The Cambridge Companion to the Hellenistic WorldGlenn R. Bugh Cambridge University Press, 2006 M05 1 This Companion volume offers fifteen original essays on the Hellenistic world and is intended to complement and supplement general histories of the period from Alexander the Great to Kleopatra VII of Egypt. Each chapter treats a different aspect of the Hellenistic world - religion, philosophy, family, economy, material culture, and military campaigns, among other topics. The essays address key questions about this period: To what extent were Alexander's conquests responsible for the creation of this new 'Hellenistic' age? What is the essence of this world and how does it differ from its Classical predecessor? What continuities and discontinuities can be identified? Collectively, the essays provide an in-depth view of a complex world. The volume also provides a bibliography on the topics along with recommendations for further reading. |
From inside the book
Results 6-10 of 83
Page 23
... first volume of Droysen's Geschichte des Hellenismus (Gotha 1877—8), and was reprinted in 1952 (shorn of many ofthe footnotes) under the editorship ofErich Bayer. There is now a new edition, under the auspices of the Alpha Bank, which ...
... first volume of Droysen's Geschichte des Hellenismus (Gotha 1877—8), and was reprinted in 1952 (shorn of many ofthe footnotes) under the editorship ofErich Bayer. There is now a new edition, under the auspices of the Alpha Bank, which ...
Page 24
... first pages define Alexander as one of the elect of history, a passage of fervid rhetoric that was deleted in the second edition. This is expounded in the first edition [Droysen (1931) 486-7], insisting that the Hellenistic centuries ...
... first pages define Alexander as one of the elect of history, a passage of fervid rhetoric that was deleted in the second edition. This is expounded in the first edition [Droysen (1931) 486-7], insisting that the Hellenistic centuries ...
Page 25
... First Coalition War. For details, see Heckel (1992) 150-1 , 172-4, 18 1-2, 275-6. On the background, see Billows (1990) 69-73; Bosworth (2002) 14-9. Diod. 19.55.3 with Bosworth (2002) 212-3. Compare Arr. Succ. F 1.36: the Indian kings ...
... First Coalition War. For details, see Heckel (1992) 150-1 , 172-4, 18 1-2, 275-6. On the background, see Billows (1990) 69-73; Bosworth (2002) 14-9. Diod. 19.55.3 with Bosworth (2002) 212-3. Compare Arr. Succ. F 1.36: the Indian kings ...
Page 30
... first steps to institutionalize it. But, as will happen continually over the next forty years, events ran ahead of them. While the officers talked, the men of the Macedonian Phalanx acted. They proclaimed Arrhidaios to be king, as the ...
... first steps to institutionalize it. But, as will happen continually over the next forty years, events ran ahead of them. While the officers talked, the men of the Macedonian Phalanx acted. They proclaimed Arrhidaios to be king, as the ...
Page 37
... first century.13 To the south, and the control ofGreece, Antigonos also took great care. For most of his early reign, there were Macedonian garrisons and pro-Macedonian tyrants throughout Greece, even in Athens. The rise ofthe Aitolian ...
... first century.13 To the south, and the control ofGreece, Antigonos also took great care. For most of his early reign, there were Macedonian garrisons and pro-Macedonian tyrants throughout Greece, even in Athens. The rise ofthe Aitolian ...
Contents
28 | |
THE POLIS AND FEDERAL1sM | 52 |
Hellenistic Economies | 73 |
2500 2000 1500 1000 500 0 500 BC AD | 85 |
The Hellenistic Family | 93 |
6 HIsToRY AND RHETORIC | 113 |
7 MATERIAL CULTURE | 136 |
Hellenistic Art | 158 |
Language and Literature | 186 |
GREEK RELIGION | 208 |
Philosophy for Life | 223 |
Science Medicine | 241 |
Sideelevation Unbroken lines show the Sambuca in horizontal position Broken | 260 |
Hellenistic Military | 265 |
Other editions - View all
The Cambridge Ancient History John Boardman,I. E. S. Edwards,N. G. L. Hammond,E. Sollberger No preview available - 1982 |
The Cambridge Ancient History John Boardman,I. E. S. Edwards,N. G. L. Hammond,E. Sollberger No preview available - 1982 |
Common terms and phrases
Alexander Alexander’s Alexandria amphoras ancient Antigonid Antigonos Antiochos Antiochos III Antipatros Apollonios Aristotle Arkadian army Asia Minor Athenaios Athenian Athens Bosworth cataphracts catapults cavalry century b.c. changes Chapter citizens Classical period cult deities Delos Demetrios Poliorketes Diod Dionysios Droysen dynasty earlier early Hellenistic Egypt Egyptian elephants elite empire epic Epicurus Eumenes evidence example first fourth century gods Greece Greek Greek cities Greek world Hellenic Hellenistic period Hellenistic world Herakleides Herophilos historian history writing Homeric included influence inscriptions Kallimachos Kassandros king kingdom land later literary Lysimachos Lysippos Macedonian material culture Mediterranean Menippos mercenaries military monarchy Nectanebos ofthe Olympias Perdikkas Pergamon Persian Philip philosophers Phoenician Plato poems poetry poets poleis polis political Polyb Polybios population pottery practice Ptolemy Pyrrhos reflect religious rhetoric Rhodes Rhodian Roman Rome royal ruler satraps second century Seleukid Seleukos siege stoas Stoic successors Theokritos third century Timaios tion traditional Walbank whereas
Popular passages
Page 264 - Archimedes stated that a body immersed in a fluid is buoyed up by a force equal to the weight of the displaced fluid.