| Reviews |
| - 'Strong, clear, themed discussions;informative use of selected ancient authors. Captures the age of Athens and Sparta and the big social and cultural changes well. Deserves to oust the obsolete works that are still too easy to find! Dr Graham Shipley, Head of Ancient History Division, School of Archaeology & Ancient History, University of Leicester' -
- 'In an attempt to re-contextualise the phenomenon of classical Greece, this new volume in The Short Oxford History of Europe uses a topical-based approach to challenge traditional chronological narratives. The nine specially commissioned essays by seven authors step through the Economy, the City, War, Political Conflicts and Private Life before examining the political-military flow of events.
This will stimulate students to think beyond diachronic approaches and to re-examine their own understanding how the Greeks lived.' - John Lewis, Faculty of Classics, Cambridge The Anglo-Hellenic Review No 23
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| Description | | - The third volume (following Blanning's Eighteenth Century and Nineteenth Century volumes) of the major new Short Oxford History of Europe series
- The contributors are all top names in the field and together make up an enterprising and formidable volume (series editor is Professor T C W Blanning, Professor of Modern European History, Cambridge)
- Not a narrative history, but an explicit thematical approach in a series of analytical surveys of society, politics, economics, culture, etc., each by a leading scholar at the cutting edge of historiography
- Chapters linked together by a substantial introduction and conclusion, by internal cross-references, and by a detailed chronological table
- Coherent, concise, comprehensive, authoritative, provocative and challenging: a book which can't be overlooked
| The complete Short Oxford History of Europe
(series editor: Professor T C W Blanning) will cover the history of Europe from Classical Greece to the present in eleven volumes. In each, experts write to their strengths tackling the key issues, including society, economy, religion, politics, and culture, head-on in chapters that will be at once wide-ranging surveys and searching analyses.
Each book is specifically designed with the non-specialist reader in mind; but the authority of the contributors and the vigour of the interpretations will make them necessary and challenging reading for fellow academics across a range of disciplines. Osborne's is the third book to be launched in the series, following on from the publication of Blanning's Eighteenth and Nineteenth century
volumes. Robin Osborne provides an analysis which introduces the physical world of the Greek city and the inheritance of the classical city from its archaic past. With specially commissioned chapters, a team of experts introduce the reader to the economy of the Greek city, its political and religious institutions, the waging of warfare between cities, the nature and ancient analysis of
struggles within cities, and the private life of individuals. The focus then moves to diachronic change within the city, tracing the broad narratives of Greek history through the fifth and fourth centuries, and concludes by demonstrating the changing ways in which the Greeks themselves construed individual and civic life. Looking at classical Greece as a whole, the reader is introduced to
general issues through use of precise examples and through the words of Greek writers themselves. Maps, a timeline, and a selective bibliography help readers to ground the information that is given and direct their further studies.
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Readership: Undergraduate courses on European and Classical history. The general reader this is a popular area of history. Ideal complement book for students taking courses in classical Greek literature, philosophy, art and archaeology.
| Contents |
List of Illustrations
List of Contributors
Glossary
List of Ancient Authors mentioned
1.
The Creation of Classical Greece
,
Robin Osborne
2.
The Economy
,
Paul Millett
3.
The Classical City
,
Rosalind Thomas
4.
The City at War
,
Hans van Wees
5.
Political conflicts, political debates, and political thought
,
Josiah Ober
6.
Private Life
,
James Davidson
7.
The Fifth Century: Political and Military Narrative
,
Lisa Kallet
8.
The Fourth Century: Political and Military Narrative
,
Robin Osborne
Conclusion
,
Robin Osborne
Further Reading
Chronology
Maps
Index
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| Authors, editors,
and contributors | Edited by Robin Osborne, Professor of Ancient History, Oxford University, and Fellow and Tutor, Corpus Christi College, Oxford
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limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations,
and month of publication, was as accurate as
possible at the time the catalogue was compiled.
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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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