The Greek City From Homer to Alexander
Edited by Oswyn Murray and Simon Price
Price: £36.00 (paper) ISBN-13: 978-0-19-814791-6 Publication date: 3 October 1991 400 pages, 19 figures, 4 b/w plates, 216x138 mm
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Ordering |
Individual customers may: order by phone, post, or fax. Manufactured on Demand - stock will be supplied on a firm sale basis within 28 days
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| Reviews |
| - '`There is ... much to enjoy in these articles ... a wealth of approaches to the ancient city ... worth reading.'
Mnemosyne, Vol XLVI, Fasc 3 (1993)' -
- '` the reader, whilst not necessarily agreeing with the ideas expressed in the individual papers, will find the contributons controversial and stimulating.'
E.J.Owens, The Classical Review.' -
- '`an excellent sample of the ways in which people are studying the Greek world.'
Greece and Rome' -
- '`The reader, whilst not necessarily agreeing with the ideas expressed in the individual papers, will find the contributions controversial and stimulating'.
E.J. Owens, The Classical Review, vol XLI, no 2, 1991.' -
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| Description | The Greek city-state or polis
is the earliest advanced form of social organization in the western world; it was the dominant political structure in the Mediterranean area from the eighth until the late fourth century BC, when it was transformed into a basis for world civilization by the conquests of Alexander the Great. The experience of the polis
is the starting-point for western
political thought.
Fourteen new essays by leading scholars from Britain, Denmark, France, Italy, and North America present leading aspects of this phenomenon. The Greek city is placed in the general context of Mediterranean history and its impact on the urbanization of Italy is assessed. Other chapters consider the geography of the polis
and the relationship between city and countryside,
its political and religious institutions, and the distinction between public and private spheres. The first essay seeks to define then uniqueness of the phenomenon of the polis
, and the last assesses the reasons for its decline.
The book is written for the general reader and the student of social sciences as much as for professional historians of the ancient world. It presents a variety of
contemporary approaches to the phenomenon of the polis
.
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| Authors, editors,
and contributors | Edited by Oswyn Murray, University Lecturer in Ancient History and Fellow, Balliol College, Oxford and Simon Price, University Lecturer in Ancient History and Fellow, Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford
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The specification in this catalogue, including without
limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations,
and month of publication, was as accurate as
possible at the time the catalogue was compiled.
Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we
are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory.
Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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