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El. knyga: Ancient Historiography on War and Empire

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  • Formatas: 304 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Nov-2016
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781785703027
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: 304 pages
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Nov-2016
  • Leidėjas: Oxbow Books
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781785703027
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In the ancient Greek-speaking world, writing about the past meant balancing the reporting of facts with shaping and guiding the political interests and behaviours of the present. Ancient Historiography on War and Empire shows the ways in which the literary genre of writing history developed to guide empires through their wars. Taking key events from the Achaemenid Persian, Athenian, Macedonian and Roman ‘empires', the 17 essays collected here analyse the way events and the accounts of those events interact.  Subjects include: how Greek historians assign nearly divine honours to the Persian King; the role of the tomb cult of Cyrus the Founder in historical narratives of conquest and empire from Herodotus to the Alexander historians; warfare and financial innovation in the age of Philip II and his son, Alexander the Great; the murders of Philip II, his last and seventh wife Kleopatra, and her guardian, Attalos; Alexander the Great's combat use of eagle symbolism and divination; Plutarch's juxtaposition of character in the Alexander-Caesar pairing as a commentary on political legitimacy and military prowess, and Roman Imperial historians using historical examples of good and bad rule to make meaningful challenges to current Roman authority. In some cases, the balance shifts more towards the ‘literary' and in others more towards the ‘historical', but what all of the essays have in common is both a critical attention to the genre and context of history-writing in the ancient world and its focus on war and empire.

New perspectives on the genre and context of history-writing in the ancient world and its focus on war and empire.

Recenzijos

All of the papers are thought-provoking * Bryn Mawr Classical Review * This is a massive, well-organised work on the historiography and history of the ancient world; as such, it makes a significant contribution to the present-day overview of historiography; the papers are erudite, well written, [ ...] Last but not least, it offers numerous fresh and provocative approaches to the seemingly marginal and/or somewhat neglected themes of historiography. * Ancient West & East *

List of contributors
vii
Abbreviations ix
Foreword: Ancient historiography and ancient history xi
Part I Introduction
1 Why history? On the emergence of historical writing
2(24)
Mark Munn
Part II Persia and Greece
2 The political and the divine in Achaemenid royal inscriptions
26(29)
Eran Almagor
3 Cyrus the Great and the sacrifices for a dead king
55(7)
Josef Wiesehofer
4 The horse and the stag: Philistus' view of tyrants
62(18)
Frances Pownall
Part III Macedon
5 Alexander II of Macedon
80(12)
William Greenwalt
6 `The giver of the bride, the bridegroom, and the bride': a study of the murder of Philip II and its aftermath
92(33)
Waldemar Heckel
Timothy Howe
Sabine Muller
7 Royal tombs and cult of the dead kings in Early Hellenistic Macedonia
125(11)
Franca Landucci Gattinoni
Part IV The Empires of Alexander the Great and the Diadochoi
8 The financial administration of Asia Minor under Alexander the Great: an interpretation of two passages from Arrian's Anabasis
136(13)
Maxim M. Kholod
9 The Eagle has landed: divination in the Alexander historians
149(20)
Hugh Bowden
10 The casualty figures of Alexander's army
169(8)
Jacek Rzepka
11 Alexander's battles against Persians in the art of the Successors
177(11)
Olga Palagia
12 How the hoopoe got his crest: reflections on Megasthenes' stories of India
188(12)
Richard Stoneman
13 Creating the king: the image of Alexander the Great in 1 Maccabees, 1--10
200(10)
Aleksandra Kleczar
Part V Second Sophistic Rome
14 The hero vs. the tyrant: legitimate and illegitimate rule in the Alexander-Caesar pairing
210(16)
Rebecca Frank
15 Plutarch's Alexander, Dionysos and the metaphysics of power
226(24)
Elias Koulakiotis
16 The artistic king: reflections on a Topos in Second Sophistic Historiography
250(12)
Sabine Muller
17 Flattery, history, and the ΠεπαιΣευμευoσ
262(13)
Sulochana Asirvatham
Index 275
Timothy Howe is Professor of History and Ancient Studies at St. Olaf College (USA). His main research interests are in Alexander the Great, ancient Mediterranean warfare, agriculture, law, religion, trade, and, Greek and Latin epigraphy. Sabine Müller is Professor of Ancient History at Marburg University (Germany) where she specialises in ancient Near East, Greece, Macedonia and Rome including iconography and the study of ancient writers in relation to archaeological evidence. Richard Stoneman is Honorary Visiting Professor at the University of Exeter (UK) with particular research interest in the continuity of the Greek world and Greek tradition up to the present day and in Alexander the Great, especially in later legend.