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The Plague of War - Athens, Sparta, and the Struggle for Ancient Greece (Hardcover)
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The Plague of War - Athens, Sparta, and the Struggle for Ancient Greece (Hardcover)
Series: Ancient Warfare and Civilization
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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The life-and-death struggle between Athens and Sparta that
embroiled all of the Greek world for an entire generation was a war
that almost did not happen. Both sides entered it with hesitation,
and the fortunes of war swung back and forth so wildly that at many
junctures either side could have won. The plague that visited
Athens in the war's early years was entirely unforeseen, as was the
death in 429 of their leading statesman Pericles, who was expected
to guide Athens through the war until the Spartans acquiesced. The
war could have concluded many times before the conventional ending
of open hostilities in 404 BCE, even as early as 425 when a team of
crack Spartan troops, marooned on an island off the coast of the
Peloponnesus, laid down their arms and surrendered, something that
had never happened before. Sparta sought peace to regain its men,
but the Athenians thought they could get better terms and kept
fighting. After 27 years of butchery on land and at sea previously
unparalleled in Greece, nothing had really been gained by either
side, not even by the Spartan "victors," who seemed to be as
capable of winning a war as of losing a peace. War without Victory
provides a superlative narrative of this famous conflict,
authoritatively examining its origins and its impact on the culture
and social structure of the participants. Jennifer Roberts' history
will be distinguished for placing the war in a wider historical
context, continuing the story down to the outbreak of the so-called
Corinthian War in 395, when gold from the Persian king made it
possible for Sparta's former allies to join Athens in making war on
them. It will therefore include one of the most infamous episodes
in Greek history, which was partly a direct consequence of the war:
the trial and execution of Socrates. Finally, it will treat the
events leading up to the stunning defeat of Sparta by its former
ally Thebes at the battle of Leuctra in 371, a defeat which
effectively ended Sparta's martial dominance forever. Including a
discussion of Greece's rich cultural life of the period, this book
promises to be just as masterful an account as Donald Kagan's
condensed one-volume history.
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