The Battle of Marathon

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Yale University Press, 7 set 2010 - 272 pagine
How did the city-state of Athens defeat the invaders from Persia, the first world empire, on the plain of Marathon in 490 BCE? Clever scholars skeptical of our earliest surviving source, Herodotus, have produced one ingenious theory after another. In this stimulating new book, bound to provoke controversy, Peter Krentz argues that Herodotus was right after all.Beginning his analysis with the Athenians’ first formal contact with the Persians in 507 BCE, Krentz weaves together ancient evidence with travelers’ descriptions, archaeological discoveries, geological surveys, and the experiences of modern reenactors and soldiers to tell his story.Krentz argues that before Marathon the Athenian army fought in a much less organized way than the standard view of the hoplite phalanx suggests: as an irregularly armed mob rather than a disciplined formation of identically equipped infantry. At Marathon the Athenians equipped all their fighters, including archers and horsemen, as hoplites for the first time. Because their equipment weighed only half as much as is usually thought, the Athenians and their Plataean allies could charge almost a mile at a run, as Herodotus says they did. Krentz improves on this account in Herodotus by showing why the Athenians wanted to do such a risky thing.
 

Sommario

Foreword by Donald Kagan and Dennis Showalter
Athens Alliance with Darius
Athens Victories over the Boeotians and Chalcidians
The Ionian Revolt
Darius and the Greeks of Europe
The Armies Arrive at Marathon
When Marathon Became a Magic Word
After the Fighting
Appendix A Important Ancient Sources on Marathon
Bibliographical Notes
Index
Copyright

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Informazioni sull'autore (2010)

DIVPeter Krentz is W. R. Grey Professor of Classics and History, Davidson College, where he has taught Greek and Roman history since 1979./div

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