Early GreeceFontana, 1980 - 319 síður Within the space of three centuries leading up to the great Persian invasion of 480 B.C., Greece was transformed from a simple peasant society into a sophisticated civilization 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 places this remarkable development in the context of Mediterranean civilization. He shows how contact with the East acted as a catalyst to transform art and religion, analyzes the invention of the alphabet and the conceptual changes it brought, describes the expansion of Greece in trade and colonization and investigates the relationship between military technology and political progress in the overthrow of aristocratic governments. |
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Síða 236
... Ionian thought , its search for rational system . Other commentators have tried indeed to minimize the extent of this difference between Milesian thought and religion , by asserting that much of our evidence comes from Aristotle and the ...
... Ionian thought , its search for rational system . Other commentators have tried indeed to minimize the extent of this difference between Milesian thought and religion , by asserting that much of our evidence comes from Aristotle and the ...
Síða 242
... Ionian vassals to support him with their navies in an attack on Scythia ( about 514 ) . According to Hero- dotus the campaign was not a success , and the king was only saved by the untimely loyalty of his Ionian navy , who were holding ...
... Ionian vassals to support him with their navies in an attack on Scythia ( about 514 ) . According to Hero- dotus the campaign was not a success , and the king was only saved by the untimely loyalty of his Ionian navy , who were holding ...
Síða 244
... Ionian revolt is described in detail by Herodotus in books 5 and 6 ; the general tendency of his nar- rative is to trivialize and devalue the resistance of the Ionians , which he sees as doomed from the start . This is not the product ...
... Ionian revolt is described in detail by Herodotus in books 5 and 6 ; the general tendency of his nar- rative is to trivialize and devalue the resistance of the Ionians , which he sees as doomed from the start . This is not the product ...
Efni
Introduction to the Fontana History of the Ancient World | 6 |
Myth History and Archaeology | 13 |
2 | 21 |
Höfundarréttur | |
16 aðrir hlutar ekki sýndir
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Aegina Al Mina Alkaios ancient Apollo archaeological archaic Archilochos Argos aristocratic Aristotle Asia Minor Athenian Athens Attica battle bronze Chalcis claim coinage colonies Corcyra Corinth Corinthian culture Cyrene Cyrus Darius Dark Age Delphi Dorian earliest early Greek eastern economic Egypt Egyptian eighth century epic Eretria Etruscan Euboea evidence excavations exile fact fighting Frag Fragment gods Greece Herodotus heroes Hesiod Homer honour hoplite Iliad important influence inscription Ionian king Kleisthenes Kleomenes Kypselos land later literacy Lykourgos mainland Megara Miletus military Mycenean myth Naucratis Odyssey oracle oral original Oxford U.P. Peisistratos Peloponnese perhaps period Persian Persian Wars Phoenician poems poet poetry political pottery probably reforms ritual settlement seventh century shield ships shows shrine sixth century slaves social society Solon Spartan style surviving temple Themistokles Theogony Thucydides tion trade tradition tribes tyranny tyrant Tyrtaios vase warrior wealth Zeus