristophanes
198
С
Tke Tkreat of Socrates
199
1.
Socrates and Any
tus
200
2.
The Sophist Polykrates Pamphlet
203
D. Socrates Defense: I Snail Obey God Ratker
Tkan
You
203
E. Diogenes tke Cynic
206
7.
Tke Fourtli Century
209
A. Tke Decline and Fall of Sparta
210
1.
Social Problems at Sparta: The Conspiracy of Cinadon
210
2.
Sparta at Its Peak: The King s Peace
(386 b.c.) 212
3.
The Foundation of the Second Athenian League
(377 b.c.) 214
4.
The Battle of Leuctra and the End of Spartan Primacy
(371 b.c.) 216
5.
The Decline of Sparta: Why?
219
B. Tke Crisis of tke
Polis in
Fourtk-Century B.C. Greece
221
1.
Fifth-Column Activity in Greek Cities
221
2.
Political Revolution in
Argos
223
3.
Mercenaries and Exiles: The Tyranny of Clearchus of Heraclea
Pontica
(364-352 b.c.) 223
4.
Can the
Polis
Be Saved? Suggested Solutions
225
C. Tke Peripkery of tke Greek World
230
1.
Thracian Court Life: A Heroic Society
230
2.
A Greek Trading Post in Thrace
232
3.
Greeks and Non-Greeks in the Black Sea: Amage, Queen of the Sarmatians,
Saves the City of Chersonesus
232
4.
Bosporus: A Multiethnic State in the Black Sea
(347/6 b.c.) 233
5.
A Hellenized Satrap: Mausolus of
Caria
234
6.
The Funeral of Mausolus: A Greek Extravaganza
(353 b.c.) 235
7.
A Greek View of Persia: Xenophon, The Education of Cyrus
236
D.
Philip
II
and tne
Emergence of
Macedon
238
1.
The Achievements of Philip II: Alexander the Great s Speech at
Opis
(324 b.c.) 238
2.
Philip
U s
Military Reforms
240
3.
The Companions of Philip II
241
4.
Philippi: The First Macedonian Colony
242
5.
Oath of Members of the League of Corinth
(338-337 b.c.) 243
6.
The Marriages of Philip II
244
7.
The Assassination of Philip II
244
E.
Tne
Reign of Alexander
tne
Great:
Alexander and the Greeks
246
1.
The Greeks in Europe
246
2.
The Greeks in Asia
248
F. Alexander and Egypt
250
1.
Surrender of Egypt to Alexander
251
2.
Foundation of Alexandria
251
3.
Alexander s Visit to Siwah
253
4.
Alexander s Organization of Egypt
254
5.
The Administration of Cleomenes of Naucratis
254
G. Alexander and the Non-Greeks
255
1.
Alexander s Organization of Babylon
256
2.
Babylonian Resistance to Alexander s Plans
256
3.
The Destruction of
Persepolis
257
H.
The Challenges of Alexander
257
1.
The Attempt to Introduce Proskynesis
257
2.
The Pages Conspiracy
260
3.
Alexander s Last Plans
262
I. What Was Alexander? Saint or Demon?
263
1.
Plutarch: Alexander a Force for the Spread of Greek Culture
263
2.
Alexander the Enemy of the True Religion: A Zoroastrian View
266
8.
Tke Hellenistic Age
267
A. A New World
268
1.
A Greek Philosopher s View of Alexander s Conquests
268
2.
The Brutal Struggle for Alexander s Empire: The Heidelberg Epitome
269
B. Alexandria and the Colonial World of Hellenistic Egypt
272
1.
A Hellenistic Metropolis: Alexandria in Egypt
272
2.
Middle Class Life in Hellenistic Egypt
274
3.
Government in Ptolemaic Egypt: Advice to a Young Official
276
4.
Government Corruption in Ptolemaic Egypt: The Amnesty of
118 b.c. 278
C.
Cultural
Contact:
Ptolemaic Egypt
279
1.
The Origins of Sarapis
280
2.
The Praises of
Isis 281
3.
How Sarapis Came to
Delos:
The Family of Apollonios, Priest of Sarapis
282
D. Cultural Contact: Bactria ana
Inaia
283
1.
The Greeks in Bactria and India
283
2.
Greek Wisdom in Bactria
284
3.
Sagala: A Greco-Indian Metropolis
284
4.
The Rock Edict of King Ashoka from Kandahar
285
5.
Dedication to Vishnu by Heliodorus (First Century
b.c.) 285
6.
Stele of Sophytos, Son of Naratos
285
E. Culture Clash: Jewish Resistance to Hellenism
286
1.
Jerusalem Transformed into
a Polis (ca.
175 b.c.) 286
2.
Abolition of Jewish Law
(167 b.c.) 287
3.
Armed Jewish Resistance Begins
(167 b.c.) 288
4.
The Purification of the Temple and the Restoration of Jewish Law
(165 b.c.) 288
F. Jewish Life in the Diaspora
290
1.
The Synagogue of Alexandria
290
2.
The Origin of the Sabbath Ritual
291
G. Opportunities and Social Roles in the Hellenistic Period
291
1.
An Athenian in Ptolemaic Service:· The Life of Kallias, Ptolemaic Governor of
Halicarnassus (Athens,
270-269 b.c.) 292
2.
The Dangerous Life of a Soldier of Fortune
294
3.
Recommendation for a Government Job (Egypt,
255 b.c.) 295
4.
A Political Woman: Phyle, Wife of Thessalos (Priene, First Century
b.c.) 296
5.
A Woman Philosopher: The Life of Hipparchia
296
6.
A Professional Woman: Phanostrate, Midwife and Doctor
(Athens, Fourth Century
b.c.) 297
7.
A Professional Woman: The Theban Harpist Polygnota, Daughter of Socrates
(Delphi,
86 b.c.) 297
8.
The Romance of Prince Antiochus and Queen Stratonice
298
9.
The Marriage Contract of Heracleides and
Demetria
(311 b.c.) 300
H.
The Coming or Rome
301
1.
T. Quinctius Flamininus and Greek Freedom
(196 b.c.) 301
2.
The Reality of Roman Power: The Letter of King Eumenes II
(156 b.c.) 302
3.
Roman Expansion in the Eastern Mediterranean: A Cynical View
303
Glossary
304
|
adam_txt |
CONTENTS
List or Maps and Figures
xv
Introduction
xvii
1.
Tne
Origin ana Spread or
tne
Polis
System
1
A. Greece in
tne
Second Millennium B.C.
2
1.
The Mycenaean Kingdoms (ca.
1650-1150 b.c.) 2
2.
Mycenaean Relations with the
Hittites:
the Tawagalawas Letter (Selections)
6
B. Greek Definitions or
tne
Polis
7
1.
The Natural Origins of the
Polis:
"Man Is by Nature a Political Animal"
8
2.
The Nature of Citizenship: "He Who Has the Right to Take Part in Deliberative or
Judicial Administration Is a Citizen"
9
C. Greek Liie in the Eigktk Century B.C.
10
1.
Homer: The Shield of Achilles
10
2.
Hesiod's Works and Days
14
D. Colonization and the Expansion or
tne
Polis
System:
Tne
Case of
Cyrene
21
1.
Herodotus' Account
21
2.
The Oath of the Colonists
24
E. Greeks and Non-Greeks in
tne
Greek Colonies:
Tne
Foundation or
Lampsacus
25
F. Greeks and Scythians in the Black Sea: Coexistence and
Interaction
26
G. Tne
Aristocratic
^Жаггіог
2,8
1.
The Warrior Ideal
28
2.
The Warrior and Society: The Drinking Song of Hybrias
29
H. Tne
Hoplite
Revolution
and tne
Citizen Soldier
29
1.
The Reality of Battle
29
2.
A Good Citizen: Tellus of Athens
30
3.
Only Farmers Can Be Good Citizens
32
I. Tne
Hoplite
Polis
:
Sparta
33
J.
Tke Role of
Àtkletics
40
1.
An Athletic Dynasty: The Diagorids of Rhodes
40
2.
Athletics and the
Polis: A
Philosophical Critique
42
2.
Tne Rise ana Fall of tne Greek Aristocracy in tne Arcnaic
Period
43
A. Aristocratic Privilege
44
1.
The Gortyn Code
44
2.
How a Boy Becomes a Man in Crete
45
B
.
Aspects of Aristocratic Lire at Its Peak
46
1.
A Fine Symposium: Xenophanes
46
2.
The Life of an Aristocrat: Alcaeus
47
3.
When You Are "Repulsive to Boys and a Laughing Stock to Women": Mimnermus
on Old Age
47
4.
A Woman's View of Aristocratic Life: Sappho's "To Anactoria"
48
C. Heroic Atkletics: Tke Ckariot Race at Patroclus' Funeral Games
49
D. Tke Aristocracy ana Its International Connections
53
1.
A Greek Officer in Egyptian Service
53
2.
Greek Mercenaries in the Egyptian Army
54
3.
The Life of a Soldier: An Order for Rations at
Arad
in the Kingdom of Judah
54
4.
An Aristocratic Exile: Antimenides of
Mityléně
54
5.
Sappho on Intermarriage Between Aristocrats
55
E. Tke Crisis of tke Aristocracy
55
1.
The Lament of Theognis
55
2.
Vulgar Upstarts: Artemon and Rhodopis
56
3.
The Crisis of the Aristocracy at Corinth: Cypselus and
Periander 57
4.
The Crisis of the Aristocracy at Athens: Solon
63
3.
Tke Persian Wars
67
A. Tke Persian Empire
69
1.
The King and His Subjects: The Cyrus Cylinder
69
2.
"By the Grace of Ahurimazda I Am King": Persian Imperial Ideology
71
B. Tke Persian Wars
73
1.
How the Wars Began: The Problems of Aristagoras
73
2.
Aristagoras Seeks Help from Sparta
76
3.
Aristagoras at Athens
77
4.
The Battle of Marathon
78
C. Tne
Second Persian Invasion of
480
B.C.
81
1.
The Muddled Greek Response: "It Was Plain That the Greater Number of the States
Would Take No Part in the War but Warmly Favored the Persians"
81
2.
Themistocles and the "Alliance of the Willing"
82
3.
The Themistocles Decree
83
4.
Why Gelon of Syracuse Refused Help
84
5.
The Battle of Thermopylae
86
6.
Athens Evacuated
87
7.
The Great Debate: Fight at
Salamis
or Defend the Isthmus of Corinth?
87
8.
The Battle of Plataea
89
9.
Revenge for Thermopylae: The Humanity of
Pausanias
96
Life in
tlie
Polk
98
A. The Household: Family Relations
101
1.
"What Is Sweeter Than Family?"
101
2.
Do Parents Love Their Children More Than Children Love Their Parents?
103
3.
The Nature of Youth
104
4.
Husbands and Wives
105
5.
Mothers and Sons: "My Mother Is a Trial"
106
6.
"Except for My Mother I Hate the Whole Female Sex"
107
7.
Procne's Lament: The Sorrows of Young Women
109
B. Household Management
110
1.
Women's Work
110
2.
"Where There Is No Wife Households Are Neither Orderly nor Prosperous" 111
3.
Woman and Legal Affairs 111
4.
The Education of a Wife
113
5.
Managing Obstreperous Children
116
6.
The Short Sad Life of a Good Woman: The Epitaph of
Sokratea
of
Paros
117
C.
Slaves and Slavery
117
1.
"The Best and Most Necessary Possessions"
117
2.
"We Have Mistresses for Our Pleasure": Sex and Slavery in the Oihos
118
3.
How to Become a Slave: Be in the Wrong Place at the Wrong Time
120
4.
The Slave Trade: A Eunuch's Revenge
121
D.
Tne
Polis and
tne
Household
123
1.
The Murder of Eratosthenes
123
2.
The Demos Must Be Pure: Athenian Laws on Pederasty
129
E. Religion in the Classical
Polis
131
1.
The Affair of the
Herms
131
2.
The Festivals: "A Man Should Spend His Whole Life at Play"
133
3.
Local
Festivals
135
4.
Athena Nike Priestess
136
5.
Personal Religion: Xenophon's Temple to Artemis
136
R
War and Warfare in tke
Polis
137
1.
The Spartan Army
137
2.
A Hoplite
Battle: Mantineia
138
G. The Place of Warfare in
tne
Polis:
Some Philosophical Reflections
142
1.
"All States Are by Nature Fighting an Undeclared War with All Other
States"
142
2.
"Peace Is the End of War, Leisure of Work"
143
5.
Tne
Peloponnesian War ana
tne
Military Revolution
145
A. The Rise of Athens
147
1.
The Golden Age: Looking at the Past
147
2.
"For Without Equal Military Power It Is Impossible for Allies to Have Equal or
Similar Say in Policy-Making": The Reality of Athenian Power
148
3.
The Strategic Thinking of Themistocles
149
B. The Delian League
150
1.
"They Had Enough of the Persian War:" The Spartans and the Delian
League
150
2.
"The Allies Brought All This on Themselves": From League to Empire
151
3.
Aristotle on the Organization of the Athenian Empire
152
C. The Athenian Empire
153
1.
The Logic of Possessing an Empire
153
2.
Athens and Her Subjects: The Case of Erythrae
160
3.
Imperial Ideology: Pericles' Funeral Oration
161
4.
The Bloody Revolution at Corcyra: "War Is a Hard Master"
168
5.
"Justice Enters the Discussion Only When the Parties Are Equal": The Melian
Dialogue
171
D. Opposition to the Peloponnesian War at Athens
177
1.
Prayer to Peace
178
2.
Lysistrata's Solution to War
178
E. Defeat and Hard Times: Athens After the Peloponnesian War
179
F. The Military Revolution
183
1.
Old and New Forms of Warfare
183
2.
Iphicrates: A Military Revolutionary
183
3.
A Stunning Reversal: Light Infantry Defeat Heavy Infantry at Lechaeum
185
4.
Mercenaries at War
187
5.
A Two-Edged Sword: Mercenary Troops and Their Employers
187
6.
The Need for Walls
188
6.
Intellectual Developments in
tne
Classical
Agfe:
Tne Pntfsig/Nomos
Debate
189
A. Tke Conventionalist Argument
191
1.
"There Is No Natural Standard of Justice": An Overview from Plato
191
2.
Callicles' Superman: "Right Is the Advantage of the Stronger over the
Weaker"
192
3.
Protagoras: Virtue Is Taught by Parents, Teachers, and the Laws
193
B. Tke Naturalist Argument
195
1. Antiphon:
Greeks and Barbarians Are the Same by Nature
195
2.
Sophocles, Empedocles, and Alcidamas: Universally Valid Norms Exist
196
3.
Aristotle: Intrinsically Evil Acts
196
4.
Making Fun of the Philosophers: Aristophanes
198
С
Tke Tkreat of Socrates
199
1.
Socrates and Any
tus
200
2.
The Sophist Polykrates'Pamphlet
203
D. Socrates' Defense: "I Snail Obey God Ratker
Tkan
You"
203
E. Diogenes tke Cynic
206
7.
Tke Fourtli Century
209
A. Tke Decline and Fall of Sparta
210
1.
Social Problems at Sparta: The Conspiracy of Cinadon
210
2.
Sparta at Its Peak: The King's Peace
(386 b.c.) 212
3.
The Foundation of the Second Athenian League
(377 b.c.) 214
4.
The Battle of Leuctra and the End of Spartan Primacy
(371 b.c.) 216
5.
The Decline of Sparta: Why?
219
B. Tke Crisis of tke
Polis in
Fourtk-Century B.C. Greece
221
1.
Fifth-Column Activity in Greek Cities
221
2.
Political Revolution in
Argos
223
3.
Mercenaries and Exiles: The Tyranny of Clearchus of Heraclea
Pontica
(364-352 b.c.) 223
4.
Can the
Polis
Be Saved? Suggested Solutions
225
C. Tke Peripkery of tke Greek World
230
1.
Thracian Court Life: A Heroic Society
230
2.
A Greek Trading Post in Thrace
232
3.
Greeks and Non-Greeks in the Black Sea: Amage, Queen of the Sarmatians,
Saves the City of Chersonesus
232
4.
Bosporus: A Multiethnic State in the Black Sea
(347/6 b.c.) 233
5.
A Hellenized Satrap: Mausolus of
Caria
234
6.
The Funeral of Mausolus: A Greek Extravaganza
(353 b.c.) 235
7.
A Greek View of Persia: Xenophon, The Education of Cyrus
236
D.
Philip
II
and tne
Emergence of
Macedon
238
1.
The Achievements of Philip II: Alexander the Great's Speech at
Opis
(324 b.c.) 238
2.
Philip
U's
Military Reforms
240
3.
The Companions of Philip II
241
4.
Philippi: The First Macedonian Colony
242
5.
Oath of Members of the League of Corinth
(338-337 b.c.) 243
6.
The Marriages of Philip II
244
7.
The Assassination of Philip II
244
E.
Tne
Reign of Alexander
tne
Great:
Alexander and the Greeks
246
1.
The Greeks in Europe
246
2.
The Greeks in Asia
248
F. Alexander and Egypt
250
1.
Surrender of Egypt to Alexander
251
2.
Foundation of Alexandria
251
3.
Alexander's Visit to Siwah
253
4.
Alexander's Organization of Egypt
254
5.
The Administration of Cleomenes of Naucratis
254
G. Alexander and the Non-Greeks
255
1.
Alexander's Organization of Babylon
256
2.
Babylonian Resistance to Alexander's Plans
256
3.
The Destruction of
Persepolis
257
H.
The Challenges of Alexander
257
1.
The Attempt to Introduce Proskynesis
257
2.
The Pages'Conspiracy
260
3.
Alexander's Last Plans
262
I. What Was Alexander? Saint or Demon?
263
1.
Plutarch: Alexander a Force for the Spread of Greek Culture
263
2.
Alexander the Enemy of the True Religion: A Zoroastrian View
266
8.
Tke Hellenistic Age
267
A. A New World
268
1.
A Greek Philosopher's View of Alexander's Conquests
268
2.
The Brutal Struggle for Alexander's Empire: The Heidelberg Epitome
269
B. Alexandria and the Colonial World of Hellenistic Egypt
272
1.
A Hellenistic Metropolis: Alexandria in Egypt
272
2.
Middle Class Life in Hellenistic Egypt
274
3.
Government in Ptolemaic Egypt: Advice to a Young Official
276
4.
Government Corruption in Ptolemaic Egypt: The Amnesty of
118 b.c. 278
C.
Cultural
Contact:
Ptolemaic Egypt
279
1.
The Origins of Sarapis
280
2.
The Praises of
Isis 281
3.
How Sarapis Came to
Delos:
The Family of Apollonios, Priest of Sarapis
282
D. Cultural Contact: Bactria ana
Inaia
283
1.
The Greeks in Bactria and India
283
2.
Greek Wisdom in Bactria
284
3.
Sagala: A Greco-Indian Metropolis
284
4.
The Rock Edict of King Ashoka from Kandahar
285
5.
Dedication to Vishnu by Heliodorus (First Century
b.c.) 285
6.
Stele of Sophytos, Son of Naratos
285
E. Culture Clash: Jewish Resistance to Hellenism
286
1.
Jerusalem Transformed into
a Polis (ca.
175 b.c.) 286
2.
Abolition of Jewish Law
(167 b.c.) 287
3.
Armed Jewish Resistance Begins
(167 b.c.) 288
4.
The Purification of the Temple and the Restoration of Jewish Law
(165 b.c.) 288
F. Jewish Life in the Diaspora
290
1.
The Synagogue of Alexandria
290
2.
The Origin of the Sabbath Ritual
291
G. Opportunities and Social Roles in the Hellenistic Period
291
1.
An Athenian in Ptolemaic Service:· The Life of Kallias, Ptolemaic Governor of
Halicarnassus (Athens,
270-269 b.c.) 292
2.
The Dangerous Life of a Soldier of Fortune
294
3.
Recommendation for a Government Job (Egypt,
255 b.c.) 295
4.
A Political Woman: Phyle, Wife of Thessalos (Priene, First Century
b.c.) 296
5.
A Woman Philosopher: The Life of Hipparchia
296
6.
A Professional Woman: Phanostrate, Midwife and Doctor
(Athens, Fourth Century
b.c.) 297
7.
A Professional Woman: The Theban Harpist Polygnota, Daughter of Socrates
(Delphi,
86 b.c.) 297
8.
The Romance of Prince Antiochus and Queen Stratonice
298
9.
The Marriage Contract of Heracleides and
Demetria
(311 b.c.) 300
H.
The Coming or Rome
301
1.
T. Quinctius Flamininus and Greek Freedom
(196 b.c.) 301
2.
The Reality of Roman Power: The Letter of King Eumenes II
(156 b.c.) 302
3.
Roman Expansion in the Eastern Mediterranean: A Cynical View
303
Glossary
304 |
any_adam_object | 1 |
any_adam_object_boolean | 1 |
author | Nagle, D. Brendan 1936- Burstein, Stanley Mayer 1941- |
author_GND | (DE-588)131774506 (DE-588)135723655 |
author_facet | Nagle, D. Brendan 1936- Burstein, Stanley Mayer 1941- |
author_role | aut aut |
author_sort | Nagle, D. Brendan 1936- |
author_variant | d b n db dbn s m b sm smb |
building | Verbundindex |
bvnumber | BV022553296 |
callnumber-first | D - World History |
callnumber-label | DF12 |
callnumber-raw | DF12 |
callnumber-search | DF12 |
callnumber-sort | DF 212 |
callnumber-subject | DF - Greece |
classification_rvk | NH 5350 |
ctrlnum | (gbd)0892554 (OCoLC)69672105 (DE-599)DNB 2006048277 |
dewey-full | 938 |
dewey-hundreds | 900 - History & geography |
dewey-ones | 938 - Greece to 323 |
dewey-raw | 938 |
dewey-search | 938 |
dewey-sort | 3938 |
dewey-tens | 930 - History of ancient world to ca. 499 |
discipline | Geschichte |
discipline_str_mv | Geschichte |
era | Geschichte gnd |
era_facet | Geschichte |
format | Book |
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genre | (DE-588)4135952-5 Quelle gnd-content |
genre_facet | Quelle |
geographic | Griechenland (Altertum) Griechenland Greece History To 146 B.C Sources Textbooks Griechenland Altertum (DE-588)4093976-5 gnd |
geographic_facet | Griechenland (Altertum) Griechenland Greece History To 146 B.C Sources Textbooks Griechenland Altertum |
id | DE-604.BV022553296 |
illustrated | Illustrated |
index_date | 2024-07-02T18:14:18Z |
indexdate | 2024-07-09T21:00:07Z |
institution | BVB |
isbn | 0195178246 0195178254 9780195178258 9780195178241 |
language | English |
lccn | 2006048277 |
oai_aleph_id | oai:aleph.bib-bvb.de:BVB01-015759583 |
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owner_facet | DE-384 DE-739 DE-12 DE-11 |
physical | XIX, 314 S. Ill., Kt. |
psigel | gbd_4_0712 |
publishDate | 2007 |
publishDateSearch | 2007 |
publishDateSort | 2007 |
publisher | Oxford Univ. Press |
record_format | marc |
spelling | Nagle, D. Brendan 1936- Verfasser (DE-588)131774506 aut Readings in Greek history sources and interpretations D. Brendan Nagle ; Stanley M. Burstein New York, NY [u.a.] Oxford Univ. Press 2007 XIX, 314 S. Ill., Kt. txt rdacontent n rdamedia nc rdacarrier Includes bibliographical references Geschichte gnd rswk-swf Geschichte Griekse oudheid gtt Griechenland (Altertum) Griechenland Greece History To 146 B.C Sources Textbooks Griechenland Altertum (DE-588)4093976-5 gnd rswk-swf (DE-588)4135952-5 Quelle gnd-content Griechenland Altertum (DE-588)4093976-5 g Geschichte z DE-604 Burstein, Stanley Mayer 1941- Verfasser (DE-588)135723655 aut http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0724/2006048277-d.html Publisher description http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0724/2006048277-t.html Table of contents only Digitalisierung UB Passau application/pdf http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015759583&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA Inhaltsverzeichnis |
spellingShingle | Nagle, D. Brendan 1936- Burstein, Stanley Mayer 1941- Readings in Greek history sources and interpretations Geschichte Griekse oudheid gtt |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4093976-5 (DE-588)4135952-5 |
title | Readings in Greek history sources and interpretations |
title_auth | Readings in Greek history sources and interpretations |
title_exact_search | Readings in Greek history sources and interpretations |
title_exact_search_txtP | Readings in Greek history sources and interpretations |
title_full | Readings in Greek history sources and interpretations D. Brendan Nagle ; Stanley M. Burstein |
title_fullStr | Readings in Greek history sources and interpretations D. Brendan Nagle ; Stanley M. Burstein |
title_full_unstemmed | Readings in Greek history sources and interpretations D. Brendan Nagle ; Stanley M. Burstein |
title_short | Readings in Greek history |
title_sort | readings in greek history sources and interpretations |
title_sub | sources and interpretations |
topic | Geschichte Griekse oudheid gtt |
topic_facet | Geschichte Griekse oudheid Griechenland (Altertum) Griechenland Greece History To 146 B.C Sources Textbooks Griechenland Altertum Quelle |
url | http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0724/2006048277-d.html http://www.loc.gov/catdir/enhancements/fy0724/2006048277-t.html http://bvbr.bib-bvb.de:8991/F?func=service&doc_library=BVB01&local_base=BVB01&doc_number=015759583&sequence=000001&line_number=0001&func_code=DB_RECORDS&service_type=MEDIA |
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