Only one surviving source provides a continuous narrative of
Greek history from Xerxes' invasion to the Wars of the Successors
following the death of Alexander the Great--the Bibliotheke, or
"Library," produced by Sicilian historian Diodorus Siculus (ca.
90-30 BCE). Yet generations of scholars have disdained Diodorus as
a spectacularly unintelligent copyist who only reproduced, and
often mangled, the works of earlier historians. Arguing for a
thorough critical reappraisal of Diodorus as a minor but far from
idiotic historian himself, Peter Green published Diodorus Siculus,
Books 11-12.37.1, a fresh translation, with extensive commentary,
of the portion of Diodorus's history dealing with the period
480-431 BCE, the so-called "Golden Age" of Athens.
This is the only recent modern English translation of the
Bibliotheke in existence. In the present volume--the first of two
covering Diodorus's text up to the death of Alexander--Green
expands his translation of Diodorus up to Athens' defeat after the
Peloponnesian War. In contrast to the full scholarly apparatus in
his earlier volume (the translation of which is incorporated) the
present volume's purpose is to give students, teachers, and general
readers an accessible version of Diodorus's history. Its
introduction and notes are especially designed for this audience
and provide an up-to-date overview of fifth-century Greece during
the years that saw the unparalleled flowering of drama,
architecture, philosophy, historiography, and the visual arts for
which Greece still remains famous.
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