Early GreeceHarperCollins UK, 19. des. 2013 - 368 síður Now available in ebook format. Within the space of three centuries, up to the great Persian invasion of 480BC, Greece was transformed from a simple peasant society into a sophisticated civilisation which dominated the shores of the Mediterranean from Spain to Syria and from the Crimea to Egypt - a culture whose achievements in the fields of art, science, philosophy and politics were to establish the canons of the Western world. The author of this book places this development in the context of Mediterranean civilisation, providing an account of the transformation that launched Western culture. |
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... tothe versioninthe course of text of the English hiswork. Two new members of Fontanaalso deserve the thanks of allwho read this series. The love of history and personal encouragement of Stuart Proffittensured the appearance of a second ...
... tothe versioninthe course of text of the English hiswork. Two new members of Fontanaalso deserve the thanks of allwho read this series. The love of history and personal encouragement of Stuart Proffittensured the appearance of a second ...
Síða
... tothe lists, andreckoning the average length ofa generationatforty years insteadof the more correct thirty years. The Greek world from the eighth century onwardsisa product, notof Mycenae, but of the Dark Age. Its darkness is ...
... tothe lists, andreckoning the average length ofa generationatforty years insteadof the more correct thirty years. The Greek world from the eighth century onwardsisa product, notof Mycenae, but of the Dark Age. Its darkness is ...
Síða
... tothe IndoEuropean family; itseemsto have entered Greeceshortly before 2000, when the archaeological evidence suggeststhe arrival of anewculture; thesenew peoples will be the later MyceneanGreeks. Evidence of an earlier nonIndoEuropean ...
... tothe IndoEuropean family; itseemsto have entered Greeceshortly before 2000, when the archaeological evidence suggeststhe arrival of anewculture; thesenew peoples will be the later MyceneanGreeks. Evidence of an earlier nonIndoEuropean ...
Síða
... to the flowing hexameter metre.The oral poet doubtless relied on memorytorepeat with variations already existing ... tothe sense, butto accompany thenoun inparticular metrical positions and in different grammatical cases; the economy ...
... to the flowing hexameter metre.The oral poet doubtless relied on memorytorepeat with variations already existing ... tothe sense, butto accompany thenoun inparticular metrical positions and in different grammatical cases; the economy ...
Síða
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Efni
Myth Historyand Archaeology II Sources | |
the Economy XIV The Comingof the Persians XV The Leadership of Greece Sparta and Athens | |
Plate Section Date chart | |
Further reading General index About the Author | |
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already ancient andthe archaic aristocratic Athenian Athens attempt battle bythe called central century claim classical clear clearly colonies constitution continued Corinth Corinthian created culture Cyrene described detailed earlier earliest early eastern economic Egypt equal especially established evidence existence fact figures forthe foundation Fragment fromthe function Greece Greek Herodotus Hesiod Homeric hoplite important individual influence inscription institutions interests inthe Ionian Italy itis king Kleisthenes known land late later leader Messenia military Mycenean myth names nature ofthe onthe organization original particular perhaps period Persian Phoenician poetry political possessed pottery present probably problems reasons records reflects reforms religious remained seems settlement seventh shows sixth social society Spartan status style success suggests temple thought Thucydides tothe trade tradition tyranny tyrant various warrior wealth writing