Books > History > World history > 500 to 1500
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Ancient Greeks at War - Warfare in the Classical World from Agamemnon to Alexander (Hardcover)
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Ancient Greeks at War - Warfare in the Classical World from Agamemnon to Alexander (Hardcover)
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Ancient Greeks at War is a lavishly illustrated tour de force
covering every aspect of warfare in the Ancient Greek world from
the beginnings of Greek civilization through to its assimilation
into the ever expanding world of Rome. As such it begins with the
onset Minoan culture on Crete around 2,000 BC, then covers the
arrival of the Mycenaean civilisation and the ensuing Late Bronze
Age Collapse, before moving on to Dark Age and Archaic Greece. This
sets the scene for the flowering of Classical Greek civilization,
as told through detailed narratives of the Greek and Persian Wars,
Peloponnesian Wars and the rise of Thebes as a major power. The
book then moves on to the onset of Macedonian domination under
Philip II, before focusing in detail on the exploits of his son
Alexander the Great, the all-conquering hero of the ancient world.
His legacy was the Hellenistic world with its multiple, never
ending series of conflicts that took place over a huge territory,
ranging from Italy in the west all the way to India in the east.
Those covered include the various Wars of the Successors, the rise
of the Bactrian-Greek and Indo-Greek kingdoms, the various wars
between the Antigonid Macedonian, Seleucid and Ptolemaic kingdoms,
and later the onset of the clash of cultures between the rising
power of Rome in the west and the Hellenistic kingdoms. In the long
run the latter proved unable to match Rome's insatiable desire for
conquest in the eastern Mediterranean, and this together with the
rise of Parthia in the east ensured that one by one the Hellenistic
kingdoms and states fell. The book ends with the destruction of
Corinth in 146 BC after the defeat by Rome of the Achaean League.
The conclusion considers the legacy of the Ancients Greeks in the
Roman world, and subsequently.
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