At the end of the fifth century BC, the Peloponnesian War resulted in Athens' shattering defeat by Sparta. Taking advantage of the debacle, a commission of thirty Athenians abolished the democratic institutions that for a century had governed the political life of the city and precipitated a year-long civil war. By autumn 403 BC, democracy was restored. Inspired by the model of the ancient chorus, this strikingly innovative book interprets a crucial moment in classical history through the prism of ten remarkable individuals and the shifting groups which formed around them. The former include more familiar names like the multifaceted Sokrates, the oligarch Kritias and the rhetorician Lysias, but also lesser-known figures like the scribe Nikomachos, the former slave Gerys and the priestess Lysimakhe. What leads a community to tear itself apart, even disintegrate, then rebuild itself? This question, explored through profound reflection on the past, echoes our tormented present.
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Will deliver when available. Publication date 31 Jan 2025
Product Details
Publication Date: 31 Jan 2025
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781009490962
About Paulin IsmardVincent Azoulay
VINCENT AZOULAY is Director of Studies at the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales Paris. He is a former member of the Institut Universitaire de France and the current director of the international bilingual journal of the Annales. Histoire Sciences Sociales. He has been awarded several prizes including the Prix du livre d'histoire du Sénat (2011). He is the author of several books already translated in English: Pericles of Athens (2014) The Tyrant-Slayers of Ancient Athens (2017) and Xenophon and the Graces of Power (2018). PAULIN ISMARD is Professor of Ancient Greek History at Aix-Marseille University. He is a former member of the Harvard Center for Hellenic Studies and of the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton. He has received several awards: the Prix du livre d'histoire du Sénat (2014) Grand Prix des Rendez-Vous de l'Histoire de Blois (2016) and Prix François Millepierres de l'Académie Française (2016). He is also the author of Democracy's Slaves. A Political History of Ancient Greece (2017) La cité et ses esclaves (2019) and Les mondes de l'esclavage. Une histoire comparée (2021).