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The Cambridge Ancient History
This volume covers c.525 to 479 BC, a period which saw events and developments of major significance in the Mediterranean world.
John Boardman (Edited by), N. G. L. Hammond (Edited by), D. M. Lewis (Edited by), M. Ostwald (Edited by)
9780521228046, Cambridge University Press
Hardback, published 24 November 1988
946 pages
30 x 17.3 x 7.2 cm, 1.547 kg
"CAH IV fulfills its function: it sets forth the state of the questions, clarifies controversies, suggests new approaches. It will be found useful by graduate students reviewing for comprehensive examinations and by professors wishing to update lectures in survey courses." Paul MacKendrick, Classical World
The years covered by this volume saw events and developments of major significance in the Mediterranean world. The first section of the book examines the Persian empire, the regions it comprised and its expansion during the reigns of Cyrus, Darius and Xerxes. In Greece, Sparta was attending maturity as the leader of a military coalition and Athens passed through a period of enlightened tyranny to a moderate democracy of dynamic energy and clear-sighted intelligence. Given the contrast between Greek ideas and Persian absolutism a clash between Greece and Persia became inevitable, and important chapters deal with the revolt of the Ionian Greeks against the Persians, and the two Persian invasions of Greece including the epic battles of Marathon, Thermopylae and Salamis. The third part of the volume turns to the Western Mediterranean. Italy now becomes a significant factor in the history of the area and this section covers the Italic peoples and their languages from the Bronze to the Iron age, and examines the Etruscans and their culture. Sicily is the subject of the final chapter. There the Greek city-states under Gelon of Syracuse and Theron ruler of Acragas repelled a Carthaginian onslaught at the battle of Himera. This new edition has been completely replanned and rewritten in order to reflect the advances in scholarship and changes in perspective which have been taking place in the sixty years since the publication of its predecessor.
List of maps
List of text-figures
List of chronological tables
Preface
Part I. The Persian Empire: 1. The early history of the Medes and the Persians and the Achaemenid empire to the death of Cambyses T. Cuyler Young Jr.
2. The consolidation of the empire and its limits of growth under Darius and Xerxes T. Cuyler Young Jr.
3. The major regions of the empire Amélie Kuhrt, I. Eph'al, Henri-Paul Francfort, A. D. H. Bivar, M. Mellink, A. Fol, N. G. L. Hammond and J. D. Ray
Part II. The Greek States: 4. The tyranny of the Pisistratidae D. M. Lewis
5. The reform of the Athenian state by Cleisthenes Martin Ostwald
6. Greece before the Persian invasion L. H. Jeffery
7. Archaic Greek society J. K. Davies, G. S. Kirk, John Boardman, Colin Kraay, C. Roebuck, Oswyn Murray, N. G. L. Hammond and J. P. Barron
Part III. The West: 12. Italy from the Bronze Age to the Iron Age David Ridgway
13. The Etruscans David Ridgway
14. The Iron Age: the peoples of Italy Edward Togo Salmon
15. The languages of Italy J. H. W. Penney
16. Carthaginians and Greeks David Asheri
Bibliography
Index.
Subject Areas: General & world history [HBG]