The Cambridge Ancient History, Dio 3John Boardman, N. G. L. Hammond Cambridge University Press, 5. kol 1982. - Broj stranica: 530 The emergence of the Greek world from the Dark Ages to the height of its Geometric civilization was described in The Cambridge Ancient History Volume III Part I. Volume III Part III explores the new prosperity and growth of the young city-states in the eighth to the sixth centuries B.C. This was the great period of expansion and colonization which saw the establishment of Greek city-states from the Western Mediterranean to the Black Sea. This volume describes the East and Egypt, the importance of West Greece and the Aegean islands in trading and exploration, the special characteristics of the societies which were established by colonization. While societies outside the mainstream of expansion and trade retained their old institutions, those at the centre changed rapidly and the period was a time of warfare in mainland Greece. Athens is seen developing into a leading state under the influence of the reforms of Solon and assessment of the social, economic and material history of Greece during these years. |
Sadržaj
CONTENTS | 27 |
36b The Greeks in Egypt | 32 |
36d The Cypriot syllabary | 71 |
The colonial expansion of Greece | 83 |
The south coast of Asia Minor and north Syria | 92 |
Sicily and southern Italy | 94 |
The north coast of the Aegean | 113 |
Hellespont Propontis Bosporus | 118 |
The internal developments of the Greek states and their relations | 189 |
The eastern Greeks | 196 |
The material evidence | 202 |
The overseas expansion of the eastern Greeks | 211 |
The East Greek acme | 215 |
Crete | 222 |
39c Cretan laws and society | 234 |
39d Euboea and the islands | 249 |
Pontus | 122 |
Northwest Greece and the Adriatic | 130 |
North Africa | 134 |
The far west | 139 |
Foundation | 143 |
Relations with the mother city | 153 |
Relations with the native population | 155 |
Causation | 157 |
Conclusion | 159 |
The western Greeks | 163 |
The expansion of the Greek colonies | 175 |
Greeks and Phoenicians | 186 |
The islands | 253 |
Illyris Epirus and Macedonia | 261 |
Central Greece and Thessaly | 286 |
The Peloponnese | 321 |
The growth of the Athenian state | 360 |
The tyranny of Pisistratus | 392 |
45a Economic and social conditions in the Greek world | 417 |
45b The material culture of Archaic Greece | 442 |
480 | |
The Argolic peninsula | 502 |
513 | |
Ostala izdanja - Prikaži sve
The Cambridge Ancient History: Volume 3, Part 3, The Expansion of the Greek ... John Boardman,N. G. L. Hammond Pregled nije dostupan - 2008 |
Uobičajeni izrazi i fraze
Acropolis Aegean Al Mina Amasis ancient Apollo archaeological evidence Archaic period archon Argos aristocratic Aristotle Assyrian Athenian Athens Attica Boeotian bronze Carian century B.C. Chalcidians Chalcis Chios Citium Classical Cleisthenes coast colonists Corcyra Corinth Corinthian Cretan Crete Cyme Cypriot Cyprus Cypselus Cyrene dedicated Delphi Dorian early East Greek eastern economic Egypt Egyptian eighth century Eretria Euboea excavations FGrH foundation Greece Greek colonies Greek world Hecataeus Herodotus Hesiod Illyrian important inscription Ionian island kilometres king land later literary Locri Megara mercenaries Messenian Milesian Miletus mother city native Naucratis oikistes Olbia Olympia oracle Persian Phocaeans Phoenician Pisistratus Pithecusa political population probably Psammetichus Rhodes Salamis Samos sanctuary sculpture seems seventh century Sicels Sicily silver Siris sixth century Solon Sparta story Strabo style Sybaris temple Thasos Thebes Thessalian Thracian Thuc Thucydides tombs trade tradition tribes tyranny tyrant vases