List of Illustrations vii
Notes on Contributors x
Preface xiv
Abbreviations and a Note on Spelling xv
Maps xviii
1 The Classical Age as a Historical Epoch 1
Uwe Walter
2 The Literary Sources 26
P. J. Rhodes
3 The Non-Literary Written Sources 45
P. J. Rhodes
4 The Contribution of the Non-Written Sources 64
Björn Forsén
5 Athens, Sparta and the Wider World 84
Roger Brock
6 Aegean Greece 99
Kai Brodersen
7 The Central and Northern Balkan Peninsula 115
Zofia Halina Archibald
8 The Greek Cities of the Black Sea 137
Stanley M. Burstein
9 Western Greece (Magna Graecia) 153
Peter Funke
10 Beyond Magna Graecia: Greeks and Non-Greeks in France, Spain
and Italy 174
Kathryn Lomas
11 The Eastern Mediterranean and Beyond: The Relations between
the Worlds of the ‘Greek’ and ‘Non-Greek’ Civilizations 197
Robert Rollinger
12 The Natural Environment 227
J. Donald Hughes
13 Environments and Landscapes of Greek Culture 245
Lin Foxhall
14 The Economic Realities 281
G. J. Oliver
15 Religious Practice and Belief 311
Emily Kearns
16 Citizens, Foreigners and Slaves in Greek Society 327
Nick Fisher
17 Women and Ethnicity in Classical Greece: Changing the
Paradigms 350
Sarah B. Pomeroy
18 Greek Government 367
Lynette G. Mitchell
19 Democracy 387
Kurt A. Raaflaub
20 Law and Rhetoric: Community Justice in Athenian Courts
416
Robert W. Wallace
21 The Organization of Knowledge 432
Susan Prince
22 From Classical to Hellenistic Art 456
Steven Lattimore
23 Warfare in the Classical Age 480
John W. I. Lee
24 The Greek World, 478–432 509
Thomas Harrison
25 The Peloponnesian War and its Aftermath 526
Karl-Wilhelm Welwei
26 The Greek World, 371–336 544
Bruce LaForse
27 The Conquests of Alexander the Great 560
Waldemar Heckel
Index 589
Konrad H. Kinzl is Emeritus Professor of Ancient History at Trent University, Canada. He is editor of Greece and the Eastern Mediterranean (1977), Die ältere Tyrannis (1979), Problems and Method in Greek History (1988) and Demokratia (1995), as well as author of Miltiades‑Forschungen (1968) and articles on archaic and classical Greek history and the sources.
"This collection of material is especially valuable for the
holistic approach it takes in assessing the world of the fifth and
fourth centuries. The focus is not narrow or purely literary and
artistic. Thus, chapters on the Aegean world, the natural habitat,
and the geological basis of the Greek environment place Greek
society, farming, and settlement in a context far more deeply
rooted than any purely literary study." (Pheonix, 2009)
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